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Case Reports
. 2005 May-Aug;29(3-4):269-76.
doi: 10.1080/01913120590951257.

Fatal pulmonary microsporidiosis due to encephalitozoon cuniculi following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for acute myelogenous leukemia

Affiliations
Case Reports

Fatal pulmonary microsporidiosis due to encephalitozoon cuniculi following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for acute myelogenous leukemia

J M Orenstein et al. Ultrastruct Pathol. 2005 May-Aug.

Abstract

Microsporidia are ubiquitous obligate eukaryotic intracellular parasites that are now felt to be more akin to degenerate fungi than to protozoa. Microsporidia can be highly pathogenic, causing a broad range of symptoms in humans, especially individuals who are immunocompromised. The vast majority of human cases of microsporidiosis have been reported during the past 20 years, in patients with HIV/AIDS, while only relatively rare cases have been described in immunocompetent individuals. However, microsporidia infections are being increasingly reported in patients following solid-organ transplanation, where the main symptom has been diarrhea. The authors report the first case of pulmonary microsporidial infection in an allogeneic bone marrow transplant recipient in the United States and only the second case in the world. The patient, with a history of Hodgkin disease followed by acute myelogenous leukemia received a T-cell-depleted graft, but succumbed to respiratory failure 63 days post transplantation. An open lung biopsy, taken just before death, was originally thought to show toxoplasmosis. The correct diagnosis of microsporidiosis was made postmortem by light and electron microscopy. DNA polymerase chain reaction analysis confirmed the diagnosis and furthermore revealed it to be the dog strain of the microsporidia species Encephalitozoon cuniculi. Although to date rarely diagnosed, microsporidial infection should also be considered in the differential diagnosis of, e.g., unexplained pulmonary infection in bone marrow transplant patients.

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