Acute Shoshin beriberi syndrome immediately post-kidney transplant with rapid recovery after thiamine administration.
Isaac M EliasGraham SinclairTom David Blydt-HansenPublished in: Pediatric transplantation (2019)
Pediatric kidney transplant surgery is usually well tolerated, despite suboptimal physical conditioning that may result from uremia and nutritional deficiencies that accompany end-stage kidney failure. Nutritional supplementation is used to overcome such deficiencies, especially for children needing dialysis. Thiamine, a water-soluble vitamin also known as vitamin B1, is a critical cofactor in energy metabolism and may be competitively inhibited by the antimetabolite oxythiamine, a uremic toxin that accumulates in kidney failure. We report a case of a thiamine deficiency syndrome leading to overwhelming cardiac dysfunction, metabolic instability, and hemodynamic compromise, after otherwise uneventful kidney transplant surgery. Prior to transplant, this 14-year-old boy was treated with peritoneal dialysis and received thiamine supplementation. Post-transplant, the patient first developed hyperglycemia, then lactic acidosis, and subsequently hemodynamic instability despite escalating treatment with volume resuscitation and inotropic medication. He made a rapid and complete recovery after administration of IV thiamine. This is the first reported case of Shoshin beriberi syndrome in a pediatric kidney transplant recipient. Inadequate dialysis may have been a key factor, with toxin accumulation and thiamine transporter downregulation contributing to his status. Functional thiamine deficiency should be considered as a potential treatable cause of early post-transplant hemodynamic instability.
Keyphrases
- peritoneal dialysis
- end stage renal disease
- case report
- chronic kidney disease
- escherichia coli
- water soluble
- coronary artery bypass
- healthcare
- young adults
- emergency department
- physical activity
- cell proliferation
- signaling pathway
- heart failure
- coronary artery disease
- risk assessment
- replacement therapy
- surgical site infection
- respiratory failure
- climate change
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- mechanical ventilation
- adverse drug
- human health
- newly diagnosed