CASE REPORTS
JOURNAL ARTICLE
REVIEW
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Transient bulging fontanelle after vaccination: case report and review of the vaccine adverse event reporting system.

Journal of Pediatrics 2005 November
OBJECTIVE: To describe the features of transient bulging fontanelle (TBF) after vaccination.

STUDY DESIGN: We searched the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System database for reports describing bulging fontanelle. We defined a definite TBF case as a patient with a bulging fontanelle, normal neuroimaging and cerebrospinal fluid analysis, and absence of a depressed level of consciousness, focal neurologic findings, or identified cause. Follow-up had to reveal normal development. Probable cases lacked either lumbar puncture or neuroimaging or both but met all other criteria.

RESULTS: We identified 18 patients with definite or probable TBF. The median age at presentation was 4.5 months, interval from vaccination to symptom onset was 18 hours, and time to resolution was 3 days. Fifteen children were febrile.

CONCLUSIONS: We cannot conclude that vaccines cause TBF. Further controlled studies are necessary. Even if further research verifies TBF as a rare side effect, immunization benefits would still vastly outweigh this hypothetical risk. However, confirmation of a vaccine association could modify the management of infants who develop TBF after immunizations.

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