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Cachexia, chorea, and pain in chronic nonbacterial osteitis and inflammatory bowel disease: a case report.

Authors :
Agharokh, Ladan
Mamola, Katherine
Yu, Andrew G.
Medina, Annette L.
Gurram, Bhaskar
Fuller, Julie
Park, Jason Y.
Chen, Weina
Rajaram, Veena
Hammer, Matthew R.
Waugh, Jeff L.
Source :
Journal of Medical Case Reports. 5/31/2023, Vol. 17 Issue 1, p1-7. 7p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Inflammatory bowel disease is an inflammatory disorder that primarily impacts the gastrointestinal tract, leading to malnutrition and chronic microscopic intestinal blood loss. Uncontrolled systemic inflammation can impact other parts of the body, known as extraintestinal manifestations. Up to 25% of patients with inflammatory bowel disease are reported to have these complications in their skin, joints, bones, eyes, liver, lung, and pancreas (Rogler et al. in Gastroenterology 161(4):1118–1132, 2021). Neurologic involvement as extraintestinal manifestations are less common, reported at 3–19%, including neuropathies, demyelination, and cerebrovascular events (Morís in World J Gastroenterol. 20(5):1228–1237, 2014). Case presentation: A 13-year-old Caucasian boy presented with 1 month of progressive lower-extremity pain, weakness, and weight loss. His physical examination was notable for cachexia, lower-extremity weakness, and chorea. Labs revealed normocytic anemia and systemic inflammation. Imaging revealed symmetric abnormal marrow signal in the pelvis and upper femurs. Pathologic examination of the bone revealed chronic inflammation consistent with chronic nonbacterial osteitis. Endoscopy revealed colonic inflammation consistent with inflammatory bowel disease. Conclusions: Children and adolescents with musculoskeletal pain lasting more than 2 weeks with systemic signs or symptoms like weight loss should prompt evaluation for systemic inflammatory disorders such as chronic nonbacterial osteitis, which can occur in isolation or associated with inflammatory bowel disease. This patient also had a nonspecific neurologic abnormality, chorea, which resolved with treatment of underlying inflammatory disorder. These extraintestinal manifestations may be concurrent with or precede intestinal inflammation, requiring a high index of suspicion when investigating nonspecific systemic inflammation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17521947
Volume :
17
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Medical Case Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163989492
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13256-023-03894-1