| Literature DB >> 21435204 |
Haldane Porteous1, Nadia Morgan, Julio Lanfranco, Monica Garcia-Buitrago, Larry Young, Oliver Lenz.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Type 4 renal tubular acidosis is an uncommon clinical manifestation of systemic lupus erythematosus and has been reported to portend a poor prognosis. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case report which highlights the successful management of a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus complicated by type 4 renal tubular acidosis who did not do poorly. CASEEntities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21435204 PMCID: PMC3074556 DOI: 10.1186/1752-1947-5-114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Laboratory investigations on admission to Jackson Memorial Hospital
| Hemoglobin, 6.6 g/dl | Na+, 131 mM/l | |
| Hematocrit, 20.9% | K+, 5.7 mM/l | |
| Platelets, 544 × 109/l | Cl-, 105 mM/l | |
| White blood cell count, 3.5 × 109/l | Neutrophils, 80.4% | HCO3, 18 mM/l |
| Lymphocytes, 16.0% | Blood urea nitrogen, 60 mg/dl | |
| Monocytes, 2.1% | Creatinine, 1.69 mg/dl | |
| Eosinophils, 0.3% |
Urinalysis results from day 4 of admission
| pH 5 | White blood cell count, 16 per high power field |
| 24-hour urinary protein, 0.81 g/day | Hyaline cast, zero to two per high-power field |
| Red blood cell count, 27 per high-power field | Squamous epithelial cells, one per high-power field |
Arterial blood gas and basic metabolic panel results from day 5 of admission
| pH 7.34 | Na+, 145 mM/l |
| HCO3, 14 mM/l | K+, 5.5 mM/l |
| CO2, 26 mmHg | Cl-, 120 mM/l |
| pO2, 96 mmHg | HCO3, 19 mM/l |
| Blood urea nitrogen, 67 mg/dl | |
| Creatinine, 1.09 mg/dl |
Figure 1Photomicrographs of the renal biopsy. (a) Lupus nephritis class IV-G(A) + V (hematoxylin and eosin stain; original magnification, × 200). (b) Glomerulus showing global endocapillary proliferation, fibrinoid necrosis, neutrophilic infiltration and capillary wall thickening (hematoxylin and eosin stain; original magnification, × 600). (c) Glomerulus showing mesangial expansion with hypercellularity and occlusion of peripheral lumina (periodic acid-Schiff stain; original magnification, × 600). (d) Glomerulus showing thickened basement membranes with numerous spikes and occasional dual contour (methenamine silver stain; original magnification, × 600). (e) Glomerulus showing areas of bright red fibrinoid necrosis (trichrome stain; original magnification, × 600). (f) Minimal tubulointerstitial fibrosis (trichrome stain; original magnification, × 100).
Figure 2Graph showing trend of serum urea during admission.
Figure 3Graph showing trend of serum creatinine during admission.
Figure 4Graph depicting achievement and maintenance of normal serum potassium, bicarbonate and urine pH in keeping with resolution of type 4 renal tubular acidosis.
Calculation of transtubular gradient
| Urine sodium, 59 mM/l | Transtubular gradient |
| Urine potassium, 38 mM/l | Urine K/plasma K |
| Urine osmolality, 405 mOsm/kg | Urine osmolality/plasma osmolality |
| Plasma potassium, 5.1 mM/l | |
| Plasma osmolality, 288 mOsm/kg | Patient's transtubular gradient = 5.3 |