Suppr超能文献

坏血病。

Scurvy.

机构信息

Ivan Krečak, MD, PhD, Department of Internal Medicine, General Hospital of Šibenik-Knin County, Stjepana Radića 83, 22000 Šibenik, Croatia;

出版信息

Acta Dermatovenerol Croat. 2022 Jul;30(1):59-60.

Abstract

Dear Editor, Scurvy is a nutritional disorder which can develop after prolonged (>1-3 months) severe vitamin C deficiency. Vitamin C is a cofactor in several enzyme reactions involved in collagen synthesis. The defect in collagen causes blood vessel fragility, poor wound healing, mucocutaneous bleedings, hair abnormalities, bone pains, and joint contractures due to periosteal and intraarticular bleeding (1,2). Risk factors for scurvy development are undernutrition, low socioeconomic status, older age, male sex, alcoholism, tobacco smoking, and severe psychiatric illnesses (1-3). The required daily intake for vitamin C is ~60 mg, and this amount of vitamin C can be found in only one medium-sized orange. For this reason, the disease is rarely encountered in developed countries and is often underrecognized by healthcare personnel. Herein, we present an illustrative case of scurvy in order to raise the awareness of this disorder. A 61-year-old Caucasian man was admitted to hospital due to fatigue, hypotension (80/50 mmHg), severe normocytic anemia (hemoglobin 76 g/L), kidney failure (estimated glomerular filtration rate of 6 mL/min/1.73m2) and mild elevation in C-reactive protein (30.9 mg/L). Prior medical history included radical cystoprostatectomy with an ileal conduit performed eight years ago due to a bladder tumor and moderate chronic kidney disease with recurrent urinary tract infections. The patient was also an alcoholic and tobacco smoker, with a very low-income and a poor diet. He did not use any medications. Heteroanamnestically, the current clinical state had developed slowly over several weeks. At admission, the patient was afebrile, lethargic, malnourished, and immobile due to generalized weakness, bone pains, and hip and knee contractures. He had generalized edema, mostly related to kidney failure, as well as severe hypoalbuminemia (serum albumin 19 g/L). There were multiple ecchymoses (Figure 1, a) and perifollicular bleedings (Figure 1, b) in the skin. The teeth were defective, and the patient's facial hair had a "corkscrew" appearance (Figure 1, c). The platelet count was normal, as was the serum fibrinogen level and the prothrombin- and activated partial thromboplastin times. Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium and multi-drug-resistant Acinetobacter baumanii were isolated from the urine. Therefore, hemodialysis, linezolid, and colistin were started. However, the patient continued to be lethargic, immobile, and with prominent skin bleeding. Medical workup excluded the possibility of an underlying malignancy or an autoimmune disorder. Finally, scurvy was suspected and 500 mg daily of oral vitamin C was introduced into therapy. In the following two weeks, the general condition of the patient significantly improved and he was discharged from the hospital in good condition - mobile and with complete resolution of skin lesions (Figure 1, d and e). Three months later, the patient was still under maintenance hemodialysis and had mild anemia (hemoglobin 123 g/L). Interestingly, scurvy was the first disease in the history of medicine for which a randomized trial found a cure (4). The differential diagnosis of scurvy includes skin infections, hematologic disorders, collagen vascular disorders, and anticoagulant/antiplatelet side-effects (1). Pathognomonic skin findings which may help raise suspicion of scurvy are perifollicular bleedings and "corkscrew" hair. Notably, laboratory testing for vitamin C concentration is not necessary to confirm scurvy as it tends to reflect recent dietary intake of vitamin C (2). Nevertheless, it may be useful to identify less typical cases (2). In our case, rapid clinical improvement with the resolution of skin lesions and joint contractures after the introduction of vitamin C confirmed the clinical diagnosis of scurvy. Additionally, vitamin C deficiency could be, at least partly (besides kidney failure and acute infection), responsible for severe anemia at disease presentation (5). This case serves to remind clinicians not to forget scurvy when treating patients at risk for vitamin C deficiency who present with fatigue, anemia, bone pains, and unexplained mucocutaneous bleedings. In suspected cases, vitamin C should be administered without hesitation.

摘要

致编辑,坏血病是一种营养失调性疾病,在严重缺乏维生素 C 后(>1-3 个月)会发生。维生素 C 是几种参与胶原蛋白合成的酶反应的辅助因子。胶原缺陷导致血管脆弱、伤口愈合不良、黏膜出血、毛发异常、骨痛和关节挛缩,这是由于骨膜和关节内出血引起的(1,2)。坏血病发展的危险因素包括营养不良、低社会经济地位、年龄较大、男性、酗酒、吸烟和严重的精神疾病(1-3)。维生素 C 的每日推荐摄入量为~60 毫克,仅一个中等大小的橙子中就含有这种量的维生素 C。因此,这种疾病在发达国家很少见,医护人员往往对此认识不足。在此,我们报告一例坏血病病例,以提高对这种疾病的认识。一名 61 岁的白人男性因疲劳、低血压(80/50mmHg)、严重正细胞性贫血(血红蛋白 76g/L)、肾功能衰竭(估计肾小球滤过率为 6ml/min/1.73m2)和轻度 C 反应蛋白升高(30.9mg/L)而入院。既往病史包括 8 年前因膀胱癌行根治性膀胱切除术和回肠造口术,以及伴有复发性尿路感染的中度慢性肾脏病。患者还是一名酗酒者和吸烟者,收入微薄,饮食不良。他没有服用任何药物。据患者自述,目前的临床状态是在数周内缓慢发展的。入院时,患者发热、昏睡、营养不良且全身无力、骨痛和髋、膝关节挛缩导致无法活动。他全身水肿,主要与肾功能衰竭有关,同时伴有严重低白蛋白血症(血清白蛋白 19g/L)。皮肤多处瘀斑(图 1a)和滤泡周围出血(图 1b)。牙齿受损,患者面部毛发呈“螺旋状”(图 1c)。血小板计数正常,血清纤维蛋白原水平、凝血酶原时间和部分凝血活酶时间也正常。尿液中分离出万古霉素耐药粪肠球菌和多药耐药鲍曼不动杆菌。因此,开始进行血液透析、利奈唑胺和黏菌素治疗。然而,患者仍持续昏睡、无法活动,皮肤出血明显。排除了潜在恶性肿瘤或自身免疫性疾病的可能性。最终怀疑为坏血病,并开始每日口服 500 毫克维生素 C 进行治疗。在接下来的两周内,患者的一般状况显著改善,并在情况良好时出院——可活动且皮肤病变完全消退(图 1d 和 e)。三个月后,患者仍在接受维持性血液透析,且有轻度贫血(血红蛋白 123g/L)。有趣的是,坏血病是医学史上第一个通过随机试验发现可以治愈的疾病(4)。坏血病的鉴别诊断包括皮肤感染、血液疾病、胶原血管疾病和抗凝/抗血小板药物的副作用(1)。有助于提高对坏血病怀疑的特征性皮肤表现是滤泡周围出血和“螺旋状”毛发。值得注意的是,由于维生素 C 摄入量反映了近期的饮食情况,因此不需要检测维生素 C 浓度来确认坏血病(2)。但是,它可能有助于识别不太典型的病例(2)。在我们的病例中,在引入维生素 C 后,皮肤病变和关节挛缩迅速改善和消退,这证实了坏血病的临床诊断。此外,维生素 C 缺乏可能是导致疾病发作时严重贫血的原因之一(除了肾功能衰竭和急性感染)(5)。本病例提醒临床医生在治疗有维生素 C 缺乏风险且出现疲劳、贫血、骨痛和不明原因黏膜出血的患者时,不要忘记坏血病。在疑似病例中,应毫不犹豫地给予维生素 C。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验