| Literature DB >> 26640733 |
Tiffany Tamse1, Avind Rampersad1, Alejandro Jordan-Villegas2, Jill Ireland3.
Abstract
Idiopathic Hypereosinophilic Syndrome (IHES) is a rare disease that can be difficult to diagnose as the differential is broad. This disease can cause significant morbidity and mortality if left untreated. Our patient is a 17-year-old adolescent female who presented with nonspecific symptoms of abdominal pain and malaise. She was incidentally found to have hypereosinophilia of 16,000 on complete blood count and nonspecific colitis and pulmonary edema on computed tomography. She went into cardiogenic shock due to papillary rupture of her mitral valve requiring extreme life support measures including intubation and extracorporal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) as well as mitral valve replacement. Pathology of the valve showed eosinophilic infiltration as the underlying etiology. The patient was diagnosed with IHES after the exclusion of infectious, rheumatologic, and oncologic causes. She was treated with steroids with improvement of her symptoms and scheduled for close follow-up. In general patients with IHES that have cardiac involvement have poorer prognoses.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26640733 PMCID: PMC4660015 DOI: 10.1155/2015/538762
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Pediatr
Figure 1(a) Chest X-ray showing complete opacification of the thorax suspicion for complete lung consolidation secondary to edema. (b) Echocardiogram images showing flail mitral valve from a ruptured cord and severe mitral regurgitation.
Figure 2(a) Peripheral smear: marked eosinophilia (most eosinophils show intact cytoplasmic granules). (b) Bone marrow biopsy: normocellular marrow with mild megakaryocytic hyperplasia, eosinophilia, and no increase in blasts. No monoclonal B-cells or immunophenotypically abnormal T-cells are detected.
Figure 3(a) Jejunum: diffuse marked eosinophilic infiltrate associated with ischemic tissue damage. (b) Mitral valve: benign endomyocardial tissue demonstrating myocardial necrosis and fibrinous endocarditis with mixed inflammatory infiltrate comprising of eosinophils, lymphocytes, and histiocytes.
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| |
| HIV 1/2 Ag/Ab | Nonreactive |
| Hepatitis A, hepatitis B, and hepatitis C | Nonreactive |
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| Negative |
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| Negative |
|
| Negative |
|
| Negative |
| Blood/fungus cultures | Negative |
| Urine cultures | Negative |
|
| |
| ANA (blood and abdominal fluid) | Negative |
| DSDNA/SSA Ab | Negative |
| Smith/RNP Ab | Negative |
| ANCA | Negative |
| C3 | 39 mg/dL |
| C4 | 2 mg/dL |
| IgG | 345 mg/dL |
| IgA | 111 mg/dL |
| IgM | 143 mg/dL |
| IgE | 191 kU/L |
| CD4 helper cells | 34.3% |
| CD8 suppressor cells | 26.4% |
| Total CD3 | 66.2% |
| Total B-cells | 28.9% |
| Natural killer cells | 3.2% |
| CD4/CD8 ratio | 1.3 |
| T-cell interpretation | Normal total B-cells |
|
| |
| Beta hCG (urine) | Negative |
| Cortisol |
13.4 |
| Tryptase | 2.6 |
|
| |
| PDGFRa (4q12) FISH | Normal |
| PDGFRb (5q33) FISH | Normal |
| FGFR1 (8p11) FISH | Normal |
| BCR/ABL1/ASS1 t(9,22) FISH | Normal |
| KIT (c-KIT) mutation | Not detected |
| Next-Gen Sequencing myeloid disorders profile | No evidence of mutation in any of genes tested. Low probability of myeloid neoplasm diagnosis (<10%) |
Myeloid disorders profile: ABL1, ASXL1, ATRX, BCOR, BCORL1, BRAF, CALR, CBL, CBLB, CBLC, CDKN 2A, CEBPA, CSF3R, CUX1, DNMT3a, ETV6, EZH2, FBXW7, FLT3, GATA1, GATA2, GNAS, HRAS, IDH1, IDH2, IKZF1, JAK2 Exon 12 + 14, JAK3, KDM6A, KIT, KRAS, MLL, MPL, MYD 88, NOTCH 1, NPM1, NRAS, PDGFRA, PHF 6, PTEN, PTPN11, RAD21, RUNX1, SETBP1, SF3B1, SMC1A, SMC3, SRSF2, STAG2, TET2, TP53, U2AF1, WT1, and ZRSR2.