Ethylene glycol (EG) toxicity is an important cause of toxic alcohol poisoning in the USA with over 5,000 exposures reported annually. While classically characterized by solitary accidental or intentional ingestions, mass toxic alcohol poisoning outbreaks and more rarely collective consumptions (typically of methanol) have been described. We describe an ethylene glycol poisoning from collective ingestion that involved soldiers presenting at William Beaumont Army Medical Center in El Paso, Texas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: FSGS is a heterogeneic glomerular disease. Risk factors for kidney disease ESKD and the effect of immunosuppression treatment (IST) has varied in previously published cohorts. These cohorts were limited by relatively small case numbers, short follow-up, lack of racial/ethnic diversity, a mix of adult and pediatric patients, lack of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) inhibition, or lack of subgroup analysis of IST.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a 30-year-old combat veteran with an unclear exposure history, with multiple deployments who was later diagnosed with acute renal failure as a result of light-chain deposition disease. Despite a drastic decline in kappa light chains following chemotherapy; his renal function worsened, and he progressed to end-stage renal disease, requiring hemodialysis. Light-chain-mediated acute tubular interstitial nephritis is an uncommon type of monoclonal gammopathy of renal significance presenting with acute renal failure without significant glomerular disease.
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