- Rhabdomyolysis and Mild Kidney Injury in a Patient with Acute Hepatitis A.
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Gu Min Cho, Chang Wook Kim, Hyeonjin Seong, Joon Hur, Bu Seok Jeon, Jonghwan Lee, Eun Hui Sim, Seok Jong Lee, Chang Don Lee
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Yeungnam Univ J Med. 2012;29(1):28-30. Published online June 30, 2012
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.12701/yujm.2012.29.1.28
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- A 48-year-old male visited the emergency room of the authors' hospital due to nausea, vomiting, and myalgia for four days. Acute hepatitis A was identified from the serologic marker of the hepatitis A virus. Mild elevation of the serum creatinine and creatinine phosphokinase (CPK) suggested rhabomyolysis, which was confirmed with the serum aldolase, myoglobin, and urine myoglobin. With supportive care, both the liver and renal functions were recovered gradually and fully. This case shows that rhabdomyolysis can be one of the mechanisms of renal complication in cases of acute symptomatic hepatitis A.
- A Case of Sacral Tuberculosis Mimicking Metastatic Bone Tumor with Elevated CA 19-9.
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Kyung Yoon Chang, Kyung Sun Ha, Kyung Seon Park, Eun Hui Sim, Jae Ho Byun
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Yeungnam Univ J Med. 2011;28(2):196-201. Published online December 31, 2011
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.12701/yujm.2011.28.2.196
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- A 73-year-old male presented a six-month history of buttock pain radiating into his thigh. The MRI revealed a large enhancing mass lesion involving the sacrum, with extension into the sacral canal. The tumor markers were measured to distinguish skeletal metastasis of carcinoma from primary bone tumor. The CA 19-9 was elevated. Despite the investigation, the primary site of cancer could not be found. Sacral bone biopsy was done. The pathologic examination revealed necrosis, chronic granulomatous inflammation, and multinucleated giant cells, consistent with tuberculosis. Sacral tuberculosis is rare in patients with no history of tuberculosis. Such solitary osteolytic lesions involving the subarticular region of large joints may mimic bone neoplasms and may be called "tuberculous pseudotumors." This case report intends to emphasize that bone tuberculosis should be a differential diagnosis in the presence of atypical clinical and radiological features. As tuberculous lesions may be mistaken for neoplasms, a small amount of fresh tissue should be sent for culture even if clinical diagnosis of a tumor seems likely. Described herein is a case of sacral tuberculosis mimicking metastatic bone tumor with elevated CA 19-9.
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- Isolated Sacral Tuberculosis: A Case Report and Review of Literature of this Rare Sacral Pathology
Harshit Arora, Vasudha Sharma, Waryaam Singh, Lavanya Arora, Sumer Singh Nanda, Rajesh Pasricha EMJ Neurology.2023;[Epub] CrossRef
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