Unusual manifestation of cutaneous Leishmaniasis in a renal transplant recipient
Authors
Abstract:
Cutaneous leishmaniasis may present as unusual manifestations in renal transplant patients receiving immunosuppressive therapy. This misleading presentation, may delay the diagnosis and treatment. Moreover special caution must be taken in renal transplant recipients because of possible interactions between antimony compounds and cyclosporine metabolites. We report a 45-year old man with 5 years history of kidney transplantation receiving immunosuppressive drugs who had an extensive, painful ulcer on the left and upper side of his chest. Laboratory evaluation confirmed the diagnosis of cutaneous leishmaniasis. The patient was treated successfully with a 3-week period of intramuscular Glucantime.
similar resources
Delayed and overlooked diagnosis of an unusual opportunistic infection in a renal transplant recipient: visceral leishmaniasis.
Visceral leishmaniasis is a rare opportunistic infection in renal transplantation patients and its presentation may be associated with or masked by many other factors in immunosuppressed patients. So, if it is not searched for in particular, diagnosis may be easily overlooked or delayed in renal transplant patients. A 32-year-old renal transplant recipient devoleped splenomegaly, pyrexia and pa...
full textAn unusual case of CMV cutaneous ulcers in a renal transplant recipient and review of literature
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection involving the skin is rare. We present a case of a renal transplant recipient who developed fever and axillary, scrotal and penile skin ulcers after renal transplantation. The skin ulcers did not heal with antibiotics. The skin biopsy revealed CMV inclusion bodies, CMV antigen on immunohistochemistry and high CMV DNA copies. The patient was diagnosed with CMV cut...
full textAcalculous Cholecystitis: An Unusual Manifestation of Cytomegalovirus Disease in Renal Transplant Recipient
Background: Common clinical manifestations of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection include flu-like symptoms with fever, diarrhea, leukopenia, and elevated liver enzymes. Diagnosis is made by detection of the virus by buffy-coat blood culture or by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis. Methods: Here we describe a women renal transplant recipient who presented with acalculous cholecystitis with C...
full textCutaneous and articular tuberculosis in a renal transplant recipient.
Seven months after undergoing kidney transplantation, a 56-year-old woman presented with papules and ulcers in her right forearm. The patient received antibiotics for 8 months with limited improvement. Eleven months after symptom onset, she presented with acute arthritis in her left knee. Asynovial fluid culture yielded Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and a forearm ulcer biopsy showed granulomatous...
full textPrimary cutaneous cryptococcosis in a renal transplant recipient: case report.
We report a kidney transplant recipient with severe skin- and soft-tissue infection mimicking necrotising fasciitis. Patient failed to respond to empirical antibiotic therapy for presumed bacterial cellulitis. Culture of aspirate from the wound and tissue samples revealed Cryptococcus neoformans. No signs of systemic cryptococcal infection were found. After antifungal treatment and surgical int...
full textUnusual Kaposi's sarcoma in a renal transplant recipient.
Kaposi’s sarcoma (KS) was first described as an ‘idiopathic multiple pigmented sarcoma of the skin’ by Moritz Kaposi in 1872 [1]. Skin lesions have a dark blue or purplish colour on white skin and often appear pigmented on black skin. Initially, they may be macular and may coalesce to form large plaques. Subsequently, they become infiltrating and may form nodular and fungiform tumours. We prese...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 3 issue 2
pages 39- 42
publication date 2000-01-01
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023