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Case Reports
. 2017 Apr 13:5:26-31.
doi: 10.5414/CNCS109082. eCollection 2017.

Plasmapheresis for treatment of immune complex-mediated glomerulonephritis in infective endocarditis: a case report and literature review

Affiliations
Case Reports

Plasmapheresis for treatment of immune complex-mediated glomerulonephritis in infective endocarditis: a case report and literature review

Meredith Halpin et al. Clin Nephrol Case Stud. .

Abstract

We report the case of a 57-year-old man who presented with subacute bacterial endocarditis secondary to Streptococcus mutans complicated by biopsy-proven immune complex-mediated glomerulonephritis (ICGN). Despite initial treatment with antibiotics and a short course of corticosteroids, the kidney function further deteriorated, and plasmapheresis was introduced as third-line therapy to remove circulating immune complexes. Following 7 treatment sessions, the patient recovered kidney function. We discuss the potential merit of plasmapheresis for patients with subacute bacterial endocarditis who develop ICGN.

Keywords: Streptococcus mutans; immune complex; plasma exchange; proliferative glomerulonephritis; subacute endocarditis.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.. Kidney biopsy findings of immune complex-mediated glomerulonephritis and time course of disease. A: A hypercellular glomerulus, interstitial inflammation, and red blood cell casts are seen on intermediate-power light microscopy (PAS stain, 100×). B: Global endocapillary proliferation without crescent formation is seen on high-power light microscopy (PAS stain, 400×). C: Significant reactivity for C3 (the strongest of all components) is seen on direct immunofluorescence microscopy (400×). D: Large sub-endothelial deposits (labeled with arrows) are seen on electron microscopy. E: Time course of the serum creatinine, rheumatoid factor, and complement component C3 and C4 over the duration of the hospitalization.

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