17 June 2026: Articles
Chlamydia trachomatis Pneumonia in a 50-Day-Old Full-Term Male Infant Associated With Mucus Plugging of the Left Upper Lobe Bronchus and Left Upper Lobe Atelectasis
Challenging differential diagnosis, Rare disease
Yuan HuangDOI: 10.12659/AJCR.953643
Am J Case Rep 2026; 27:e953643
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chlamydia trachomatis (C. trachomatis) is a common vertically transmitted pathogen responsible for infantile pneumonia, which typically manifests as interstitial lung lesions and pulmonary hyperinflation. Lobar atelectasis resulting from mucus plug obstruction secondary to C. trachomatis infection is rarely observed in children. Here, we report a case of C. trachomatis pneumonia in a 50-day-old full-term male infant presenting with left upper lobe bronchial mucus plugging and atelectasis.
CASE REPORT: A full-term, vaginally delivered 50-day-old male infant presented with a 15-day history of cough and normal oxygenation. Pre-admission imaging showed left upper lobe pneumonia accompanied by atelectasis and bronchial obstruction. Sputum polymerase chain reaction was positive for C. trachomatis, and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) targeted next-generation sequencing (tNGS) further supported the etiological diagnosis. The infant was treated with erythromycin combined with bronchoscopic mucus plug clearance, and achieved complete clinical recovery, with no recurrence during 2 months of follow-up.
CONCLUSIONS: In the present case, conventional pathogen detection combined with BALF tNGS supported the diagnosis of C. trachomatis pneumonia associated with secondary airway mucus plugs and lobar atelectasis. Bronchoscopy provided valuable diagnostic and therapeutic benefits in this patient. This case report expands the recognized clinical and imaging spectrum of infantile chlamydial pneumonia and may provide a practical reference for the evaluation of similar atypical pediatric cases.
Keywords: Bronchoscopy, Child, Chlamydia trachomatis, Mucus, Pneumonia, pulmonary atelectasis
Introduction
In adult women,
Laboratory tests for
Chest imaging plays a pivotal role in the diagnosis of
This report describes a case of
Case Report
A 50-day-old male infant was admitted to our hospital on January 15, 2026, with a 15-day history of persistent cough. During this period, the patient exhibited no significant tachypnea, dyspnea, conjunctival discharge, aspiration during feeding, vomiting, or diarrhea. Three days prior to admission, the patient experienced a low-grade fever that resolved spontaneously without intervention. Laboratory tests conducted at a local hospital prior to admission revealed a white blood cell count (WBC) of 11.2 × 109/L, a neutrophil ratio of 40.9%, an eosinophil ratio of 4.4%, and a high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) level of 34.7 mg/L. Chest radiography revealed left upper lobe pneumonia (Figure 1A), and chest computed tomography (CT) showed left upper lobe atelectasis with stenosis and obstruction of the left upper lobe bronchus (Figure 1B-1D). No antibiotics were administered to the patient prior to transfer. The patient was subsequently transferred to our hospital for further evaluation and definitive diagnosis.
Physical examination on admission showed a body temperature of 36.5 °C, respiratory rate of 40 breaths per minute, and peripheral blood oxygen saturation (SpO2) of 95%. There was no conjunctival hyperemia or ocular discharge. The patient breathed steadily, with slightly diminished breath sounds in the left upper lung and scattered moist rales bilaterally. The patient maintained normal oxygen saturation throughout hospitalization without supplemental oxygen. On the day of admission, multiplex nucleic acid testing for common respiratory pathogens in sputum (including 12 pathogens: SARS-CoV-2, common coronaviruses, influenza A and B viruses, parainfluenza virus,
Given the patient’s atypical thoracic imaging findings, BALF specimens were submitted to Hangzhou Adicon Clinical Laboratories Co., Ltd. for targeted next-generation sequencing (tNGS) covering 363 prevalent pediatric respiratory pathogens. After automated library construction and qPCR quantification, high-throughput shotgun sequencing was performed. Human sequences were removed from high-quality reads, and the remaining data were aligned against microbial reference databases for pathogen identification and relative abundance quantification. Relative abundance was calculated as the percentage of valid reads assigned to a given microorganism relative to the total valid microbial reads. Both negative and positive controls were included in each tNGS run. Microorganisms identified in sequencing libraries were reported only if the sequencing data met quality control thresholds (Phred quality 20 (Q20) > 85%, Q30 > 80%) and the species was not detected in the negative control (NC) of the same sequencing run, or the reads per million (RPM) ratio between sample and NC was ≥5, which was used as a cutoff to distinguish true-positive results from background contamination. This assay yielded limits of detection (LOD) of 400 copies/mL for both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria, 100 copies/mL for fungi, 400 copies/mL for DNA viruses and 200 copies/mL for RNA viruses.
The infant was born at full term via vaginal delivery, with a birth weight of 3.1 kg, and was exclusively breastfed. No conjunctivitis symptoms were observed since birth. The mother underwent screening for human immunodeficiency virus and syphilis during pregnancy, with all results negative, and no
After confirming
At the 2-month follow-up, the patient remained asymptomatic with no recurrence. The follow-up period of this study was only 2 months, mainly due to the time span from the patient’s discharge to the completion of manuscript writing being only 2 months, making it impossible to obtain longer-term follow-up data. Although the follow-up period is limited, the available 2-month follow-up results show that the therapeutic effect is stable, and no recurrence of related symptoms was observed, which can effectively support the conclusion of this study.
This 50-day-old full-term infant presented with a 15-day cough and radiologically confirmed left upper lobe atelectasis. A systematic differential diagnosis was further performed to rule out common etiologies of infantile atelectasis. (1)
Discussion
This report describes a rare case of infantile
Maternal
Most cases of neonatal
Infants with
The most common radiological findings in
To screen for potential co-infection, tNGS was performed on the patient’s BALF specimens. Traditional diagnostic approaches, including culture, antigen-antibody assays, and PCR, cannot achieve high-throughput screening for a broad spectrum of pathogens, and generally yield low positive rates for bacterial and fungal pathogens in routine sputum and BALF tests [29,30]. By virtue of its outstanding efficiency, sensitivity, and cost-effectiveness, tNGS has emerged as a robust modality for precise etiological diagnosis of infectious diseases [29]. It has been reported that the combination of conventional assays and tNGS achieves a definitive pathogen detection rate of 89% in children with pneumonia, significantly enhancing diagnostic accuracy [31]. Although routine laboratory tests and BALF tNGS revealed no evidence of alternative pathogens in the present case, false-negative results are an inherent limitation of all microbiological examinations; thus, co-infection cannot be entirely excluded. Given the favorable clinical response to exclusive erythromycin monotherapy, the lobar atelectasis in this infant was presumably attributable to isolated
Atelectasis is a clear indication for bronchoscopy [32]. In this patient, bronchoscopy revealed mucus plugging. Of note, clinical and mechanistic investigations focusing on atelectasis secondary to
Erythromycin (40–50 mg/kg/day for 14 days) is the recommended first-line treatment for C. trachomatis pneumonia in infants and young children [2,5,9,16,17,21,23,34]. A 3-day oral course of azithromycin at a daily dose of 20 mg/kg serves as a valid alternative therapeutic regimen [2]. Of note, both erythromycin and azithromycin possess unique safety concerns. Their use in infants younger than 6 weeks of age may predispose patients to infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis or intestinal obstruction, thereby necessitating rigorous clinical monitoring throughout the treatment course [2,5].
Conclusions
This report describes a rare and atypical presentation of infantile
Figures
Figure 1. Chest imaging of our case. (A) Chest radiograph showing pneumonia in the left upper lung. (B–D) High-resolution chest computed tomography demonstrating left upper lung atelectasis, with stenosis and occlusion of the left upper lobe bronchus. (E) Follow-up chest radiograph after 11 days of treatment, showing significant resolution of left upper lung atelectasis. (F) Follow-up chest radiograph after 20 days of treatment, returning to normal.
Figure 2. Amplification plot of polymerase chain reaction for Chlamydia trachomatis in sputum. A typical sigmoidal amplification curve was observed with a cycle threshold (Ct) value of 24.84. The assay positivity criterion was defined as a Ct value ≤ 38 accompanied by a typical sigmoidal amplification curve.
Figure 3. Bronchoscopic findings of the larynx, trachea, and bronchi. (A) Larynx. (B) Left secondary carina; the black arrow indicates mucus plug obstruction of the left upper lobe bronchus. (C) Left upper lobe bronchus patent after bronchoscopic lavage. (D) Left lower lobe bronchus. (E) Right upper lobe bronchus. (F) Right intermediate bronchus. References
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Figures
Figure 1. Chest imaging of our case. (A) Chest radiograph showing pneumonia in the left upper lung. (B–D) High-resolution chest computed tomography demonstrating left upper lung atelectasis, with stenosis and occlusion of the left upper lobe bronchus. (E) Follow-up chest radiograph after 11 days of treatment, showing significant resolution of left upper lung atelectasis. (F) Follow-up chest radiograph after 20 days of treatment, returning to normal.
Figure 2. Amplification plot of polymerase chain reaction for Chlamydia trachomatis in sputum. A typical sigmoidal amplification curve was observed with a cycle threshold (Ct) value of 24.84. The assay positivity criterion was defined as a Ct value ≤ 38 accompanied by a typical sigmoidal amplification curve.
Figure 3. Bronchoscopic findings of the larynx, trachea, and bronchi. (A) Larynx. (B) Left secondary carina; the black arrow indicates mucus plug obstruction of the left upper lobe bronchus. (C) Left upper lobe bronchus patent after bronchoscopic lavage. (D) Left lower lobe bronchus. (E) Right upper lobe bronchus. (F) Right intermediate bronchus. Tables
Table 1. Sequence of routine laboratory test results during hospitalization.
Table 2. Results of pathogen-related tests during hospitalization.
Table 3. The tNGS results of BALF in the present patient.
Table 1. Sequence of routine laboratory test results during hospitalization.
Table 2. Results of pathogen-related tests during hospitalization.
Table 3. The tNGS results of BALF in the present patient. In Press
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