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A 4-Year-Old Girl with Gastroenteritis, Anemia, Thrombocytopenia, and Hematuria
Author(s) -
Kristina Carswell,
Wafi Bibars,
Saad Mir,
Neil Harris,
Michele Lossius
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
clinical chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.705
H-Index - 218
eISSN - 1530-8561
pISSN - 0009-9147
DOI - 10.1373/clinchem.2012.194720
Subject(s) - vomiting , urinalysis , medicine , diarrhea , nausea , gastroenterology , complete blood count , anemia , hematocrit , white blood cell , abdominal pain , urine
A previously healthy 4-year-old girl presented with a 2-day history of severe nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. Her symptoms began with diffuse abdominal pain followed by alternating episodes of vomiting and nonbloody diarrhea. There were no reports of sick contacts, recent travel, camping, or unusual food or water consumption. On the first day of symptoms, her primary care physician diagnosed viral gastroenteritis and stool cultures were sent to an outside laboratory. The following day, her vomiting increased in frequency and the diarrhea became streaked with blood and mucus. The patient was taken to a regional hospital where a complete blood count revealed a white blood cell count of 22 500/mL (reference interval, 5.5–15.5 × 1000/mL) with 89% neutrophils and 7% bands. A urinalysis revealed positive ketones of 150 mg/dL (reference value, negative) and a specific gravity of 1.030 (reference interval, 1.005–1.030). She was then transferred to our hospital for management of neutrophilia and dehydration. On admission, her temperature was 38.7 °C, but other vital signs and physical exam results were unremarkable. She was treated with intravenous fluids. Stool cultures for bacteria, shiga toxin, ova, and parasites were obtained. Urinalysis showed positive protein of 300 mg/dL protein (reference value, negative) and 4 red blood cells per high-power field (reference value, negative). On day 2 of admission, the patient passed cranberry-colored urine. Repeat laboratory test results at this time revealed creatinine of 1.10 mg/dL (97.2 μmol/L) (reference interval, 0.03–0.7 mg/dL), a blood urea nitrogen (BUN)4 of 26 mg/dL (9.3 mmol/L) (reference interval, 6–20 mg/dL), a hematocrit of 30.7% (reference interval, 34.0%–40.0%), and a platelet count of …

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