Infant Death Following Home Birth: A Case Report of Fatal Neonatal Hypoglycemia

J Forensic Sci. 2020 May;65(3):995-998. doi: 10.1111/1556-4029.14247. Epub 2019 Dec 4.

Abstract

Infants born to diabetic mothers are at increased risk for symptomatic hypoglycemia and death after birth. A 36-year-old G4P3 mother with a history of gestational diabetes and newly diagnosed type II insulin-dependent diabetes gave birth at home, in the care of a midwife, to a macrosomic infant girl (10 lbs.). Several hours after birth, the infant became lethargic and was found to be hypoglycemic (blood sugar: 28 mg/dL). Glucose and sugar water were administered by the midwife; however, the infant continued to decompensate. Emergency medical services were called, and the infant was transported to the hospital where, despite resuscitative efforts, she died. An autopsy and review of the literature was performed. At autopsy, characteristic features of maternal-fetal glucose dysregulation were identified, including fetal macrosomia, cardiomegaly, hepatomegaly, and severe pancreatic islet cell hypertrophy/hyperplasia. Developmental abnormalities and other potential causes of death were not identified. Although deaths due to hypoglycemia cannot be reliably diagnosed postmortem using vitreous glucose levels, a clinical history of maternal glucose dysregulation in combination with certain gross and histologic findings should prompt a pathologist to consider maternal-fetal glucose dysregulation as a diagnosis of exclusion and cause of death.

Keywords: autopsy; forensic pathology; gestational diabetes; homebirth; infants of diabetic mothers; neonatal hypoglycemia; pancreatic islet cell hyperplasia/hypertrophy (ICHH).

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Cardiomegaly / pathology
  • Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 / complications*
  • Diabetes, Gestational*
  • Fatal Outcome
  • Female
  • Fetal Macrosomia / pathology
  • Hepatomegaly / pathology
  • Home Childbirth
  • Humans
  • Hyperplasia
  • Hypertrophy
  • Hypoglycemia / diagnosis*
  • Hypoglycemia / etiology
  • Infant, Newborn
  • Islets of Langerhans / pathology
  • Pregnancy
  • Pregnancy in Diabetics*