A 75-year-old man was diagnosed with pulmonary nontuberculous mycobacterial (NTM) infection in February 2005 and was treated with rifampicin, ethambutol, and clarithromycin. However, the infection was resistant to treatment, and his chest radiograph showed an abnormality that gradually seemed to aggravate. The patient's sputum was positive for Mycobacteria. Moreover, the patient had dyspnea and an underlying chronic inflammation in the lungs. He visited our hospital because of dyspnea and leg edema in June 2011. Laboratory evaluation on admission revealed proteinuria (6 g/day) and decreased serum total protein (5.8 g/dL) and albumin (1.6 g/dL) levels, indicating nephrotic syndrome.Percutaneous renal biopsy revealed membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) in the acute stage and AA amyloidosis of mild degree. AA amyloidosis was also diagnosed histologically on gastric and colonic biopsy, in addition to renal biopsy. His renal function decreased gradually, and therefore, he underwent hemodialysis therapy in January 2012. However, his gastrointestinal-related symptoms persisted, and his appetite diminished, because of which he had become severely malnourished; he died 8 months later. This is a rare case of a patient with two different renal lesions (MPGN and AA amyloidosis) complicated with NTM. Our case suggests that MPGN and amyloidosis should be considered in elderly patients with nephrotic syndrome onset and chronic inflammation.
A 76-year-old woman on hemodialysis (HD) presented with pain and swelling in the left wrist and forearm. The osteomyelitis occurred in the part of the ulna adjacent to the arteriovenous fistula. Mycobacterium tuberculosis was identified in pus obtained from the left forearm, leading to a diagnosis of tuberculous osteomyelitis. The patient was treated with anti-tuberculous drugs and her symptoms improved. In this study, we report a case of tuberculous osteomyelitis occurring in the ulna, which is not the usual site of predilection for tuberculosis infection. As HD patients exhibit a high frequency of extrapulmonary tuberculosis, tuberculous osteomyelitis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of infectious osteomyelitis. In addition, it may be useful to perform stab cultures at an early stage in order to diagnose tuberculous osteomyelitis.
A 77-year-old man on maintenance dialysis developed hypotension, nausea and abdominal pain one hour after beginning to undergo hemodialysis. Abdominal computed tomography (CT) showed gas shadows in the intrahepatic portal vein and the small intestinal wall, but no signs indicating intestinal necrosis. Three days later, the gas shadows on abdominal CT disappeared by conservative therapy. In cases with both pneumatosis cystoides intestinalis and hepatic portal venous gas, intestinal necrosis should therefore be suspected and surgical therapy should also be considered, particularly in hemodialysis patients with a risk of intestinal ischemia. However, conservative therapy may be an option in cases with no intestinal necrosis.
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