Background: During 2009 and 2010, 2 clusters of organ transplant-transmitted Balamuthia mandrillaris, a free-living ameba, were detected by recognition of severe unexpected illness in multiple recipients from the same donor.
Methods: We investigated all recipients and the 2 donors through interview, medical record review, and testing of available specimens retrospectively. Surviving recipients were tested and treated prospectively.
Background: Historically, cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in immunocompetent patients has been considered to have a relatively indolent and self-limited course, not warranting specific treatment.
Case Presentation: We are presenting a 72-year-old African-American male transferred to our intensive care unit (ICU) with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia, respiratory failure, and dialysis-dependent acute kidney injury. While he recovered from bacteremia, he remained difficult to wean from respiratory support, had labile blood pressure, and manifested persistent diarrhea.
Background: Intralipid emulsion (ILE) is a nutritional fatty acid supplementation that is emerging as a potential therapy for local anesthetic systemic toxicity and is also being considered as a therapy for other lipophilic medication intoxications. Isolated reports of pulmonary edema or severe lipemia exist as a complication of therapy.
Case Report: A 26-year-old hypertensive, male, kidney transplant recipient presented to an outside emergency department (ED) after an intentional overdose of his medications (ie, amlodipine, metoprolol, lisinopril).
Immunosuppression (IS) is often withdrawn in patients with end stage renal disease secondary to a failed renal allograft, and this can lead to an accelerated loss of residual renal function (RRF). As maintenance of RRF appears to provide a survival benefit to peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients, it is not clear whether this benefit of maintaining RRF in failed allograft patients returning to PD outweigh the risks of maintaining IS. A 49 year-old Caucasian male developed progressive allograft failure nine years after living-donor renal transplantation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBK virus, a member of the polyomavirus family, is a well-recognized cause of irreversible graft failure after kidney transplantation. Awareness of the relationship between BK infection and immunosuppression along with better understanding of its pathogenesis has contributed to increasing rates of its diagnosis. Current therapies are aimed at early diagnosis, limiting inflammation caused by the virus and elimination of the virus through different strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHere we have used a systems biology approach to study innate and adaptive responses to vaccination against influenza in humans during three consecutive influenza seasons. We studied healthy adults vaccinated with trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine (TIV) or live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV). TIV induced higher antibody titers and more plasmablasts than LAIV did.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe addition of calcineurin inhibitors, including cyclosporine A (CsA) and FK-506 (tacrolimus), to transplant protocols has markedly reduced acute allograft rejection and prolonged patient survival. Although monitoring of serum drug levels has been shown to be a poor indicator of efficacy, there is little data on calcineurin enzymatic activity in humans. Therefore, we measured calcineurin in isolated CD3(+)/4(+) T cells from 81 non-transplant controls and 39 renal allograft patients by using a (32)PO(4)-labeled calcineurin-specific substrate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPre-existing neutralizing antibody provides the first line of defence against pathogens in general. For influenza virus, annual vaccinations are given to maintain protective levels of antibody against the currently circulating strains. Here we report that after booster vaccination there was a rapid and robust influenza-specific IgG+ antibody-secreting plasma cell (ASC) response that peaked at approximately day 7 and accounted for up to 6% of peripheral blood B cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe growing success of solid organ transplantation poses unique challenges for the implementation of effective immunization strategies. Although live attenuated vaccines have proven benefits for the general population, immunosuppressed patients are at risk for unique complications such as infection from the vaccine because of lack of both clearance and containment of a live attenuated virus. Moreover, while vaccination strategies using killed organisms or purified peptides are believed to be safe for immunosuppressed patients, they may have reduced efficacy in this population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is associated with the malignant transformation of B, T, and NK lymphocytes in humans, especially in immunosuppressed individuals.
Objective: We describe an unusual case confined to the skin in a 39-year-old African American female following a renal transplant.
Methods: Morphologically and immunophenotypically, the tumor was best classified as a plasmablastic lymphoma; however, the neoplastic population revealed rearrangements of both immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgG) and T cell receptor gamma (TCR-gamma).
Many strategies have been proposed to induce tolerance to transplanted tissue in rodents; however, few if any have shown equal efficacy when tested in nonhuman primate transplant models. We hypothesized that a critical distinction between specific pathogen-free mice and nonhuman primates or human patients is their acquired immune history. Here, we show that a heterologous immune response--specifically, virally induced alloreactive memory--is a potent barrier to tolerance induction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerforin mediates target cell apoptosis by CTLs and NK cells. Although perforin expression correlates strongly with acute allograft rejection, perforin-deficient mice reject allografts with the same kinetics as wild-type recipients. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that while perforin is dispensable for acute rejection, it is essential for down-regulating the alloimmune response by inducing the apoptosis of host immune cells.
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