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Thrombotic microangiopathy following heart transplant in pediatric Danon disease.

Abstract
This case describes an uncommon acute complication of diffuse thrombotic angiopathy and associated aHUS/TTP in an 11-year-old girl with Danon disease who underwent orthotopic heart transplant. Shortly after transplant, despite an uncomplicated operative course, the patient developed severe kidney injury and progressive altered mental status, culminating in cerebral edema, brain herniation, and death. She had received a single dose of tacrolimus (FK506) and a single dose of antithymocyte globulin. Sources of progressive somnolence, including oversedation from impaired renal clearance of opiates, and severe myopathy as has been previously described in Danon disease, were ruled out, and the patient continued to decline. Initial brain CT scan early after transplant showed no signs of cerebral edema, but repeat CT indicated severe cerebral edema. Based on autopsy, diffuse thrombotic angiopathy, with signs of hemolytic anemia with schistocytes, was likely responsible for her deterioration in the broader condition of aHUS/TTP.
AuthorsKevin Hummel, Kristi Glotzbach, Shaji Menon, Eric Griffiths, Ashwin K Lal
JournalPediatric transplantation (Pediatr Transplant) Vol. 24 Issue 4 Pg. e13669 (06 2020) ISSN: 1399-3046 [Electronic] Denmark
PMID32067323 (Publication Type: Case Reports, Journal Article)
Copyright© 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Topics
  • Child
  • Fatal Outcome
  • Female
  • Glycogen Storage Disease Type IIb (complications)
  • Heart Failure (complications, surgery)
  • Heart Transplantation
  • Humans
  • Postoperative Complications (pathology)
  • Thrombotic Microangiopathies (pathology)

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