The Egyptian Journal of Internal Medicine (Jun 2023)
Lupus and antiphospholipid syndrome diagnosis in a young female presenting with multiple non-specific symptoms
Abstract
Abstract A female in her 30s with no known past medical conditions presented to North Shore University Hospital with three weeks of intermittent fevers, fatigue, and malaise. She also reports generalized body pain, myalgias, ear pain, throat pain, and joint pain. She denies rash. She also reports nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea and a 10-pound weight loss in one week. She had a miscarriage at 16 weeks of gestation. She met systemic inflammatory syndrome criteria on admission as she was febrile to 102.9 Fahrenheit, tachycardic to 120 beats per minute, tachypneic to 22 breaths/minute, and had leukopenia with white blood cell count of 2,470 per cubic milliliter. Labs were significant for pancytopenia, elevated transaminases, low C3 complement level, double stranded DNA > 1000 IU/mL, anti-nuclear factor positive 1:1280, and positive antiphospholipid serology. She was treated with steroids and hydroxychloroquine and was started on warfarin.