| Literature DB >> 30083060 |
Takuya Murakami1, Tetsu Akimoto1, Tomoyuki Yamazaki1, Hiromichi Yoshizawa1, Mari Okada1, Atsushi Miki1, Saki Nakagawa1, Ken Ohara1, Taro Sugase1, Takahiro Masuda1, Takahisa Kobayashi1, Osamu Saito1, Shigeaki Muto1, Daisuke Nagata1.
Abstract
A 28-year-old man was referred and admitted to our hospital due to Escherichia coli O157-mediated hemorrhagic colitis with severe thrombocytopenia. A systemic workup concluded that the patient had acute pancreatitis as well as hemolytic uremic syndrome. The patient was ultimately discharged, with his platelet count having recovered. Our case serves an illustrative example of potentially serious complications of an increasingly recognized public health problem. Systemic studies on this topic are insufficient, and we strongly recommend the further accumulation of more experiences like ours. Several diagnostic and management concerns that emerged in this case are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: disseminated intravascular coagulation; hemolytic uremic syndrome; pancreatitis; platelet transfusion; recombinant human thrombomodulin; thrombocytopenia
Year: 2018 PMID: 30083060 PMCID: PMC6069030 DOI: 10.1177/1179547618785137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Med Insights Case Rep ISSN: 1179-5476
Figure 1.Select axial images of diagnostic abdominal computed tomography. An inflamed colon with circumferential bowel wall thickening (arrowheads) was shown by on initial study (A and B). After 3 days, a second scan (C and D) demonstrated distension of the small intestine accompanied by air-fluid levels (narrow arrow) and the accumulation of ascites (wide arrows) as well as an exaggeration of bowel thickening (arrowhead).
The laboratory data on admission to our hospital.
| White blood cell | 19 600/μL | (3900-9800) |
| Neutrophils | 78.6% | (42.0-72.2) |
| Eosinophils | 0.3% | (0.0-5.8) |
| Basophils | 0.2% | (0.0-1.7) |
| Monocytes | 15.6% | (2.5-11.1) |
| Lymphocytes | 5.3% | (19.9-46.1) |
| Hb | 10.0 g/dL | (13.5-17.6) |
| Platelet count | 1.3 × 104/μL | (13.0-36.9) |
| PT | ||
| Patient’s plasma | 14.5 s | (10.4-12.2) |
| Control plasma | 11.5 s | |
| PT-INR | 1.29 | (0.9-1.2) |
| Active partial thromboplastin time | ||
| Patient’s plasma | 36.1 s | (23.1-36.3) |
| Control plasma | 29.9 s | |
| Antithrombin III | 69.9% | (88.0-116.0) |
| Fibrinogen degradation product | 134.9 μg/mL | (0-5) |
| 20.7 μg/mL | (0-1.5) | |
| Blood urea nitrogen | 59 mg/dL | (8-20) |
| Serum Cr | 2.15 mg/dL | (0.63-1.03) |
| Total protein | 4.3 g/dL | (6.9-8.4) |
| Serum albumin | 2.0 g/dL | (3.9-5.1) |
| Sodium | 122 mmol/L | (136-148) |
| Potassium | 4.4 mmol/L | (3.6-5.0) |
| Chloride | 89 mmol/L | (96-108) |
| Calcium | 9.6 mg/dL | (8.8-10.1) |
| Aspartate aminotransferase | 74 IU/L | (11-30) |
| Alanine aminotransferase | 15 IU/L | (4-30) |
| Amylase | 106 IU/L | (44-132) |
| Lipase | 96 IU/L | (13-49) |
| LDH | 2422 IU/L | (109-216) |
| CRP | 18.11 mg/dL | (0-0.14) |
Abbreviations: CRP, C-reactive protein; Hb, hemoglobin; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; INR, international normalized ratio.
The reference ranges for each parameter used at our institute are indicated in parentheses.
Figure 2.Changes in several clinical parameters during hospitalization. On hospital day 7, the patient no longer manifested thrombocytopenia and showed a recovered platelet count above 15 × 104/μL; however, normalization of the elevated serum LDH levels lagged behind by approximately 3 weeks. Note that PEX combined with intermittent HD (vertical bars on top) was performed on hospital days 2, 3, 4, and 7. HD indicates hemodialysis; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; PEX, plasma exchange.