2003 Volume 42 Issue 9 Pages 893-896
A patient with bronchial asthma developed cholecystitis. Laboratory investigations revealed marked eosinophilia (6, 615/mm3), an elevated anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody level and renal dysfunction (blood urea nitrogen 14 mg/dl, creatinine 1.4 mg/dl). Following cholecystectomy, histopathological examination revealed a marked inflammatory cell infiltrate composed mainly of eosinophils with evidence of invasion of the wall of the gall bladder and granuloma formation of arterioles. A diagnosis of Churg-Strauss syndrome was made and she was treated with 60 mg of prednisolone per day. A renal biopsy was performed one year later in view of persistent renal dysfunction. Pathological analysis revealed a pauciimmune glomerulonephritis with interstitial changes but no crescent formation.
(Internal Medicine 42: 893-896, 2003)