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Dr. Alec D. Weisberg (Medicine): An 84-year-old man was transferred to this hospital because of staphylococcal bacteremia and renal failure. Two weeks before admission, fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, shortness of breath, productive cough, and generalized weakness developed. The patient went to the emergency department of a local hospital. The oxygen saturation was 88 percent while the patient was breathing ambient air. A radiograph of the chest showed patchy bilateral pulmonary infiltrates. He was admitted to the hospital. Blood cultures were positive for methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus. He was treated with levofloxacin and cefotaxime for five days, and on the fifth
Differential Diagnosis
Differential Diagnosis
Staphylococcal Infection and Glomerulonephritis
Staphylococcal SuperantigenAssociated Glomerulonephritis
HenochSchönlein Purpura
ANCA-Associated Vasculitis
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Other Causes of Renal Injury
Acute Tubular Injury
Acute Interstitial Nephritis
Septic Emboli
Summary
Clinical Diagnosis
Dr. Mark D. Denton's Diagnoses
Pathological Discussion
Anatomical Diagnoses
Source Information
From the Renal Unit, Derriford Hospital, and the Department of Medicine, Peninsula Medical School both in Plymouth, United Kingdom (M.D.D.); and the Departments of Radiology (S.R.D.), Cardiology (S.C.), and Pathology (R.B.C.), Massachusetts General Hospital; and the Departments of Radiology (S.R.D.), Medicine (S.C.), and Pathology (R.B.C.), Harvard Medical School both in Boston.
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