Nontraumatic spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage in infants is rare and usually occurs due to infection, trauma, or known coagulopathy, most often originating from the thalamus and extending into the ventricle. In this case report, we describe a two-month-old late preterm female infant (36 weeks of gestational age) who was brought in due to irritability, projectile vomiting, and feeding difficulties. The clinical history suggested cow's milk protein allergy, as the baby had recently been switched to formula. The neurological signs observed during physical examination, including upward eye deviation and lack of visual tracking, prompted neuroimaging, which revealed a right thalamic hemorrhagic infarct with intraventricular hemorrhage. The patient was stabilized and transferred to the local tertiary neurosurgical center. Workup for thrombophilia and vascular malformations was initiated. The child recovered uneventfully and demonstrated normal developmental status at follow-up.
Abdulsalam et al. (Wed,) studied this question.