Describe the supportive care.
Avoid antibiotics and antimotility agents (may increase the likelihood of HUS in suspected infection with EHEC).
Monitor and correct:
Fluid status abnormalities (for more information, see “Clinical assessment of volume status”)
Electrolyte disturbances
Acid-base disorders
Blood pressure (due to hypertension or septic shock)
RBC transfusions
Antiepileptic drugs (e.g., diazepam, phenytoin) in patients with seizures
Describe other treatment options.
Dialysis (as indicated for AKI): Up to 50% of HUS patients require dialysis.
Plasma exchange therapy: only in refractory cases
Eculizumab
Effective for the treatment of aHUS [5]
May be beneficial in HUS with neurological symptoms [6]
Post-diarrheal HUS is a nationally notifiable condition. [7]
Platelet transfusions should be administered with caution unless patients are bleeding or require an invasive procedure. Some studies suggest that they can exacerbate microangiopathy.
List complications.
HUS can result in microthrombus formation and complications in various organs:
CNS
Seizures
Paresis
Stroke
Coma
GI tract
Hemorrhagic colitis
Bowel necrosis, perforation, stricture
Peritonitis
Intussusception
Heart: ischemia and fluid overload
Pancreas: transient or permanent diabetes mellitus
Liver: hepatomegaly, transaminase elevations
Kidney
Hypertension
Chronic kidney disease (CKD)
End-stage renal disease (ESRD)
Describe the prognosis.
The prognosis depends primarily on prompt initiation of treatment. Timely treatment can prevent acute complications (AKI, coma, and death) as well as progression to chronic renal failure.
With treatment, the mortality rate of HUS is low: < 10%.
Long-term renal sequelae occur in 35–55% of children with HUS.
Atypical HUS has a less favorable prognosis and a higher risk of progressing to end-stage renal disease.
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