| Literature DB >> 25745498 |
Jintanat Ananworanich1, Anandita A Datta2, James Lk Fletcher3, Natavudh Townamchai4, Nitiya Chomchey3, Eugene Kroon3, Irini Sereti5, Victor Valcour6, Jerome H Kim7.
Abstract
We report a 57-year old man with diabetes mellitus and hypertension who presented with acute HIV infection. Routine blood tests showed an elevated blood urea nitrogen and creatinine. Renal biopsy showed acute tubular nephropathy, which has not been reported to occur during acute HIV infection, in the absence of rhabdomyolysis or multiple organ system failure. Antiretroviral therapy was initiated. His renal failure gradually resolved without further intervention. At one year of follow-up his HIV RNA was undetectable, and his renal function was normal. The case illustrates a rare manifestation of acute HIV infection - acute renal failure - in an older man with diabetes and hypertension. In this setting acute kidney injury might mistakenly have been attributed to his chronic comorbidities, and this case supports early HIV-1 testing in the setting of a high index of suspicion.Entities:
Keywords: Acute HIV infection; Acute renal failure; Acute retroviral syndrome; Acute tubular nephropathy; Elderly; HIV
Year: 2014 PMID: 25745498 PMCID: PMC4350645 DOI: 10.1186/1742-6405-11-34
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Ther ISSN: 1742-6405 Impact factor: 2.250
Figure 1Light microscope (Hematoxylin Eosin stain) of the kidney tissue showed dilated tubules, focal epithelial attenuation, blebbing, sloughing and nuclear dropout.
Figure 2Electron microscope of the kidney tissue showed attenuation and loss of nuclei.
Published cases of acute renal failure during acute/primary HIV infection
| First author (year) | Age, race, gender | Acute/primary HIV infection diagnosis | Renal disease diagnosis | Other findings | Outcome of acute renal failure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| del Rio C (1990)
[ | 29-year old, African American man | Non-reactive HIV EIA and Western Blot with seroconversion 4 weeks after presentation | Acute tubular necrosis and mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis by renal biopsy, Creatinine was 2.8 mg/dl and 24-hour urine protein was 6 g | Rhabdomyolysis | Improved after supportive care |
| Levin ML (2001)
[ | 41-year old, Black male | Non-reactive HIV EIA with HIV RNA 700,000 copies/ml. Patient experienced HIV seroconversion 6 weeks later | Acute renal failure from HIVAN diagnosed by renal biopsy. Creatinine was 7.3 mg/dl and 24-hour urine protein was 6.9 g. | None reported | Improved with supportive care and antiretroviral therapy |
| Prabahar MR (2008)
[ | 42-year old, Saudi male | Reactive HIV EIA but primary HIV infection was presumed because of high HIV RNA and consistent clinical profile | Acute renal tubular necrosis diagnosed by renal biopsy with a creatinine of 6.8 mg/dl | Rhabdomyolysis, acute hepatitis | Improved after hemodialysis |
| Pano-Pardo JR (2009)
[ | 19-year old, Haitian American female | HIV seroconversion within the past 8 weeks | Bilateral renal infarcts on CT scan, acute renal failure with a creatinine of 2.3 mg/dl | Rhabdomyolysis, myocarditis, pancreatitis, anemia | Recovered with supportive care |
| Gomes AM (2009)
[ | 38-year old, Black male | Inconclusive HIV EIA and non-reactive Western Blot with HIV RNA >1,000,000 copies/ml | Acute renal failure with a creatinine of 7.5 mg/dl. Renal biopsy was not done due to risk of bleeding | Hemolytic uremic syndrome (hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia) | Improved after plasmapheresis and hemodialysis |
| Merrill ER (2011)
[ | 19-year old, African American male | HIV seroconversion during the hospitalization period | Acute tubular necrosis diagnosed by renal biopsy with a creatinine of 8 mg/dl and abnormal urinalysis (3+ protein, 3+ blood, 158 red cells/HPF) | Rhabdomyolysis, acute hepatitis. CMV IgG was positive | Improved after hemodialysis |
| Szabo S (2002)
[ | 47-year old, African American woman | Reactive HIV EIA and a negative Western Blot with HIV RNA >75,000 copies/ml | Creatinine of 14 mg/dl and 24-hour urine protein of 21.4 g. Renal biopsy showed severe collapsing focal segmental glomerulosclerosis consistent with HIVAN | None reported | Improved after hemodialysis but later died from bacterial sepsis |
Footnote: HIVAN: HIV-associated nephropathy, EIA: enzyme immunoassay, CMV: Cytomegalo virus.