| Literature DB >> 34179694 |
Haldun Bulut1,2, Alexandra H E Herbers2, Ilse M G Hageman2, Paetrick M Netten2, Hendrik J M de Jonge3, Robert Joustra4, Frank L van de Veerdonk1, Cornelis P C de Jager5.
Abstract
We describe a case of a previous healthy 20-year-old male athlete who presented with an atypical clinical profile with multiorgan involvement within five weeks after confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection, suggestive for multisystem inflammatory syndrome (MIS); MIS is a rare, potentially life-threatening complication associated with SARS-CoV-2. MIS shares similar clinical features compatible with several overlapping lifethreatening hyperinflammatory syndromes, such as incomplete Kawasaki Disease (KD) and toxic shock syndrome (TSS) associated to a cytokine storm suggestive of a macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) without fulfilling the criteria for hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), that may create a great challenge to distinguish between them. MIS should promptly be considered and treated, as uncontrolled MIS has a high mortality. In MIS cardiac involvement, heart failure may present as an additional problem, especially because volume loading is advised in accordance with proposed therapy. Carefully monitoring of the respiratory and cardiac status in response of resuscitation is therefore warranted.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Glucocorticoids; Heart failure; Immunoglobulins; Multisystem inflammatory syndrome
Year: 2021 PMID: 34179694 PMCID: PMC8214721 DOI: 10.1007/s42399-021-00998-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SN Compr Clin Med ISSN: 2523-8973
Patient characteristics during and after hospitalization
| Day 0 | Day 2 | Day 6 | 1 week after discharge | 4 weeks after discharge | Reference values | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hemoglobin (g/dL) | 7.7 | 7.2 | 8.0 | 8.6 | 9.1 | 12–18 g/dL |
| White cell count (109 cells/L) | 6.9 | 6.5 | 13.6 | 5.9 | 5.8 | 4–11 × 109 cells/L |
| Lymphocyte count (109 cells/L) | 0.3 | 0.6 | 2.8 | 1.0–3.5 × 109 cells/L | ||
| Platelet count (109 cells/L) | 133 | 113 | 368 | 596 | 248 | 150–400 × 109 cells/L |
| Lactate dehydrogenase (U/L) | 418 | 379 | 335 | 197 | <250 U/L | |
| Ferritin (μg/L) | 3300 | 7400 | 4100 | 1300 | 190 | 20–300 μg/L |
| CRP (mg/L) | 310 | 144 | 29 | 3 | < 3 | 0–8 mg/L |
| Procalcitonin (ng/L) | 8.1 | 8.0 | 0.82 | 0–0.5 ng/L | ||
| D-dimer (mg/L) | 7.44 | 4.37 | 2.0–4.0 mg/L | |||
| Fibrinogen (mg/L) | 1050 | 1480 | 1600–3200 mg/L | |||
| Hs Troponin I (ng/L) | 3 | 158 | 48 | 6 | 0–47 (ng/L) | |
| nT-proBNP (ng/L) | 120 | 2538 | 756 | < 35 | 0–125 (ng/L) |
Fig. 1A Timeline of cardiac biomarker levels in response to interventions throughout hospital stay. Interventions at 1 are as follows: start broad-spectrum antibiotics cefuroxime and metronidazole, start prednisolone 60 mg once daily, and high doses of prophylactic nadroparin 0.6 mL daily. Interventions at 2 are as follows: addition gentamicin to cefuroxime and metronidazole; start IVIG 150 g once (and next day 80 g once) for a total of 2 days of treatment; start high doses of acetylsalicylacid 600 mg four times daily during 2 days, followed by 200 mg once daily; prednisolone 80 mg twice daily during a day, followed by 80 mg once daily during 5 days; and start high-flow nasal oxygen therapy and diuretics. B Timeline of the inflammatory marker levels in response to the described interventions above
Fig. 2Images of echocardiogram at hospitalization day 2; suspicion on cardiac involvement as part of MIS. The panels below demonstrate depressed systolic left ventricular function, slight tricuspidal valve insufficiency, aotic valve with 3 leaflets without pericardial effusion, and a dilated vena cava inferior