| Literature DB >> 36106216 |
Faisal Al-Husayni1,2, Adeeb Munshi3,4,5, Sultan Qanash1,2, Talal A Shaikhain6, Zeyad Alzahrani7, Bader Alghamdi8,9,10.
Abstract
Clinically amyopathic dermatomyositis (CADM) is characterized by skin manifestations with minimal to no muscle involvement. It is a unique subset of dermatomyositis, which may create a diagnostic challenge due to its vague presentation. Establishing the diagnosis is crucial as CADM is highly associated with rapidly progressive interstitial lung disease (RP-ILD), and patients who suffer from thereof have an abysmal prognosis. Herein, we described a case of a 46-year-old male who presented with a history of skin rash and then started to experience shortness of breath. His respiratory symptoms were progressing swiftly and affected his daily life activities. The initial blood tests were normal, but his chest imaging revealed fibrotic nonspecific interstitial pneumonia. The patient required intubation due to a critical respiratory condition, and later, he needed extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). While the patient was connected to an ECMO machine, a bedside open lung biopsy (BOLB) was performed, and the results were in keeping with RP-ILD and CADM. The patient was started on cyclophosphamide without a response, and his chest computed tomography showed acute respiratory distress syndrome. His hospital course was complicated with pneumonia, severe kidney dysfunction requiring dialysis, and candidemia, which resulted in the patient's death.Entities:
Keywords: anti-mda-5; clinically amyopathic dermatomyositis; extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; lung biopsy; rapid progressive interstitial lung disease
Year: 2022 PMID: 36106216 PMCID: PMC9459409 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.27839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Erythematosus flat-topped papules coalesce to form plaques with some excoriation affecting the elbow and dorsal part of the hand
Figure 2Patient’s chest x-ray showing bilateral cystic changes (red arrows) with patchy airspace opacities (blue arrows) mostly appreciated in the left lower lobe and left retrocardiac area
Patient’s immunological panel
MPO: Myeloperoxidase antibodies; PR3: Proteinase 3.
| Lab | Results | Reference range |
| Antinuclear antibody | Positive | Negative |
| Anti-double stranded DNA | 66.8 IU/mL | <68.6 is negative; 68.6-229 is moderately positive; >229 is strongly positive |
| Rheumatoid factor | <10.70 IU/M | <15 IU/ML |
| Ribonucleoprotein antibody | 4.30 U | <20 is negative; 20-39 is weakly positive; 40-80 is moderately positive; >80 is strongly positive |
| Anti-Smith antibody | 4.08 U | <20 is negative; 20-39 is weakly positive; 40-80 is moderately positive; >80 is strongly positive |
| Antineutrophil cytoplasmic PR3 antibody (C-ANCA) | 8.28 U | <20 is negative; 21-30 is weakly positive; >30 is moderate to strongly positive |
| Antineutrophil cytoplasmic MPO antibody (P-ANCA) | 2.60 U | <20 is negative; 21-30 is weakly positive; >30 is moderate to strongly positive |
| Anti-RO | 27.15 U | <20 is negative; 20-39 is weakly positive; 40-80 is moderately positive; >80 is strongly positive |
| Anti-LA | 3.21 U | <20 is negative; 20-39 is weakly positive; 40-80 is moderately positive; >80 is strongly positive |
| Anti-JO | 4.35 U | <20 is negative; 20-39 is weakly positive; 40-80 is moderately positive; >80 is strongly positive |
| Anti-SCL70 antibodies | 5.35 U | <20 is negative 20-39 is weakly positive 40-80 is moderately positive >80 is strongly positive |
| C3 complement | 1.55 g/L | 0.9-1.9 g/L |
| C4 complement | 0.37 f/L | 0.1-0.4 g/L |
Figure 3Patient’s chest computed tomography showing fibrotic nonspecific interstitial pneumonia pattern
Figure 4(A) Hyaline membrane and reactive pneumocytes with mixed inflammation and (B) organizing features and adjacent reactive pneumocytes
Figure 5Repeated chest imaging showing new bilateral extensive airspace changes (red arrows) with large left pneumothorax (blue arrows)