| Literature DB >> 32290867 |
Ahmad Al-Abdouh1, Abdul Muhaymin Siyal2, Hanan Seid2, Ammer Bekele2, Pablo Garcia3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hydralazine is a common vasodilator which has been used for the treatment of hypertension and heart failure. Hydralazine can induce antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated vasculitis due to its auto-immunogenic capability and one of the very rare presentations is pulmonary-renal syndrome. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Drug-induced vasculitis; Glomerulonephritis; Hydralazine; Pulmonary hemorrhage; Pulmonary–renal syndrome
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32290867 PMCID: PMC7158156 DOI: 10.1186/s13256-020-02378-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Fig. 1Chest X-ray shows diffuse nodular densities bilaterally but more prominent on the right lung
Fig. 2Chest computed tomography shows bilateral irregularly shaped nodules asymmetric on the right with peripheral and pleural-based distribution
Differential diagnoses of the case
| Differential diagnoses | |
|---|---|
| Hydralazine-induced ANCA-associated vasculitis with pulmonary–renal syndrome | |
| Acute heart failure with pulmonary edema and cardiorenal syndrome | |
| Acute renal failure with pulmonary edema and uremic hemoptysis | |
| Respiratory tract infection with prerenal renal failure and/or postinfectious GN | |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus | |
| Cryoglobulinemic vasculitis |
ANCA antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody, GN glomerulonephritis
Fig. 3a Light microscopy: a glomerulus with segmental fibrin in glomerular tufts, and segmental cellular crescents (four out of 20 glomeruli showed same features). b Light microscopy: one glomerulus with global sclerosis. c Light microscopy: occasional marginating neutrophils in the remaining glomeruli. d Light microscopy: focal mild tubular injury with tubular cell vacuolization, apical blebbing, focal dilation, with some proteinaceous casts and sparse red blood cells casts. The interstitium has mild focal inflammatory infiltrate. There is mild tubular atrophy and interstitial fibrosis. e Immunofluorescence: segmental granular glomerular staining for immunoglobulin 2, C3, and trace stain for kappa and lambda. f Electron microscopy: a glomerulus with a cellular crescents and some fibrin
Timeline of events
| Timeline | Events |
|---|---|
| Day 0 | • Admitted with hypoxia and acute renal failure (on nasal cannula) |
| Day 1 | • Worsening of acute hypoxic respiratory failure (on high-flow nasal cannula) |
| Day 2 | • Worsening of acute hypoxic respiratory failure (intubated) |
| • She underwent bronchoscopy | |
| • She became anuric | |
| • She was started on pulse dose steroids | |
| Day 3 | • She underwent kidney biopsy |
| • She was started on intermittent hemodialysis | |
| • She was started on cyclophosphamide | |
| Day 14 | • She was discharged to subacute rehabilitation facility on cyclophosphamide and prednisone (tapering dose) |
| • She was scheduled for out-patient intermittent hemodialysis three times per week (polyuric) | |
| Day 45 | • Cyclophosphamide was stopped |
| Day 82 | • She was weaned off dialysis (last session) |
| Day 113 | • She was given the first dose of rituximab for maintenance therapy |
| Day 297 | • She finished her tapering steroids course |
| • She was given the second dose of rituximab for maintenance therapy | |
| • Kidney function is stable (GFR 49 mL/minute/1.73 m2) |
GFR glomerular filtration rate