Intracranial Fungal Infection After Solid-Organ Transplant.

Intracranial Fungal Infection After Solid-Organ Transplant. Exp Clin Transplant. 2018 Mar;16(Suppl 1):179-182 Authors: Şahintürk F, Demirkaya H, Dere ÜA, Sönmez E, Altınörs N, Moray G, Haberal M Abstract Neurologic complications after solid-organ transplant reveal a great spectrum of pathologies. Intracranial hemorrhages, cerebral ischemic lesions, infarctions, lymphoproliferative disorders, and infections, including aspergillosis, have been observed after liver transplant. Fungi constitute nearly 5% of all central nervous system infections, mainly occurring in immunocompromised patients. The most common causative agent is Aspergillus species. It presents either as maxillary sinusitis or pulmonary infection. Brain involvement of Aspergillus carries a high rate of mortality. Aspergillosis presents in the forms of meningitis, mycotic aneurysms, infarctions, and mass lesions. Aspergillosis does not have a specific radiologic appearance. Parenchymal aspergillosis has heterogenous signal intensity (hypointense on T1-weighted and hyperintense on T2-weighted images). Here, we present 3 patients who underwent solid-organ transplant and developed central nervous system aspergillosis. Different modalities of neurosurgical intervention were performed in combination with chemotherapy as part of their fungal therapy. PMID: 29528023 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Experimental and Clinical Transplantation : official journal of the Middle East Society for Organ Transplantation - Category: Transplant Surgery Authors: Tags: Exp Clin Transplant Source Type: research