November 2012 Pulmonary Case of the Month: The Wolves Are at the Door
Lewis J. Wesselius, MD
Department of Pulmonary Medicine
Mayo Clinic Arizona
Scottsdale, AZ
History of Present Illness
A 49 year old female was admitted for hypoxia, lethargy, and an abnormal chest x-ray. She was recently discharged after a 10 day outside hospital stay for a diagnosis of pneumonia treated initially with azithromycin, then clindamycin and discharged on levofloxacin. Corticosteroids given during that hospitalization and she was discharged on taper. As the steroids were tapered, she had increasing dyspnea, confusion, and lethargy. She presented to the emergency room with an abnormal CT chest x-ray and was started on meropenem, vancomycin and azithromycin, and was also given IV methylprednisolone (125 mg initial dose).
PMH, FH and SH
She had her first stroke at age 18 and walks with a cane and has some expressive aphasia. There were multiple prior episodes of pneumonia (25 in 5 years). She was diagnosed with systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE) with lupus pneumonitis (based on surgical lung biopsy) about 3-4 years prior to admission. She had a St. Jude mitral valve replacement 12 years ago and had suffered a hemorrhagic stroke presumed secondary to anticoagulation. There is also a history of nephrolithiasis and recurrent urinary tract infections and anemia with multiple prior transfusions.
Her mother died at 49 reportedly due to complications of SLE.
Physical Examination
- Temperature 37.1° C; Blood Pressure127/75 mm Hg; Pulse 80 beats/min; SaO2 96% on 3 LPM
- HEENT: no significant abnormalities identified
- Chest: clear to auscultation and percussion
- Cardiovascular: mechanical click, no murmur
- Extremities: trace edema
Laboratory Evaluation
- Hemoglobin 10.1 g/dL WBC 11,900 cells/μL Platelets 137,000 cells/μL
- INR 2.62
- Creatinine 0.9 mg/dL BUN 15 mmol/L
- N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT pro-BNP) 1,294 pg/ml
- C-reactive protein (CRP) 74.7 mg/L
- Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) 14 mm/hr
- Drug Screen: negative
Chest X-ray
Her chest x-ray is shown below (Figure 1).
Figure 1. Portable chest radiography at the time of admission.
Which of the following are pulmonary complications of SLE?
- Pleuritis
- Chronic interstitial pneumonitis
- Acute lupus pneumonitis
- Pulmonary hypertension
- All of the above
Reference as: Wesselius LJ. November 2012 pulmonary case of the month: the wolves are at the door. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care 2012;5: 223-8. PDF
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