Kidney Medicine (Feb 2024)

Thrombotic Microangiopathy and Acute Tubular Injury After Diethylene Glycol Ingestion: A Kidney Biopsy Teaching Case

  • Grace Malvar,
  • Deepthi Gunasekaran,
  • Nazanin Vaghari Mehr,
  • Shuta Ishibe,
  • Gilbert Moeckel

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
p. 100758

Abstract

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We present a rare and unusual case of thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) in a patient who ingested chafing fuel containing diethylene glycol. The patient showed a typical clinical course of initial gastrointestinal symptoms followed by acute kidney injury (AKI) and peripheral sensorimotor neuropathy. A kidney biopsy showed TMA and diffuse acute tubular injury. Diethylene glycol is widely used as a solvent in numerous consumer products, including brake fluid, antifreeze, chafing fuel, and artificial fog solutions. Diethylene glycol has been implemented in mass poisonings, and the incidence of AKI in diethylene glycol poisonings is linked to high-mortality rates. TMA, a pathologic lesion observed in a wide spectrum of diseases, is triggered by endothelial injury. Our case shows that TMA should be considered as a possible life-threatening complication in the setting of acute diethylene glycol poisoning. Direct toxic injury to endothelial cells by diethylene glycol is a possible mechanism. It is therefore plausible that patients with a genetic predisposition to endothelial injury may develop TMA following diethylene glycol exposure.

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