Case Reports

17-year-old girl • abdominal pain • lower-leg itching • dark urine and yellow eyes • Dx?

Author and Disclosure Information

► Abdominal pain
► Lower-leg itching
► Dark urine & yellow eyes


 

References

THE CASE

A 17-year-old White girl with no known past medical history presented to the emergency department (ED) with complaints of abdominal pain and pruritus. The abdominal pain had started 9 days prior and lasted for 3 days. One day after resolution, she developed bilateral lower extremity itching, which was not relieved with loratadine.

Review of systems included dark urine and yellow eyes noted for several days. The patient denied nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, fevers, chills, arthralgias, recent illness, travel, or sick contacts. Immunizations were up to date. The patient had no history of surgery or liver disease and no pertinent family history. Her current medications included ethinyl estradiol/norethindrone acetate for birth control and minocycline for acne vulgaris. She had been taking the latter medication for 2 years. No additional medications were noted, including vitamins, over-the-counter medications, or supplements. She denied smoking and alcohol or recreational drug use.

In the ED, the patient had normal vital signs. Physical exam findings included bilateral scleral icterus and scattered skin excoriations on the hands, arms, back of the neck, and feet. At the time of hospital admission, the patient’s minocycline and birth control were held under the initial presumption that one or both might be contributing to her presentation.

Pertinent laboratory findings included aspartate transaminase (AST), 828 U/L (normal range, 2-40 U/L); alanine aminotransferase (ALT), 784 U/L (normal range, 3-30 U/L); lactic acid dehydrogenase, 520 U/L (normal range, 140-280 U/L); alkaline phosphatase, 119 U/L (normal range, 44-147 U/L); total bilirubin, 1.9 µmol/L (normal range, 2-18 µmol/L); and direct bilirubin, 1.3 µmol/L (normal range, 0-4 µmol/L). Baseline liver function test results (prior to admission) were unknown. Results of a coagulation panel, complete blood count, basic metabolic panel, amylase, lipase, urine toxicology, and urinalysis all were within normal limits.

Ultrasound of the abdomen revealed a normal abdomen, liver, pancreas, gallbladder, and common bile duct. This imaging study was negative for other obstructive pathologies.

THE DIAGNOSIS

During hospital admission, a noninvasive liver work-up was pursued by Gastroenterology. A hepatitis panel, Epstein-Barr virus testing, and levels of ceruloplasmin and acetaminophen were all found to be within normal limits, excluding additional causes of liver disease. Serum antinuclear antibody (ANA) testing was significantly positive, with a titer of 1:640 (range, < 1:20) and, as noted above, liver transaminases were severely elevated, leading to a presumptive diagnosis of drug-induced liver pathology.

Continue to: During outpatient follow-up...

Pages

Recommended Reading

Histologic remission fails to be related to UC relapse
MDedge Family Medicine
AGA publishes recommendations for managing IBD in elderly patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Mortality higher in older adults hospitalized for IBD
MDedge Family Medicine
Patient with CKD: Contrast or no contrast?
MDedge Family Medicine
AGA publishes seronegative enteropathy guidance
MDedge Family Medicine
BE: Surveillance endoscopy frequency improving but still overdone
MDedge Family Medicine
Autologous fecal microbiota transplantation helped maintain weight loss after ‘green’ Mediterranean diet
MDedge Family Medicine
Upper GI bleeds in COVID-19 not related to increased mortality
MDedge Family Medicine
C. difficile control could require integrated approach
MDedge Family Medicine
IBD: Fecal calprotectin’s role in guiding treatment debated
MDedge Family Medicine