TY - JOUR
T1 - Non-infectious aortitis in an immunosuppressed renal transplant recipient with IgA nephropathy.
AU - Bailey, Pippa
PY - 2017/10/19
Y1 - 2017/10/19
N2 - A 54-year-old woman presented with atypical chest pain, fever and malaise. She was immunosuppressed with three agents following a living-donor kidney transplant 1 year previously. Her native kidney failure was secondary to biopsy-demonstrated crescentic IgA nephropathy, with systemic involvement. A CT pulmonary angiogram revealed an inflammatory cuff of soft tissue around the descending thoracic aorta suggesting aortitis. Inflammatory markers were elevated. Given her immunosuppression, the patient was screened extensively for infective causes and was empirically commenced on intravenous meropenem. After 72 hours of no clinical or serological response to antibiotic therapy, negative microbiological investigations and worsening inflammation on serial imaging, she was commenced on high-dose methylprednisolone for presumed inflammatory aortitis. Symptoms and inflammatory markers rapidly normalisedand the patient was discharged home on oral prednisolone. A clinical diagnosis of IgA-related aortitis was made. Imaging 3 months later showed complete resolution of the aortitis.
AB - A 54-year-old woman presented with atypical chest pain, fever and malaise. She was immunosuppressed with three agents following a living-donor kidney transplant 1 year previously. Her native kidney failure was secondary to biopsy-demonstrated crescentic IgA nephropathy, with systemic involvement. A CT pulmonary angiogram revealed an inflammatory cuff of soft tissue around the descending thoracic aorta suggesting aortitis. Inflammatory markers were elevated. Given her immunosuppression, the patient was screened extensively for infective causes and was empirically commenced on intravenous meropenem. After 72 hours of no clinical or serological response to antibiotic therapy, negative microbiological investigations and worsening inflammation on serial imaging, she was commenced on high-dose methylprednisolone for presumed inflammatory aortitis. Symptoms and inflammatory markers rapidly normalisedand the patient was discharged home on oral prednisolone. A clinical diagnosis of IgA-related aortitis was made. Imaging 3 months later showed complete resolution of the aortitis.
UR - https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5665357
U2 - 10.1136/bcr-2017-221136
DO - 10.1136/bcr-2017-221136
M3 - Article (Academic Journal)
C2 - 29054943
SN - 1757-790X
JO - BMJ Case Reports
JF - BMJ Case Reports
ER -