Case report: Rhabdomyolysis in the setting of acute human immunodeficiency virus infection

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DOI: 10.4236/crcm.2013.23054    5,070 Downloads   7,460 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Acute HIV infection (AHI) is often marked by nonspecific and vague complaints, which make detection difficult. An 18-year-old man presented with one week history of subjective fevers with chills, nonproductive cough and generalized body aches. He was found to have rhabdomyolysis due to AHI. This report adds the most thoroughly investigated case of AHI-associated rhabdomyolysis to date, having ruled out erlichia, legionella, parainfluenza, adenovirus, enterovirus, metapneumovirus, RSV and DILS.

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Huang, J. , Gold, S. , McManus, K. and Wispelwey, B. (2013) Case report: Rhabdomyolysis in the setting of acute human immunodeficiency virus infection. Case Reports in Clinical Medicine, 2, 198-202. doi: 10.4236/crcm.2013.23054.

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