A case of septic shock due to delayed diagnosis of Cryptosporidium infection after liver transplantation.

BMC Infect Dis

Department of Critical Care Medicine, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, 610041, China.

Published: April 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cryptosporidium is a germ that can cause severe diarrhea, especially in people who have had organ transplants, like liver transplants.
  • A patient became very sick after having diarrhea for over 20 days, and doctors found out the cause was Cryptosporidium after running special tests.
  • Treatment involved giving the patient antibiotics and reducing their immunosuppression, which helped them recover.

Article Abstract

Background: Cryptosporidium is recognized as a significant pathogen of diarrhea disease in immunocompromised hosts, and studies have shown that Cryptosporidium infection is high in solid organ transplantation (SOT) patients and often has serious consequences. Because of the lack of specificity of diarrheasymptoms cased by Cryptosporidium infection, it is rarely reported in patients undergoing liver transplantation (LT). It frequently delays diagnosis, coming with severe consequences. In clinical work, diagnosing Cryptosporidium infection in LT patients is also complex but single, and the corresponding anti-infective treatment regimen has not yet been standardized. A rare case of septic shock due to a delayed diagnosis of Cryptosporidium infection after LT and relevant literature are discussed in the passage.

Case Presentation: A patient who had received LT for two years was admitted to the hospital with diarrhea more than 20 days after eating an unclean diet. After failing treatment at a local hospital, he was admitted to Intensive Care Unit after going into septic shock. The patient presented hypovolemia due to diarrhea, which progressed to septic shock. The patient's sepsis shock was controlled after receiving multiple antibiotic combinations and fluid resuscitation. However, the persistent diarrhea, as the culprit of the patient's electrolyte disturbance, hypovolemia, and malnutrition, was unsolved. The causative agent of diarrhea, Cryptosporidium infection, was identified by colonoscopy, faecal antacid staining, and blood high-throughput sequencing (NGS). The patient was treated by reducing immunosuppression and Nitazoxanide (NTZ), which proved effective in this case.

Conclusion: When LT patients present with diarrhea, clinicians should consider the possibility of Cryptosporidium infection, in addition to screening for conventional pathogens. Tests such as colonoscopy, stool antacid staining and blood NGS sequencing can help diagnose and treat of Cryptosporidium infection early and avoid serious consequences of delayed diagnosis. In treating Cryptosporidium infection in LT patients, the focus should be on the patient's immunosuppressive therapy, striking a balance between anti-immunorejection and anti-infection should be sought. Based on practical experience, NTZ therapy in combination with controlled CD4 + T cells at 100-300/mm was highly effective against Cryptosporidium without inducing immunorejection.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10131476PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12879-023-08252-6DOI Listing

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