Erschienen in:
28.10.2016 | Brief Report
Fatal disseminated cowpox virus infection in an adolescent renal transplant recipient
verfasst von:
Paul Gazzani, Joanna E Gach, Isabel Colmenero, Jeff Martin, Hugh Morton, Kevin Brown, David V Milford
Erschienen in:
Pediatric Nephrology
|
Ausgabe 3/2017
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Abstract
Background
A 17-year-old boy on long-term immunosuppression following renal transplantation for chronic kidney disease (CKD), the result of dysplastic kidneys, initially presented with a swelling in his neck while attending hospital for an unrelated problem. A clinical diagnosis of tonsillitis was made, and he was treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics. Over a few days, his condition deteriorated, and he developed multiple vesicopustular skin lesions and required an emergency tonsillectomy due to respiratory distress.
Case diagnosis/treatment
Histological investigation of the skin and tonsillar tissue suggested a viral aetiology, and subsequent electron microscopy and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tissue examination proved disseminated cowpox infection. The family cat, which was reported as having self-resolving sores on its skin, was likely the source of the infection. The child failed to respond to antiviral treatment and succumbed to multiorgan failure within a month of admission.
Conclusions
We report this case of fatal disseminated cowpox infection to highlight an increasing risk of this illness in the post-transplant population and to detail some unusual features not previously described, such as tonsillar involvement, disseminated skin lesions and multiorgan failure.