Background: Carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CR-KP) infections in solid organ transplant patients are progressively increasing and are associated with worse outcomes, although potential risk factors and therapeutic strategies are still not well defined.
Methods: We conducted a retrospective matched-pair analysis in which we compared 26 recipients CR-KP-positive after kidney transplantation (KT) with 52 CR-KP-negative patients transplanted in the same period, during a CR-KP outbreak that occurred in our hospital. Twenty-one patients (80%) received a combined antibiotic treatment.
Carbapenem-resistant (CR-KP) infections in solid organ transplant recipients are associated with high morbidity and mortality. We report a case of a fatal donor-derived CR-KP infection in a combined kidney-pancreas transplant. Given the short interval of time between donor hospitalization and organ procurement, information concerning the donor CR-KP positivity arrived only 72 hours after transplant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRhodococcus equi is a well-recognized pathogen in veterinary medicine that can also affect immuno-compromised human subjects. The most common clinical features in humans include necrotizing pneumonia with subacute pulmonary disease, progressive cough, chest pain and fever. We report a case of a 49-year-old kidney transplant patient who developed a Rhodococcus equi infection characterized by multiple abscesses of the soft tissues and muscles without any respiratory manifestation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDelayed graft function (DGF) is a frequent complication of kidney transplantation (KT) that may affect both short- and long-term graft outcome. It has been reported that pretransplantation peritoneal dialysis was correlated with a better recovery of graft function than hemodialysis in adult kidney recipients. However, the effect of pretransplantation dialysis mode (PDM) seemed to be unclear on the early outcome of KT in pediatric recipients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRenal transplantectomy is still a frequent procedure for a transplant surgeon. Nevertheless, it is constantly marred by complications, first of all bleeding. In fact, the local circumstances after the operation and the general health state of the uremic patients lead to a high incidence of this complication.
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