| Literature DB >> 29716638 |
Giorgia Bucciol1,2, David Cassiman3, Tania Roskams4, Marleen Renard2, Ilse Hoffman2, Peter Witters2, Rik Schrijvers5, Heidi Schaballie2, Barbara Bosch2,6, Maria Caterina Putti7, Olivier Gheysens8, Noel Knops2, Marc Gewillig9,10, Djalila Mekahli11,12, Jacques Pirenne13, Isabelle Meyts14,15.
Abstract
Vitamin A intoxication is a rare cause of liver disease, but the risk increases in patients with underlying liver dysfunction. We present a patient with Shwachman-Diamond Syndrome who developed liver fibrosis, portal hypertension and very severe hepatopulmonary syndrome as a consequence of chronic vitamin A intoxication. She underwent successful liver transplantation with complete resolution of the pulmonary shunting.Entities:
Keywords: Hepatopulmonary syndrome; Liver transplantation; Shwachman-Diamond syndrome; Vitamin A
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29716638 PMCID: PMC5930429 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-018-0818-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Clinical and laboratory characteristics of the patient at diagnosis of SDS (2 years), diagnosis of liver disease (12 years), diagnosis of HPS (15 years), liver transplantation (18 years) and at the present follow-up
| Age 2 | Age 12 | Age 15 | Age 18 | Age 22 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Height | 74.6 cm (< 3° %ile) | 129 cm (< 3° %ile) | 135 cm (< 3° %ile) | 140 cm (< 3° %ile) | 141 cm (< 3° %ile) |
| Weight | 7.6 kg (< 3° %ile) | 21 kg (< 3° %ile) | 30 kg (< 3° %ile) | 41 kg (< 3° %ile) | 44.2 kg (< 3° %ile) |
| CMV-PCR | NA | Negative | Negative | Negative | Negative |
| SatO2 at rest | 100% | 99% | 88% | 79% | 99% |
| PaO2 arterial blood gas in room air | 115 mmHg | NA | 50 mmHg | 35 mmHg | NA |
| A-a gradient in room air | -6 mmHg | NA | 61 mmHg | 75 mmHg | NA |
| White blood count | 8400/uL (5500-15,500) | 3000/uL (4500-13,000) | 1390/uL (4000-10,000) | 1500/uL (4000-10,000) | 4000/uL (4000-10,000) |
| Neutrophils | 2200/uL (1500-9000) | 1000/uL (1800-8000) | 400/uL (2500-7800) | 400/uL (2500-7800) | 1400/uL (2500-7800) |
| Hemoglobin | 13.9 g/dL (11.5-13.5) | 10.9 g/dL (12-16) | 9.4 g/dL (12-16) | 10.4 g/dL (12-16) | 16 g/dL (12-16) |
| Platelets | 307,000/uL | 48,000/uL | 23,000/uL (150000-450,000) | 19,000/uL (150000-450,000) | 153,000/uL (150000-450,000) |
| Lymphocytes | 4700/uL (1700-6900) | 1700/uL (1200-3600) | 840/uL (1200-3600) | 800/uL (1200-3600) | 1290/uL (1200-3600) |
| T cells (CD3+) | NA | NA | 768/uL (800-3500) | NA | 1060/uL (798-2823) |
| B cells (CD19+) | NA | NA | 49/uL (200-600) | NA | 120/uL (82-476) |
| NK cells (CD56+) | NA | NA | 22/uL (70-1200) | NA | 79/uL (66-745) |
| IgG | NA | 15.60 g/L (5.30-13) | 14.60 g/L (5.76-12.65) | 12.20 g/L (7.51-15.60) | 9.10 g/L (7.51-15.60) |
| IgA | NA | 3.23 g/L (0.60-2.70) | 4.11 g/L (0.81-2.32) | 4.10 g/L (0.82-4.53) | 3.19 g/L (0.82-4.53) |
| IgM | NA | 0.85 g/L (0.43 - 1.73) | 0.67 g/L (0.30-1.59) | 1.13 g/L (0.46-3.04) | 0.47 g/L (0.46-3.04) |
| AST | 166 U/L (5-37) | 46 U/L (≤ 32) | 32 U/L (≤ 32) | 27 U/L (≤ 32) | 23 U/L (≤ 31) |
| ALT | 187 U/L (5-37) | 15 U/L (≤ 31) | 20 U/L(≤ 31) | 19 U/L (≤ 31) | 14 U/L (≤ 31) |
| Gamma GT | 27 U/L (7-32) | 69 U/L (≤ 35) | 13 U/L (≤ 35) | 13 U/L (≤ 35) | 7 U/L (≤ 40) |
| Total bilirubin | 0.43 mg/dL (0.2-1) | 1.58 mg/dL (≤ 1) | 3.79 mg/dL (≤ 1) | 5.17 mg/dL (≤ 1) | 0.38 mg/dL (≤ 1.18) |
| INR | NA | 1.3 | 1.5 | 1.3 | 1 |
| Albumin | 45 g/L (32-52) | 38 g/L (35-52) | 35 g/L (35-52) | 37 g/L (35-52) | 39 g/L (35-52) |
A-a Alveolar-arterial, ALT Alanine transaminase, AST Aspartate transaminase, CMV Cytomegalovirus, Gamma GT Gamma-glutamyltransferase, HPS Hepatopulmonary syndrome, Ig Immunoglobulin, INR International normalized ratio, mmHg Millimeters of mercury, NA No data available, NK Natural killer, uL Microliter, %ile Percentile. Reference ranges for age in brackets
Fig. 1Biopsy of the explanted liver. The hematoxylin and eosin stain shows hyperplasia of hepatic stellate cells, which have a foamy cytoplasm containing abnormally large fat droplets (big arrows), in the context of enlarged sinusoids (thin arrows)