| Literature DB >> 30756004 |
Luís Pontes Dos Santos1, Joana Couto1, Miguel Romano1, Raquel López1.
Abstract
Light-chain deposition disease is a rare paraproteinaemia characterized by deposition of monoclonal light-chain immunoglobulins with a non-amyloid structure, most frequently affecting the kidney. The authors present the case of a 58-year-old man admitted due to haemorrhagic shock caused by spontaneous splenic rupture. Investigation showed coagulopathy, homogeneous hepatomegaly with elevated cholestasis enzymes but normal bilirubinaemia, and a nephrotic syndrome with monoclonal kappa light chains. Liver and bone marrow biopsies revealed light-chain deposition disease. Splenic rupture as the presentation of a paraproteinaemia is rare. The diagnosis of light-chain deposition disease should be considered in case of a monoclonal plasma cell disorder with Congo-red negative deposits on histology. LEARNING POINTS: Spontaneous splenic rupture is a rare presentation of a paraproteinaemia.Light-chain deposition disease is a rare disease with non-fibrillar deposition of monoclonal light-chain immunoglobulins most frequently affecting the kidney.Light-chain deposition disease should be suspected in case of a monoclonal plasma cell disorder with Congo-red negative deposits on histology.Entities:
Keywords: Light-chain deposition disease; paraproteinemia; splenic rupture
Year: 2018 PMID: 30756004 PMCID: PMC6346975 DOI: 10.12890/2018_0001010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Case Rep Intern Med ISSN: 2284-2594
Laboratory investigation results
| Value | Normal Range | |
|---|---|---|
Value outside the normal range
Figure 1Abdominal computerized tomography: Splenic rupture with an area of possible splenic infarction, large subcapsular splenic hematoma, exuberant hemoperitoneum and homogenous hepatomegaly of 17cm
Figure 2Liver biopsy histology, Hematoxylin-eosin staining, 10×: Portal and peripostal inflammatory infiltrate and acidophilic amorphous deposits surrounding the hepatocytes
Figure 3Liver biopsy histology, Congo-red staining, 20×: Amorphous deposits with atypical positivity