Renal involvement in human rabies: clinical manifestations and autopsy findings of nine cases from northeast of Brazil

Authors

  • Elizabeth De Francesco Daher Secretaria de Saúde do Estado do Ceará; Hospital Geral de Fortaleza; Serviço de Nefrologia
  • Geraldo Bezerra da Silva Júnior Universidade Federal do Ceará; Faculdade de Medicina; Departamento de Medicina Clínica; Hospital Universitário Walter Cantídio
  • Marúsia Thomaz Ferreira Universidade Federal do Ceará; Faculdade de Medicina; Departamento de Medicina Clínica; Hospital Universitário Walter Cantídio
  • Fernando Antonio de Sousa Barros Universidade Federal do Ceará; Faculdade de Medicina; Departamento de Medicina Clínica; Hospital Universitário Walter Cantídio
  • Tiago Magalhães Gurgel Universidade Federal do Ceará; Faculdade de Medicina; Departamento de Patologia e Medicina Legal
  • Régia Maria do Socorro Vidal Patrocínio Universidade Federal do Ceará; Faculdade de Medicina; Departamento de Patologia e Medicina Legal

Keywords:

Rabies, Clinical manifestations, Acute renal failure, Pathology, Autopsy

Abstract

A retrospective study was conducted in nine patients with rabies admitted to a hospital of Fortaleza, Brazil. Autopsy was performed in all cases. The ages ranged from three to 81 years and six were males. They all were bitten by dogs. The time between the accident and the hospital admission ranged from 20 to 120 days (mean 45 ± 34 days). The time until death ranged from one to nine days (mean 3.3 ± 5.5 days). The signs and symptoms presented were fever, hydrophobia, aerophobia, agitation, disorientation, dyspnea, sialorrhea, vomiting, oliguria, sore throat, pain and hypoesthesia in the site of the bite, headache, syncope, cough, hematemesis, mydriasis, hematuria, constipation, cervical pain and priapism. In three out of six patients, there was evidence of acute renal failure, defined as serum creatinine >; 1.4 mg/dL. The post-mortem findings in the kidneys were mild to moderate glomerular congestion and mild to intense peritubular capillary congestion. Acute tubular necrosis was seen in only two cases. This study shows some evidence of renal involvement in rabies. Histopathologic findings are nonspecific, so hemodynamic instability, caused by autonomic dysfunction, hydrophobia and dehydration must be responsible for acute renal failure in rabies.

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Published

2005-12-01

Issue

Section

Rabies

How to Cite

Daher, E. D. F., Silva Júnior, G. B. da, Ferreira, M. T., Barros, F. A. de S., Gurgel, T. M., & Patrocínio, R. M. do S. V. (2005). Renal involvement in human rabies: clinical manifestations and autopsy findings of nine cases from northeast of Brazil . Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De São Paulo, 47(6), 315-320. https://www.revistas.usp.br/rimtsp/article/view/30948