RESUMO
Background: Erdheim-Chester disease is a form of histiocytosis. It is an extremely rare illness. Since its discovery, hundreds of cases of this disease have been identified across the globe. Pathologically, the condition is characterized by proliferation of lipid-rich foam-like tissue cells, which is especially prevalent in bones. Approximately 50% of patients develop infiltration into organs other than the bones. Case description: A patient with fever and bone pain is described in this case report. After visiting multiple hospitals and departments, undergoning battery of investigations, and ruling out other diseases, the patient was pathologically diagnosed with Erdheim-Chester disease after a biopsy of the associated bone destruction. The condition improved with symptomatic therapy. Conclusion: Numerous clinical symptoms make non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis challenging to diagnose and requires pathological diagnosis. Patients with unexplained multiple bone destruction must be alert against this disease from a clinical standpoint.
RESUMO
A 28-year-old female patient was hospitalized primarily because of "intermittent fever for 28 days aggravated by systemic rashes, oral ulcer, and edema in both eyelids for 5 days." During treatment, convulsions and loss of consciousness occurred. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the head revealed an abnormal signal with shadows in the bilateral frontal, parietal, temporal, and occipital lobes; cerebellar hemispheres; and basal nodes, with high signal intensity on T2 weighted imaging (T2WI), on fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery, and of the apparent diffusion coefficient and low signal intensity on T1WI and diffusion weighted imaging. Therefore, the patient was diagnosed with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) with reversible posterior encephalopathy syndrome (RPES). Intravenous high-dose methylprednisolone and cyclophosphamide were administered for blood pressure control, which effectively controlled the disease. Therefore, when patients with SLE and hypertension or renal insufficiency or those receiving high-dose methylprednisolone or immunosuppressants suddenly present with neurologic abnormalities, a diagnosis of RPES must be considered, and head MRI is the first choice for diagnosis of this disease. In terms of treatment, the blood pressure should be quickly controlled, and the primary disease should be aggressively treated.