Lymphadenopathy in an immunosuppressed patient raises the quintessential diagnostic dilemma: infection or malignancy? We present the case of a transplant recipient on anti-rejection prophylaxis admitted with acute fever, malaise and a swollen right axillary node. The patient had pancytopenia and tested positive for Epstein-Barr virus; nodal core biopsy demonstrated atypical plasma cell infiltration, immediately raising suspicion for post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder. However, excisional biopsy and serology clarified a final diagnosis of cat-scratch disease-a potentially fatal zoonosis requiring a disparate treatment regimen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBowel obstruction is a common cause for the acute abdomen with different aetiologies that shapes subsequent management plans. Small bowel obstruction often develop due to intra-abdominal adhesions in patients with prior abdominal surgery and for large bowel obstructions, more commonly due to tumours and lesions. Disruptions to normal intra-abdominal anatomy as seen in pancreatic-kidney transplantation or kidney transplant alone can result in increased risk of bowel obstruction-especially if the donor graft is implanted within the intraperitoneal plane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Kidney transplants from small pediatric donors are considered marginal and often transplanted as dual grafts. This study aimed to compare long-term outcomes between recipients of single kidney transplants (SKTs) and dual en bloc kidney transplants (EBKTs) from small pediatric donors.
Methods: Data were obtained from the Australia and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Registry.
Scrotal-inguino-retroperitoneal (SIR) lymphocele is a rare complication following kidney transplant. This entity is characterized by a tract originating in the retroperitoneal space, through the inguinal canal and scrotum following lymph hydrodissection. Systematic review investigating SIR lymphocele yielded cases with open fenestration of the sac into the peritoneum as treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNodulocystic basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is a cystic variant of BCC, which can easily be misdiagnosed. We report a case of a 52-year-old man with a nodulocystic BCC that appeared at the site of a previously excised BCC 9 years prior. It examined as a benign cyst with a radiological signature of a vascular malformation.
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