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editorial
. 2022 Dec 30;20(9):2618–2620. doi: 10.1111/ajt.16184

A kidney transplant recipient with nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea after a recent COVID-19 exposure

Alexis H Lerner 1, Liqi Shu 1, Ralph Rogers 1, Dimitrios Farmakiotis 1,*
PMCID: PMC9800660  PMID: 32862559

A 57-year-old male with history of deceased-donor kidney transplant 3 years ago presented to the hospital with 3 days of nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. His immunosuppressive regimen was mycophenolate, tacrolimus, and prednisone. The patient’s roommate had been hospitalized with COVID-19 20 days prior but had since returned home. Six days prior, while asymptomatic, the patient had tested negative for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in a nasopharyngeal specimen.

He endorsed chills but denied cough, dyspnea, dysgeusia, myalgia, headache, or history of travel. He had a fever of 103.5°F and tachycardia to 110 but no hypoxia. He did not appear to be in significant distress. He had bibasilar crackles on lung exam and a normal abdominal exam.

Laboratory testing revealed leukocytosis (12.6/μL with 87% neutrophils), lymphopenia (0.8/μL), thrombocytopenia (122/μL), hyponatremia (127 mEq/L), and a mildly elevated creatinine (1.87 mg/dL, baseline: 1.3-1.5 mg/dL). Chest radiograph ( Figure 1) and computed tomography (CT) ( Figure 2) showed a dense right middle lobe pneumonia. Repeat SARS-CoV-2 PCR, respiratory pathogen panel (both in a nasopharyngeal specimen), and Clostridium difficile toxin PCR in the stool were all negative. He was admitted to the inpatient transplant service for further care.

FIGURE 1.

FIGURE 1

Radiograph of the chest showing airspace disease in the right middle lobe

FIGURE 2.

FIGURE 2

Computed tomography of the chest, axial, and coronal views, showing right middle lobe consolidation with air bronchograms

1. QUESTIONS

  • 1
    Which of the following is most likely responsible for this patient’s symptoms, laboratory results, and imaging findings?
    • a
      An intracellular bacterium
    • b
      A mold
    • c
      A parasite
    • d
      A virus
    • e
      A yeast
  • 2
    Which of the following tests should be the preferred next step towards diagnosis?
    • a
      Pathogen-specific antibodies in the serum
    • b
      PCR in an oropharyngeal specimen
    • c
      Serum β-D-glucan
    • d
      Serum galactomannan
    • e
      Urinary antigen
  • 3
    Which of the following is appropriate treatment for this infection?
    • a
      Azithromycin
    • b
      Hydroxychloroquine
    • c
      Remdesivir
    • d
      Voriconazole
    • e
      Azithromycin and hydroxychloroquine
  • 4
    Which of the following cognitive biases likely affected the initial diagnostic approach to this case?
    • a
      Availability bias
    • b
      Dunning-Kruger effect
    • c
      Gambler’s fallacy
    • d
      Blind obedience
    • e
      All the above

Articles from American Journal of Transplantation are provided here courtesy of Elsevier

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