[Case Report] 32yo with abdominal pain two years after pancreas-kidney transplant
Description
This case report has been developed by Trainees, to assist their peers with preparation of long-case presentations. It is not a fully-vetted Education resource but a “passion project” from editors of the Pomegranate Health podcasts.
The case is that of a 32-year-old woman presenting with constant and dull abdominal pain that had been sudden in onset. The pain is accompanied by nausea and vomiting but bowel habits were unchanged. The patient has a history of type 1 diabetes and a simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplant two years prior to the presentation. There is no history of rejection of pancreatitis and serum creatinine appears normal.
The attending nephrologist walks through the elimination of differential diagnoses typical of any patient and also of particular relevance to a transplant patient.
Guests
Dr Chiang Sheng Lee FRACP (Lyell McEwin Hospital; University of Adelaide)
Dr Stephen Bacchi (Lyell McEwin Hospital)
Dr Amitjeet Singh (Lyell McEwin Hospital)
Production
Produced by Mic Cavazzini DPhil. Music licenced from Epidemic Sound includes ‘Rockin’ for Decades’ by Blue Texas and ‘Brighton Breakdown’ by BDBs. Image created and copyrighted by RACP.
Editorial feedback kindly provided by RACP physicians Aidan Tan, Brandon Stretton, David Arroyo, Keith Ooi and Fionnuala Fagan. Thanks also to Adelaide medical students Benjamin Cook, Srishti Sharma and Prakriti Sharma.
Please visit the Pomegranate Health web page for a transcript and supporting references. Login to MyCPD to record listening and reading as a prefilled learning activity.
Key Reference (Spoiler Alert)
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Gadolinium-Induced Acute Graft Pancreatitis in a Simultaneous Pancreas-Kidney Transplant Recipient [Case Rep Nephrol. 2022]