Samina Akhtar, Belqees Yawar Faiz, Khurram Khaliq Bhinder, Salma Gul, Ijaz Akhan, Madiha Saeed Wahla.
Unusual presentation of reactive arthritis after salmonella enteritis in a 6-year-old boy.
Pak Postgrad Med J Jan ;32(1):48-51.

ABSTRACT: Reactive arthritis, formerly called Reiter’s syndrome is extra-articular oligoarthropathy, which can be due to bacterial infection or genetic predisposition. The infections are either urogenital (chlamydia being most notorious) or gastrointestinal (e.g. salmonella, yersinia, etc.). The human leukocyte antigen (HLA-B27) antigen has been implicated as the most common predisposing factor. Reactive arthritis often involves the joints of the lower limb. Bacterial enteric infections are a potential threat in a Pediatric population that can be due to an acute illness or its sequelae. Reactive arthritis following outbreaks of enteric infections with Salmonella is uncommon in the pediatric population. We report a rare case of a 6 years old boy who came to ER with high-grade fever and severe pain in the right iliac fossa. Clinical diagnosis of appendicitis was made by the physicians on physical exam but after radio-pathological investigation like CBC, ESR, CRP, Blood culture, USG abdomen, CT abdomen, and MRI, diagnosis of reactive arthritis secondary to salmonella enteritis was made and the patient underwent right hip arthrotomy after which he was discharged. Thus, imaging played a pivotal role in the right diagnosis of a patient with proper management guidelines. This also showed that salmonella enteritis can present atypically mimicking septic arthritis or acute appendicitis. Reactive arthritis after salmonella infection is a very rare and one of its kind case reported in Pakistan.

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