Abstract
Immunocompromised patients who developed varicella-zoster virus (VZV)-associated disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) previously included recipients of bone marrow, hematopoietic stem cell, or organ transplantations, patients with primary nephropathy receiving corticosteroid therapy, cancer patients receiving chemotherapy, and patients with human immune deficiency virus infection. The case reported here is novel because, to our knowledge, there has been no report of VZV-associated DIC after the onset of Henoch-Schönlein purpura (HSP). To report the successful treatment of a novel pediatric case with VZV-associated DIC secondary to HSP. An 8-year-old girl developed VZV-associated DIC 24 days after diagnosis of HSP with renal and gastrointestinal involvement. She was treated with methylprednisolone at a local hospital for 19 days, and suddenly developed fever starting from day 4 in our hospital. Her fever persisted with vesicular skin rashes on her back, strong abdominal and lower back pain, epistaxis, hematochezia, erosion and bleeding on her lips, in her mouth and at puncture sites on day 5. She was diagnosed with DIC with the laboratory evidence of dramatically decreased platelet count and fibrinogen, prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time and prothrombin time, and increased fibrin degradation products including d-dimers. She also developed multiple organ dysfunction syndrome. On day 7, the patient VZV nucleic acid result turned out to be positive. Methylprednisolone treatment was discontinued, and she was given a multi-modality therapy including medications of acyclovir and antibiotics, intravenous gamma-immunoglobulin, various blood product transfusions, continuous renal replacement therapy, plasma exchange, and administration of liver and gastrointestinal system protection drugs. The patient multi-organ function damage gradually recovered. After VZV control, the patient was treated with oral methylprednisolone again for HSP with nephritis. Urine analysis was normal 1 year later, and oral hormone was discontinued. No complication or relapse occurred during 2 years of follow-up. This case report, for the first time, adds HSP treated with corticosteroids to the spectrum of clinical conditions that progressed to life-threatening secondary varicella-associated DIC. Early identification of varicella infection and DIC, combined with timely antiviral, immunoglobulin transfusion, plasma exchange, and other combined therapies are essential for saving patients' lives.
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