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Malaria after living donor liver transplantation: report of two cases |
Durgatosh Pandey, Kan-Hoe Lee, Sin-Yew Wong and Kai-Chah Tan |
Singapore, Singapore
Author Affiliations: Department of Hepatobiliary Surgery and Liver Transplantation (Pandey D and Tan KC); Department of Respiratory Medicine and Intensive Care (Lee KH); and Department of Infectious Diseases (Wong SY), Asian Centre for Liver Diseases and Transplantation, Gleneagles Hospital, Singapore
Corresponding Author: Durgatosh Pandey, MCh, Department of Surgical Oncology, Institute of Medical Sciences, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi 221005, India (Tel: 91-542-2309511; Fax: 91-542- 2368856; Email: durgatosh@gmail.com) |
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Abstract BACKGROUND: Infectious complications are common during the postoperative course of a liver transplant recipient. Malaria, however, is a rare complication in such a setting.
METHOD: We report post-transplantation malaria causing elevation of liver enzymes in two recipients.
RESULTS: Both patients who had undergone living donor liver transplantation showed elevated levels of liver enzymes and fever during the postoperative course. Investigations (including liver biopsy in one patient) were initially inconclusive in determining the cause of liver dysfunction. The diagnosis of malaria was established in both cases by peripheral blood smear. Liver function transiently worsened with antimalarial treatment but subsequently became normal.
CONCLUSION: This report highlights the importance of excluding such uncommon causes of post-transplantation liver dysfunction, especially when either the recipient or the donor comes from a region endemic for malaria.
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