| Literature DB >> 27904829 |
Aram Behdadnia1, Seyyed Farshad Allameh2, Mehrnaz Asadi Gharabaghi3, Seyed Reza Najafizadeh1, Ahmad Tahamoli Roudsari1, Alireza Ghajar4, Morsaleh Ganji4, Mohsen Afarideh4.
Abstract
A 31-year old woman with persistent fever for 6 weeks and unresponsive to antibiotic therapy came for rheumatologic investigation. After computed tomography (CT) studies of her neck, thorax and abdomen revealed bilateral cervical, axillary and retroperitoneal lymph node enlargements, histopathologic evaluation of the resected nodes showed features of histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenopathy suggestive of Kikuchi-Fujimoto's lymphadenopathy. Kikuchi-Fujimoto Disease (KFD) involving the retroperitoneal nodes is extremely unusual and even more challenging to diagnose when there are no early signs of extranodal involvement or abdominopelvic pain. We present a case of systemic KFD involving the cervical, axillary and retroperitoneal lymph nodes and emphasize the clinical interest to properly differentiate between the benign condition of KFD that requires no more than minimal to low dosage steroid therapy and the potentially life-threatening lupus lymphadenitis that mandates intensive immunosuppressive treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Kikuchi-Fujimoto disease; lupus lymphadenitis; necrotizing lymphadenitis; systemic lupus erythematosus
Year: 2016 PMID: 27904829 PMCID: PMC5116869 DOI: 10.5582/irdr.2016.01055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intractable Rare Dis Res ISSN: 2186-3644