Author/Authors :
Biso, Sylvia Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA , Lekkham, Rapeepat Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA , Climaco, Antoinette Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Abstract :
Aspergillus pericarditis is a rare and life-threatening infection in immunosuppressed patients. It has nonspecific clinical
manifestations that often mimic other disease entities especially in patients who have extensive comorbidities. Diagnosis is
oftentimes delayed and rarely done antemortem. A high degree of suspicion in immunocompromised patients is necessary for
evaluation and timely diagnosis. This is a case of Aspergillus pericarditis with cardiac tamponade in a renal transplant patient with
liver cirrhosis. Two months after transplant, he developed decompensation of his cirrhosis from hepatitis C, acute cellular rejection,
and Kluyvera bacteremia, followed by vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VRE) bacteremia. Four months after transplant,
the patient presented with lethargy and fluid overload. He subsequently developed shock and ventilator-dependent respiratory
failure. An echocardiogram showed pericardial effusion with cardiac tamponade. He had emergent pericardiocentesis that showed
purulent drainage. He was started on broad-spectrum antibiotics. Amphotericin B was initiated when the pericardial fluid grew
mold that was later identified as Aspergillus fumigatus. The patient quickly decompensated and expired.
Keywords :
Aspergillus Pericarditis , Tamponade , Renal , Transplant Patient