Abstract
A 1-month-old child was admitted at our pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) in a
very critical state with generalized cyanosis, grunting, high fever, tachypnea, tachycardia,
severe hypotension with capillary refill time > 5 seconds, and no palpable pulse.
The child was apparently doing well until a few hours before admission. On admission
to PICU, his clinical diagnosis was consistent with severe sepsis with his sequential
organ failure assessment scores of 7 to 8 points. We started rapid restoration of
circulation with aggressive volume replacement and empiric antimicrobial therapy.
Despite optimal supportive therapy, the patient showed severe liver injury leading
to liver failure, making the treatment more challenging. His simplex real-time reverse
transcriptase polymerase chain reaction assay and enzyme linked immune sorbent assay
documented respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection. Through our case report we
would like to highlight the extrapulmonary manifestations of RSV infections and the
importance of liver dysfunction during sepsis.
Keywords
sepsis - RSV - liver dysfunction