| Literature DB >> 28690758 |
Achour Bechir1, Regaieg Haifa1, Ben Abdelkader Atef2, Bouslema Emna1, Achour Asma3, Ben Sayed Nesrine1, Ben Youssef Yosra1, Khelif Abdrrahim1.
Abstract
Hypercalcemia and severe osteolytic lesions are rare complications of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in childhood. We report a case of a 3 years old boy who presented with prolonged fever, nausea, vomiting and increasing lower limbs pain. Skeletal X-rays and CT scan showed severe osteolytic lesions of the skull and extremities. Her physical examination showed multiple cervical lymph nodes. In laboratory tests, he had severe hypercalcemia. Parathyroid hormone (PTH) was not elevated. Despite the absence of circulating blasts, bone marrow biopsy revealed B-precursor (ALL). Hypercalcemia was initially treated with intravenous isotonic sodium chloride solution and diuretics but the serum calcium level normalized only after the beginning of corticosteroids and chemotherapy. The child responded initially to chemotherapy and eventually relapsed and died of septic shock. Acute leukemia must be considered in differential diagnosis in patients with hypercalcemia. A detailed examination even when there no circulating blasts in their peripheral blood smear, and if in doubt bone marrow aspiration should must be taken into consideration.Entities:
Keywords: Acute lymphoblastic leukemia; childhood; hypercalcemia; osteolytic bone lesions
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28690758 PMCID: PMC5491737 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2017.26.244.10506
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1(A,B) multiple osteolytic lesions in the skull, humerus, pelvic bone, both femurs, and both tibias; Skull X-ray (front and profile): reveals multiple lytic lesions; (C) front chest X-ray revealed proximal metaphyseal humoral lytic lesion responsible for fracture; (D) X-ray reveals multiple osteolytic lesions in pelvic bone and both femurs; (E) lumbosacral and pelvis CT Scan revealed diffuse lytic lesions and permeative bony lesions in iliac bones; (F) X-ray of knee joints reveals metaphyseal lytic lesions in both distal femurs and proximal tibiae
Figure 2Acute lymphoblastic leukemia-histology; (A) HE stain x 50; diffuse infiltration of the bone marrow by small round cells; (B) HE stain x 100; nuclei are convoluted with fine chromatin and frequent mitosis; (C) CD10 stain x 100; diffuse expression in neoplastic cells