| Literature DB >> 20175891 |
Gareth J Rosser1, Pablo Garcia Reitböck, Martin C Gray, Paul Warwicker.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Renal involvement in POEMS (polyneuropathy, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, M-band, skin changes) syndrome is considered to be an under-diagnosed phenomenon with no clear treatment path. The limited literature suggests steroids to be the drug of choice, although improvements are limited and usually reverse on withdrawal of the drug. CASEEntities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20175891 PMCID: PMC2848064 DOI: 10.1186/1752-1947-4-63
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Tests at presentation
| Full blood count | Thrombocythaemia - Platelet count 520 × 109/L |
|---|---|
| Liver function | Normal - except alkaline phosphatase 149 IU/l (normal range 38-126 IU/l) |
| Auto-antibodies | antinuclear factor positive - titre 1/100 (double-stranded DNA titre negative), anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA) negative, rheumatoid factor negative |
| Immunoglobulin levels | normal, Bence Jones Proteinuria - negative, immunofixation of serum protein electrophoresis - monoclonal band of IgA lambda |
| Thyroid function | free thyroxine 13.9 mIU/l (normal range 9-25 mIU/l), thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) 6.68 mIU/l (normal range 0.5-4.5 mIU/l), thyroid peroxidase antibodies - within normal limits |
Figure 1Renal biopsy. Periodic acid Schiff staining shows membranoproliferative/mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis.
Figure 2Plasma creatinine and urinary protein concentration with time. Plasma creatinine stabilises whilst urinary protein loss drops significantly then plateaus at ~0.3 g/24 hours.