| Literature DB >> 27921061 |
Jeanne-Marie Giard1, Kerry A Decker1, Jennifer C Lai1, Ryan M Gill2, Aaron C Logan3, Oren K Fix4.
Abstract
Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is a syndrome of excessive immune activation that mimics and occurs with other systemic diseases. A 35-year-old female presented with signs of viral illness at 13 weeks of pregnancy and progressed to acute liver failure (ALF). We discuss the diagnosis of HLH and Kikuchi-Fujimoto (KF) lymphadenitis in the context of pregnancy and ALF. HLH may respond to comorbid disease-specific therapy, and more toxic treatment can be avoided.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27921061 PMCID: PMC5126497 DOI: 10.14309/crj.2016.135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACG Case Rep J ISSN: 2326-3253
Negative/Normal Tests on Initial Work-Up
| Serologies |
| Hepatitis A, B, C, E |
| Cytomegalovirus |
| Epstein-Barr |
| Herpes simplex virus |
| Human immunodeficiency virus |
| |
| Leptospirosis |
| Leishmaniasis |
| Rapid plasma reagent |
| Bacterial blood cultures |
| Malaria smear |
| Quantiferon-TB-gold |
| Antinuclear antibodies |
| Anti-double stranded DNA |
| Liver-kidney microsomal antibodies |
| Immunoglobulin G |
| Ceruloplasmin |
Figure 1Liver biopsy. (A) High-power view of a central zone with confluent necrosis in zone 3 (400x magnification). (B) Hematoxylin and eosin stain of a portal tract with mild lymphoplasmacytic inflammation but intact ducts (400x magnification).
HLH Clinical Diagnostic Criteria
| Five of the eight following criteria: |
| 1. Fever ≥38.5ºC |
| 2. Splenomegaly |
| 3. Cytopenias affecting 2 of the 3 lineages in the peripheral blood |
| Hemoglobin < 9 g/dL |
| Platelets < 100 x 103/mL |
| Neutrophils < 1 x 103/mL |
| 4. Hypertriglyceridemia (fasting, >265 mg/dL) and or hypofibrinogenemia (<150 mg/dL) |
| 5. Hemophagocytosis in bone marrow, spleen, lymph nodes, or liver |
| 6. No or absent natural killer cell activity |
| 7. Ferritin > 500 ng/mL |
| 8. Elevated sCD25 (α-chain of sIL-2 receptor) |
Adapted from Jordan et al (3).
Figure 2Hematoxylin and eosin stain of lymph node biopsy with characteristic agranulocytic necrosis with apoptotic debris, typical of Kikuchi-Fujimoto disease (40x magnification).
Figure 3Hematoxylin and eosin stain of bone marrow biopsy with hemophagocytosis in the center of the field in which a red cell indents a macrophage nucleus (1,000x magnification).