A 67-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with a high fever. Laboratory tests revealed leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, liver dysfunction, rhabdomyolysis, and hyperferritinemia. He was diagnosed with severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) complicated by hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis and treated with steroid therapy, intravenous calcium channel blocker (CCB), and supportive care, without favipiravir. Serum levels of ferritin and soluble interleukin 2 receptor (sIL2R) were markedly elevated on Day 3 after admission and decreased thereafter, while an SFTS viral load of 6.8×10 4 copies/μL was detected on Day 2, increasing to 2.9×10 5 copies/μL on Day 6. Serum ferritin and sIL2R levels may be better indicators of mortality than the SFTS viral load, and CCBs may have a therapeutic effect.
Spontaneous bladder rupture is an uncommon and life-threatening urological emergency, and early diagnosis is often challenging. Herein, we report a case of intraperitoneal bladder rupture in an 81-year-old male with neurogenic bladder-the case of intraperitoneal bladder rupture required late laparotomy for pelvic abscess following initial conservative treatment.An eighty-one-year-old male presented to our emergency department with deterioration of consciousness, fever, and hematuria. He denied previous trauma history and had been treated for neurogenic bladder. Physical examination revealed signs of tenderness in the abdomen. A diagnosis of bladder rupture was made based on laboratory examination indicating renal failure and radiological imaging showing urinary ascites. Conservative management with a Foley catheter and antibiotics (meropenem administered 1 g/day) was initiated. On day seven after admission, the patient complained of abdominal pain and fever, and a diagnosis of pelvic abscess based on contrast-enhanced computed tomography and septic peritonitis was made. An emergency exploratory laparotomy for peritoneal drainage was performed. The postoperative course was uneventful, and the patient was discharged on day 29 after admission.Urinary bladder rupture should always be considered as a differential diagnosis in patients presenting with free fluid in the abdomen, peritonitis, reduced urine output, and hematuria. Clinicians should be aware that secondary bacterial peritonitis can occur as a major complication of a ruptured urinary bladder.
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