Myositis and acute kidney injury in bacterial atypical pneumonia: Systematic literature review
Myositis and acute kidney injury in bacterial atypical pneumonia: Systematic literature review
Simoni et al., 2020 | J Infect Public Health | Systematic Review
Citation
Simoni Chiara, Camozzi Pietro, ... Milani Gregorio P. Myositis and acute kidney injury in bacterial atypical pneumonia: Systematic literature review. J Infect Public Health. 2020-Dec;13(12):2020-2024. doi:10.1016/j.jiph.2020.10.007
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bacterial community-acquired atypical pneumonia is sometimes complicated by a myositis or by a renal parenchymal disease. Available reviews do not mention the concurrent occurrence of both myositis and acute kidney injury. METHODS: In order to characterize the link between bacterial community-acquired atypical pneumonia and both myositis and a renal parenchymal disease, we reviewed the literature (United States National Library of Medicine and Excerpta Medica databases). RESULTS: We identified 42 previously healthy subjects (35 males and 7 females aged from 2 to 76, median 42 years) with a bacterial atypical pneumonia associated both with myositis (muscle pain and creatine kinase ≥5 times the upper limit of normal) and acute kidney injury (increase in creatinine to ≥1.5 times baseline or increase by ≥27 μmol/L above the upper limit of normal). Thirty-six cases were caused by Legionella species (N = 27) and by Mycoplasma pneumoniae (N = 9). Further germs accounted for the remaining 6 cases. The vast majority of cases (N = 36) presented a diffuse myalgia. Only a minority of cases (N = 3) were affected by a calf myositis. The diagnosis of rhabdomyolysis-associated kidney injury was retained in 37 and that of acute interstitial nephritis in the remaining 5 cases. CONCLUSION: Bacterial atypical pneumonia may occasionally induce myositis and secondary kidney damage.
Key Findings
We identified 42 previously healthy subjects (35 males and 7 females aged from 2 to 76, median 42 years) with a bacterial atypical pneumonia associated both with myositis (muscle pain and creatine kinase ≥5 times the upper limit of normal) and acute kidney injury (increase in creatinine to ≥1.5 times baseline or increase by ≥27 μmol/L above the upper limit of normal). Thirty-six cases were caused by Legionella species (N = 27) and by Mycoplasma pneumoniae (N = 9). Further germs accounted for the
Outcomes Measured
- Requires manual extraction
Population
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Population | See abstract |
| Sample Size | 27 |
| Age Range | See abstract |
| Condition | See abstract |
MeSH Terms
- Acute Kidney Injury
- Adult
- Community-Acquired Infections
- Female
- Humans
- Male
- Myositis
- Nephritis, Interstitial
- Pneumonia, Bacterial
- Pneumonia, Mycoplasma
Evidence Classification
- Level: Systematic Review
- Publication Types: Journal Article, Systematic Review
- Vertical: creatine
Provenance
- PMID: 33139236
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jiph.2020.10.007
- PMCID: Not in PMC
- Verified: 2026-04-09 via PubMed E-utilities API
Source extracted via PubMed E-utilities API on 2026-04-09