Abstract
We present a 30-year-old combat veteran with an unclear exposure history, with multiple deployments who was later diagnosed with acute renal failure as a result of light-chain deposition disease. Despite a drastic decline in kappa light chains following chemotherapy; his renal function worsened, and he progressed to end-stage renal disease, requiring hemodialysis. Light-chain-mediated acute tubular interstitial nephritis is an uncommon type of monoclonal gammopathy of renal significance presenting with acute renal failure without significant glomerular disease. Our case illustrates that light-chain-mediated acute tubular interstitial nephritis may present clinically like acute interstitial nephritis and that renal biopsy is critical for diagnosis. We also explore possible links between various environmental and occupational exposures that could have precipitated his disease process at such a young age.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Forster, B. M., Hinton, A. P., & Thurlow, J. S. (2017). A case report of acute renal failure as a result of light-chain-mediated acute tubular interstitial nephritis in a 30-year-old combat veteran. Military Medicine, 182(11), e2099–e2103. https://doi.org/10.7205/MILMED-D-17-00164
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.