Unusual Fungal Endocarditis Causing Disseminated Infection After Renal Transplant

肾移植后罕见真菌性心内膜炎引起播散性感染

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Abstract

Fungal endocarditis is a relatively uncommon disease; it mostly affects those with intracardiac devices and those with compromised immune systems. Scedosporium apiospermum (S. apiospermum), the asexual state of Pseudoallescheria boydii, has become increasingly reported as an opportunistic pathogen. These filamentous fungi present in soil, sewage, and polluted waters, and was previously recognized to cause human infection after their inhalation or traumatic subcutaneous implantation. In immunocompetent individuals, it usually causes localized diseases depending on the site of entry such as skin mycetoma. However, in immunocompromised hosts, the fungus species appear to disseminate and cause invasive infections, frequently reported to be life-threatening with poor response to antifungal medications. S. apiospermum invasive endocarditis remains a rare complication, mostly cited in immunocompetent hosts with prosthetic cardiac valves or other intracardiac devices and severely immunocompromised patients with hematologic neoplasia. Herein, we describe the case of a renal transplant patient on immunosuppressive medications who presented with S. apiospermum fungal septic infection that invaded the left ventricular outflow tract (LVOT) causing endocarditis with disseminated infection and resulted in poor clinical outcome.

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