Clinical cases/Case 1

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Case presentation
A 30-year old man comes to the accidents and emergencies department with a presenting complaint of rash on both lower legs. He first noticed the rash two days earlier, but it progressively got worse. The rash itself is not painful but he has felt waxing and waning pains in his knees and ankles. He has also felt some nausea and colicky abdominal pain without vomiting or a change in bowel motions or stool appearance. He has not felt any fever or chills and denies urinary or respiratory problems. There have been no recent illnesses, no weight changes or night sweats.

The man has type 1 diabetes for which he has been on insulin injections since childhood. He has not take any other prescription or over-the-counter drugs and has no known allergies. He's a non-smoker who admits to occasional use of alcohol. He doesn't know details about medical conditions in his family. The patient works as a teller in a bank, is married and lives in the city with his wife and baby daughter.

His vital signs are as follows: temperature 37.1 °C (98.8 °F), pulse 74 bpm, blood pressure 160/90 mmHg, respiratory rate 12/min.

On physical examination, there is a non-blanching rash predominantly on the legs but extending to the lower back. The lesions are dark red and slightly raised. The patient admits to pain on deep palpation in all four quadrants of the abdomen. Bowel sounds are normal and no masses or organomegaly can be felt. There is no redness or swelling of the joints of the lower extremities. The lungs are clear to auscultation and heart sounds are normal. Examination of the head, eyes, ears, nose and throat are normal. No enlarged lymph nodes are palpated. There are no signs of meningeal irritation. A digital rectal examination shows a streak of blood on the finger. Further physical examination is unremarkable.

An electrocardiogram is found to be completely normal.

Laboratory tests are remarkable for leukocytosis (18,000 white blood cells /µl) and raised serum C-reactive protein (180 mg/L) and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (75 mm/h). There is also a raised creatinine (1.23 mg/dl,or 107 μmol/l) and glucose (138 g/l, or 7.7 mmol/L). The platelet count is 450,000/µl. Clotting tests are within normal limits. Liver enzymes, thyroid function tests, lactate dehydrogenase and creatine phosphokinase are within normal limits.

Case discussion
{{Dynamic navigation noncentered Henoch-Schönlein purpura (HSP) is a systemic leukocytoclastic vasculitis characterized by the deposition of IgA immune complexes. It occurs most often in young children but it should be suspected in adults with palpable purpura (especially on the lower extremities and buttocks) and other typical features such as joint, abdominal and renal involvement. HSP seems to run a more severe course in adults. Complications are also different as compared to children, in whom intussusception is more common and renal failure is rarer. In a series of 37 adults with HSP, ten (27%) developed end-stage renal disease. Severe renal involvement at presentation (e.g. strong proteinuria or hypertension) has been suggested as a predictor of subsequent renal impairment. In this case, abdominal symptoms and renal involvement should prompt consideration for the use of intravenous corticosteroids. Given this patient's diabetes, other immunosuppressive drugs might be considered.
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Vasculitides typically present with either palpable purpura, simultaneous lung and kidney disease or mononeuritis multiplex. Since HSP is rare in adults, other forms of vasculitis need to be excluded. Hypersensitivity vasculitis presents with fever, lymphadenopathies, arthralgia but without glomerulonephritis, and is usually secondary to infections or medications. Small vessel vasculitis can also be secondary to connective tissue diseases or infections (most commonly hepatitis B and C but also HIV, cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, and parvovirus B19). Other small vessel vasculitides can be differentiated by their clinical presentation and laboratory tests (as described above).

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