Abstract

A 7-year-old child presented with a severe form of Takayasu's arteritis, with two consecutive episodes involving the right testis and then the left kidney 6 months later. The renal artery obstruction was accompanied by severe hypertension. An aortography showed a complete obstruction of the left renal artery and a narrowing of the right subclavian artery. Plasma renin activity was high. Serum immunoglobulins were within the normal range, except for an increase in IgE (880 mu/l). Despite 4 months', treatment with antihypertensive drugs, prednisone, cyclophosphamide, and anticoagulant, the blood pressure never returned to normal and the left renal function remained completely absent. A nephrectomy was performed which immediately normalized plasma renin activity and blood pressure. The child was subsequently treated with alternate-day prednisone for 3 months, alternating with 3 months of cyclophosphamide or, later, azathioprine. Persantine (dipyridamole) and acetylsalicylic acid were administered continuously. The right radial pulse returned to normal within 2 years. An 8-year follow-up failed to detect any new episode of arteritis. The right kidney showed signs of compensatory hypertrophy. Finally, a recent arteriography demonstrated not only a normal right renal artery blood flow but almost total disappearance of the right subclavian artery obstruction. However, the IgE remained abnormally high (2,023 micrograms/l).

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