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Renal infarct: a rare disease due to a rare etiology

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posted on 2016-08-29, 00:00 authored by Divya Akshintala, Saurabh K. Bansal, Vamsi Krishna Emani, Manajyoti Yadav
Renal infarction is caused by profound hypoperfusion secondary to embolic/thrombotic occlusion of the renal artery or vasospasm of the renal artery. We present a case of a 54-year-old patient who presented with nausea, vomiting, and vague abdominal pain. He had frequent episodes of migraine headaches and he treated himself with as needed rizatriptan. CT scan of the abdomen showed renal cortical infarction. After extensive investigations, etiology of his renal infarct was deemed to be due to rizatriptan.

Funding

The Research Open Access Article Publishing (ROAAP) Fund of the University of Illinois at Chicago for financial support towards the open access publishing fee for this article.

History

Publisher Statement

This is a copy of an article published in the Journal of Community Hospital Internal Medicine Perspectives. © 2015 Divya Akshintala et al.

Publisher

Co-Action Publishing

Language

  • en_US

Issue date

2015-01-15

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