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Review
. 1998 Nov;40(8):612-7.

[A pediatric case of myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic (ANCA)-related crescentic glomerulonephritis associated with propylthiouracil treatment for Graves' disease]

[Article in Japanese]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 9893462
Review

[A pediatric case of myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic (ANCA)-related crescentic glomerulonephritis associated with propylthiouracil treatment for Graves' disease]

[Article in Japanese]
Y Kawasaki et al. Nihon Jinzo Gakkai Shi. 1998 Nov.

Abstract

We treated a 13-year-old girl who developed myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (MPO-ANCA)-related crescentic glomerulonephritis (GN) during propylthiouracil (PTU) treatment for Graves' disease. MPO-ANCA-related crescentic GN during PTU therapy has been described previously in only one recent report of 2 children. We report this case here and describe 15 (13 adult cases) more patients with MPO-ANCA-related GN associated with PTU found in a literature review. The mean age at onset was 41.3 years, and the length of PTU administration ranged from 2 weeks to 6 years (mean 3.5 years). Clinical signs and symptoms were hematuria (100%), proteinuria (100%), arthralgia (7 of 16 cases; 43.8%), fever (4 cases; 20.0%), purpura (2 cases; 12.5%), skin ulcer (1 case; 6.3%) and dyspnea (1 case; 6.3%). These patients were treated with steroid (15 cases; 93.8%), cyclophosphamide (8 cases; 50.0%), steroid pulse therapy (4 cases; 25.0%), or plasma exchange (1 case; 6.3%), or were not treated (1 case; 6.3%). Most patients revealed crescentic GN (15 cases; 93.8%) on renal biopsy, while one exhibited mesangial proliferative GN (6.3%). For 2 of the 16 patients (12.5%) irreversible renal dysfunction persisted and hemodialysis was started. Patients with Graves' disease treated with PTU should be observed carefully by urinalysis and monitoring of the serum creatinine level.

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