Acute porphyria
Dilema diagnóstico y manifestaciones neuroendocrinas
Abstract
Acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) is an infrequent and considered orphan disease, characterized by neurovisceral crisis, being abdominal pain the most common symptom, accompanied in many cases by non-specific symptoms, making early diagnosis difficult. The delay in the diagnosis and treatment of this entity can be catastrophic or even fatal, causing long-term or permanent neurological damage. The case of a young adult who attends medical consultation several times for non-specific abdominal pain and 24 hours after admission develops sympathetic autonomic instability with elevated blood pressure and tachycardia is presented. He subsequently presents muscular weakness that evolves to quadriplegia and hyponatremia with criteria for inadequate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH). These data together with reddish urine staining lead to the diagnosis of porphyria. The clinical and biochemical characteristics emphasizing the importance of including porphyria within the differential diagnoses of abdominal pain and dysautonomia of indeterminate cause are presented.
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