Progressive neurological disease induced by tacrolimus in a renal transplant recipient: Case presentation

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Tacrolimus and cyclosporine, both calcineurin inhibitors, can cause neurological side effects. While mild symptoms such as tremor are well recognised, severe complications including seizures and encephalopathy are poorly documented f...

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Main Authors: Hanna Michael G, Chegounchi Marjan, Neild Guy H
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2006-03-01
Series:BMC Nephrology
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2369/7/7
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spelling doaj-6093da272d264f4a8cfca25e50f8f3322020-11-25T01:27:06ZengBMCBMC Nephrology1471-23692006-03-0171710.1186/1471-2369-7-7Progressive neurological disease induced by tacrolimus in a renal transplant recipient: Case presentationHanna Michael GChegounchi MarjanNeild Guy H<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Tacrolimus and cyclosporine, both calcineurin inhibitors, can cause neurological side effects. While mild symptoms such as tremor are well recognised, severe complications including seizures and encephalopathy are poorly documented following renal transplantation.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>We report a 42 year old man who received a cadaver renal transplant. He received tacrolimus and prednisolone. The course was uneventful for 6 weeks when he became intermittently confused, with unsteady gait and slurred speech. Following a grand mal convulsion he was admitted. He had no focal neurological signs, cerebrospinal fluid was normal; electroencephalogram was consistent with temporal lobe partial epilepsy. The magnetic resonance imaging of brain showed widespread changes with multiple areas of low signal intensity in brain stem and cerebral hemispheres. He was readmitted 3 weeks later after further fits, despite anti-convulsant therapy. He was psychotic with visual hallucinations, and rapidly became obtunded. Although his tacrolimus blood concentration had been kept in the normal range, his symptoms improved dramatically when the tacrolimus was stopped.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Severe central nervous system toxicity from calcineurin inhibitors has been rarely reported in renal transplantation and we found only one report of tacrolimus-induced toxicity in an adult. We believe the condition is frequently undiagnosed. It is a very important diagnosis not to miss as the remedy is simple and failure may result in unnecessary brain biopsy, as well as irreversible injury.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2369/7/7
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hanna Michael G
Chegounchi Marjan
Neild Guy H
spellingShingle Hanna Michael G
Chegounchi Marjan
Neild Guy H
Progressive neurological disease induced by tacrolimus in a renal transplant recipient: Case presentation
BMC Nephrology
author_facet Hanna Michael G
Chegounchi Marjan
Neild Guy H
author_sort Hanna Michael G
title Progressive neurological disease induced by tacrolimus in a renal transplant recipient: Case presentation
title_short Progressive neurological disease induced by tacrolimus in a renal transplant recipient: Case presentation
title_full Progressive neurological disease induced by tacrolimus in a renal transplant recipient: Case presentation
title_fullStr Progressive neurological disease induced by tacrolimus in a renal transplant recipient: Case presentation
title_full_unstemmed Progressive neurological disease induced by tacrolimus in a renal transplant recipient: Case presentation
title_sort progressive neurological disease induced by tacrolimus in a renal transplant recipient: case presentation
publisher BMC
series BMC Nephrology
issn 1471-2369
publishDate 2006-03-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Tacrolimus and cyclosporine, both calcineurin inhibitors, can cause neurological side effects. While mild symptoms such as tremor are well recognised, severe complications including seizures and encephalopathy are poorly documented following renal transplantation.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>We report a 42 year old man who received a cadaver renal transplant. He received tacrolimus and prednisolone. The course was uneventful for 6 weeks when he became intermittently confused, with unsteady gait and slurred speech. Following a grand mal convulsion he was admitted. He had no focal neurological signs, cerebrospinal fluid was normal; electroencephalogram was consistent with temporal lobe partial epilepsy. The magnetic resonance imaging of brain showed widespread changes with multiple areas of low signal intensity in brain stem and cerebral hemispheres. He was readmitted 3 weeks later after further fits, despite anti-convulsant therapy. He was psychotic with visual hallucinations, and rapidly became obtunded. Although his tacrolimus blood concentration had been kept in the normal range, his symptoms improved dramatically when the tacrolimus was stopped.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Severe central nervous system toxicity from calcineurin inhibitors has been rarely reported in renal transplantation and we found only one report of tacrolimus-induced toxicity in an adult. We believe the condition is frequently undiagnosed. It is a very important diagnosis not to miss as the remedy is simple and failure may result in unnecessary brain biopsy, as well as irreversible injury.</p>
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2369/7/7
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