Severe lupus after two years of hemodialysis: It exists and can be serious.
Marouane JabraneMohammed BouchoualMohamed ArrayhaniPublished in: The Egyptian journal of internal medicine (2023)
Progression of lupus nephropathy (LN) to end-stage renal disease is a serious complication and requires subsequent replacement therapy. Lupus disease activity is extinguished in chronic hemodialysis. We report the observation of a 35-year-old female patient, in conventionnel hemodialysis for two years (chronic glomerulonephritis), admitted to the emergency room for convulsions, left flaccid tenderness, cutaneous-mucosal pallor and altered general condition evolving since three days before her admission. we also observed a spontaneous ecchymotic lesions on the right arm. Echodoppler of the right upper extremity was in favor of a partially thrombosed aneurysm of the right brachial artery. The biological workup showed pancytopenia, the requested immunological workup showed a low complement C 3 , a positive level of anti-DNA antibodies. The patient was treated as severe lupus flare: Bolus of methylprednisolone, followed by oral administration, associated with Mycophenolate mofétil (MMF) at a dose of 1 g/d. The evolution was favorable on the clinical, biological and radiological levels. Systemic lupus erythematous (SLE) can occur even after several years of hemodialysis and sometimes in a severe form, pushing the clinician to think of this pathology in the presence of evocative signs.
Keyphrases
- disease activity
- end stage renal disease
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- peritoneal dialysis
- chronic kidney disease
- rheumatoid arthritis
- rheumatoid arthritis patients
- ankylosing spondylitis
- replacement therapy
- juvenile idiopathic arthritis
- case report
- emergency department
- drug induced
- coronary artery
- healthcare
- public health
- circulating tumor
- ulcerative colitis
- cell free