Asplenia-Associated Babesiosis: A Quagmire Traversed by Exchange Transfusion.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-2024
Abstract
Babesiosis is a potentially life-threatening tick-borne parasitic infection. Severe disease in splenectomized individuals may require exchange transfusion. A 58-year-old male with a history of splenectomy presented with 2 weeks of subjective fever, weakness, and abdominal pain. He denied any rashes, tick bites, or recent travel. He had a motor vehicle accident a few years ago and had undergone an emergency splenectomy. On examination, the patient was febrile (39.3 °C), tachycardic (106/min), and jaundiced. Labs revealed anemia and thrombocytopenia. Computed tomography (CT) abdomen revealed asplenia. As it was summer, there was concern for a tick-borne illness. A peripheral smear showed schistocytes, and labs revealed hyperbilirubinemia, high lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), low haptoglobin, and reticulocytosis (13%), consistent with hemolysis. Testing for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2),
Publication Title
J Med Cases
Volume
15
Issue
7
First Page
148
Last Page
151
Recommended Citation
Gondal, M., Rovenstine, L., Ansari, F., Kiyani, Z., Bokhari, S., Jyothi Ramachandran Nair, D., Khan, T., & Jaleel, S. (2024). Asplenia-Associated Babesiosis: A Quagmire Traversed by Exchange Transfusion.. J Med Cases, 15 (7), 148-151. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.14740/jmc4247