Chickenpox in Adult Renal Transplant Recipients |
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Authors: | Bradley, J. R. Wreghitt, T. G. Evans, D. B. |
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Affiliation: | 1Department of Renal Medicine, Addenbrooke's Hospital Cambridge, UK 2Department of Clinical Microbiology and Public Health Laboratory, Addenbrooke's Hospital Cambridge, UK |
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Abstract: | Five of 610 adults developed chickenpox between 35 days and9.2 years after renal transplantation, and only one patientsurvived. All patients received prednisolone and azathioprineduring the incubation period. Corticosteroid therapy was continued,but azathioprine was stopped after diagnosis. Four patientswere treated with acyclovir, but three were given suboptimaldoses. The patient who survived had been taking the lowest doseof azathioprine and was given the recommended dose of acyclovir.All patients who died developed disseminated intravascular coagulation,and at postmortem examination were found to have had cerebralhaemorrhage. None of the patients treated with acyclovir hadevidence of active varicella-zoster virus infection at postmortem examination, but two had disseminated bacterial and fungalinfections. Chickenpox follows a severe and often fatal course in adultswith renal transplants. Prompt acyclovir therapy can be effective,provided an adequate dose is given. Attention should be directedtowards prevention by the identification and immunisation ofat risk patients prior to transplantation. |
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Keywords: | Chickenpox Immunosuppression Renal transplantation Varicella-zoster virus |
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