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A curious case of expanded dengue syndrome.

Muzeer AhmedMuhammad Arsalan WasimAbdul Nafey KaziHiba AkberMaheen SheikhMuhammad Junaid Patel
Published in: Tropical doctor (2024)
Dengue fever (DF) primarily presents with fever, headache, malaise, bleeding manifestations and haemoconcentration. World Health Organization (WHO) classifies DF according to levels of severity: (a) without warning signs; (b) with warning signs, such as abdominal pain, persistent vomiting, fluid accumulation, mucosal bleeding, lethargy, liver enlargement, increasing haematocrit and thrombocytopenia; and (c) severe dengue with severe plasma leakage, severe bleeding or organ failure. Atypical clinical presentations of DF are defined as expanded dengue syndrome: this includes renal, cardiac, hepatic or cerebral damage. We report such a severe case where a young man developed acute kidney injury, acute fulminant liver failure and acute pancreatitis secondary to DF, but recovered.
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