Case: A male infant was born at 36th week period of gestation with a birth weight of 1.99kg following an uneventful intrauterine period. At birth, he was noted to have multiple skin nodules. The largest nodule measuring 4.0 x 2.0 x 1.5 cm was at his pre-auricular area. It was initially fleshy and reddish in color. A few days later, it turned black and subsequently the black skin overlying the mass fell off, leaving a firm underlying mass with the appearance of a cauliflower. Other skin lesions, which were firm in consistency, were found on the medial aspect of his right supraorbital ridge, right mid-arm, right mid-thigh, plantar surface of his right big toe and his scalp. They were either skin-colored or reddish in colour, measuring between 1.0 and 2.0 cm in diameter. He also had hepatomegaly and splenomegaly palpable at 5 cm and 3 cm below the subcostal margins, respectively
Severe jaundice (serum bilirubin level > 340 gmol/L) occurred in 81 infants admitted to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) of the Maternity Hospital Kuala Lumpur (MHKL) in 1993. Of these 46 (56.8%) underwent 53 exchange transfusions. In-patient case notes were available for study on 41 of them. Two infants had no cause identified while 12 were associated with prematurity, 13 ABO incompatibility, 8 G6PD deficiency, 6 sepsis 2 Rh isoimmunisation and 6 miscellaneous causes. In 14 infants it was felt that exchange transfusions might have been avoided if they were detected earlier and phototherapy instituted promptly. Twenty six (26) infants were deemed to have been given phototherapy at the appropriate time but jaundice increased to exchange transfusion levels, threshold values depending on the unit in charge. Use of higher intensity phototherapy might have been more effective in some of the cases. Available data showed similar outcomes in both groups.