Multiorgan Dysfunction in a Patient With Adult-Onset Still's Disease Flare: A Case Report
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Cureus
Abstract
Adult-onset Still's disease (AOSD) is a rare multisystem inflammatory disorder. A 71-year-old lady who was on treatment for AOSD presented with clinical evidence of heart failure and was subsequently found to have impaired renal and hepatic function. Following extensive workup including a liver biopsy, the cause of liver dysfunction was determined to be congestive hepatopathy, while renal dysfunction was presumed to stem from the low output state. The etiology of myocardial dysfunction, driving liver and kidney injury, was considered to be myocarditis from AOSD or global myocardial dysfunction from a systemic inflammatory state. Management involved pulse-dose glucocorticoids followed by taper and anakinra for AOSD, alongside goal-directed medical therapy for cardiac failure. At follow-up after a month, hepatic and renal function had fully recovered, whereas cardiac function remained compromised, evidenced by persistently depressed ejection fraction and global hypokinesia on a repeat echocardiogram. This report delineates a systematic approach to multiorgan dysfunction in a patient with a rare condition such as AOSD and reviews the reported causes of hepatic and cardiac involvement in AOSD.
First Page
e60400
DOI
10.7759/cureus.60400
Publication Date
5-1-2024
Recommended Citation
Arya P V, Akhila; Vangipuram, Deepak R.; Rondla, Madhumita; and Unnikrishnan, Dileep, "Multiorgan Dysfunction in a Patient With Adult-Onset Still's Disease Flare: A Case Report" (2024). Internal Medicine. 185.
https://scholar.bridgeporthospital.org/internal_medicine/185
Identifier
38883113 (pubmed); PMC11179129 (pmc); 10.7759/cureus.60400 (doi)