HI, I am new here and I DON'T have APS or Lupus.
It is my husband who as Primary APS. He was dx 3 years ago when he pulled a calf muscle and ended up with a DVT. They did several rounds of blood tests over a 6 month period and at the end of that, confirmed it was APS.
He was given the choice of going on warfarin, going on asprin, or just ignoring it and hoping he didn't get any more clots. He chose to go on warfarin.
Apart from his left leg (which is the location of the DVT) aching a lot, he has had no other symptoms of APS since.
Earlier this year he had to go for a minor medical procedure and was taken off warfarin for 5 days before the procedure. He suffered from what they thought was sepsis afterwards but seemed to take several months to get over it.
At the end of September he was then taken off Warfarin and admitted to hospital for abdominal surgery. He was on a Hepron infusion the day before surgery, and afterwards. Then put on clexain and warfarin afterwards and sent home.
Over the next two weeks he became progressively unwell, with stomach pains, high fevers and very tired.
Two weeks after being discharged, I took him to our GP who had taken blood tests the previous week, and on checking the results decided it was time to go back to hospital and phoned an ambulance to take him.
From there things went down hill.
Day 1 - No sign of bleeding in the abdomin, lungs clear, heart clear.
Day 3 - CT abdomen/pelvis showed some free fluid in the pelvis and adrenal glands. Systolic murmur (not present on admission), Raised BNP 3479, cardiomegaly on chest x-ray. Small L) sided plural effusion. Troponin T raised (peaked at 5000). Developed acute kidney injury. No evidence of infective endocarditis.
Day 5 - Plural effusion aspirated, Low cortisol was fund so treated with IV hydrocotisone.
Day 7 - Diagnosed with Adrenal Insufficiency. (not present before admission).
Day 11 - CT scan showed bilateral bulky adrenal glands. Significant pericardial effusion (not present in first CT). Drained following evidence of tamponade. Blood in fluid, bit no sign of infection, etc.
Day 23 - Discharged with diagnosis of likely CAPS syndrome precipitated by abdominal surgery and warfarin cessation. Characterised by myocarditis, acute kidney injury and adrenal insufficiency.
He was released two weeks ago and is slowly improving.
While he was in hospital he was asked who his Rhumathologist was but he had never been sent to one. We had one visit him while in hospital who did tests for Lupus and confirmed that he did not have Lupus, but did not rule out having it in the future.
Are there any other's out there who have suffered what is thought to be CAPS. Having looked at the websites around, it seems he is about 1 in 100,000 as he not only had CAPS, but survived it, and is a male.