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Human granulocytic ehrlichiosis in pancreas transplant recipients
Authors:J. Trofe  K.S. Reddy  R.J. Stratta  S.D. Flax  K.T. Somerville  R.R. Alloway  M.F. Egidi  M.H. Shokouh-Amiri  A.O. Gaber
Affiliation:Department of Pharmacy, University of Tennessee-Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee, USA;, Section of Transplantation, Department of Surgery, University of Kentucky Chandler Medical Center, Lexington, Kentucky, USA;, Division of Transplantation, Department of Surgery, University of Tennessee-Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee, USA;, Department of Pathology, University of Tennessee-Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee, USA;, Department of Medicine, University of Tennessee-Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee, USA
Abstract:Abstract: Human ehrlichioses are tick‐borne infections caused by bacteria in the genus Ehrlichia of the family Rickettsiaceae. To date there have been three cases of ehrlichiosis reported in the transplant population, a human monocytic ehrlichiosis (HME) infection in a liver transplant recipient and two cases of human granulocytic ehrlichiosis (HGE) in kidney transplant recipients. We report three pancreas transplant patients who developed HGE in the last two years at a single southeastern center in the United States. All three patients had clinical, laboratory, and pathophysiologic findings on bone marrow biopsy and peripheral blood smears consistent with HGE, and responded to doxycycline therapy. In the setting of potent immunosuppression, ehrlichiosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of transplant patients presenting with persistent fever, pancytopenia, and abnormal liver function. Patients with ehrlichiosis infection may be at risk for developing other opportunistic infections or lymphoproliferative disease.
Keywords:ehrlichiosis    pancreas transplantation    opportunistic infections, immunosuppression
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