Pyrethroid insecticide exposure linked to acute kidney injury in a 55-year-old male
This publication is a case report and accompanying literature review. It describes a 55-year-old previously healthy male who developed acute kidney injury after household exposure to a pyrethroid-containing aerosol insecticide. Over a 3-week follow-up, his renal function progressively deteriorated, partially improved, and ultimately stabilized at stage 3 chronic kidney disease. The biopsy confirmed acute tubular necrosis and acute interstitial nephritis.
The authors synthesize that this case suggests an association between inappropriate pyrethroid exposure and clinically significant nephrotoxicity. They note that biopsy-confirmed nephrotoxicity in humans remains sparsely documented, particularly for non-occupational exposures. The review highlights the importance of considering environmental toxicants in the differential diagnosis of otherwise unexplained acute kidney injury.
Key limitations include the single-patient design and lack of a control group, which preclude causal inference. The authors acknowledge that the evidence is preliminary and not generalizable. Practice relevance is restrained, suggesting clinicians consider this exposure in the differential diagnosis of unexplained AKI.