Cerebral Toxoplasmosis in a Renal Transplant Recipient—A Rare Complication
Dubravka Mihaljević, Zvonimir Sitaš, Josip Hanulak, Petar Vranjić, Justina Mihaljević

TL;DR
A kidney transplant recipient developed cerebral toxoplasmosis, a rare infection, which was misdiagnosed initially but later confirmed through testing and treatment.
Contribution
This paper presents a rare case of cerebral toxoplasmosis in a renal transplant recipient and emphasizes the importance of early diagnosis and treatment.
Findings
Cerebral toxoplasmosis was confirmed in a renal transplant recipient through histopathology and PCR testing.
The patient showed neurological improvement with anti-toxoplasma therapy but later died from urosepsis.
The case highlights the diagnostic challenges of cerebral toxoplasmosis, which can mimic brain tumors.
Abstract
Cerebral toxoplasmosis is a rare but potentially fatal opportunistic infection in renal transplant recipients receiving long-term immunosuppressive therapy. It may result from donor-derived transmission or reactivation of latent infection. We report the case of a 70-year-old female who underwent kidney transplantation from a deceased donor in 2004 for end-stage renal disease due to glomerulonephritis. She was maintained on cyclosporine, mycophenolate mofetil, and prednisone. In September 2024, she presented with headache, mood changes, and right-sided hemiparesis. Brain multislice computed tomography revealed a large temporoparietal lesion initially suspected to be glioblastoma. Craniotomy and histopathological analysis demonstrated encysted Toxoplasma gondii bradyzoites within gliotic tissue. Polymerase chain reaction testing confirmed the presence of T. gondii DNA, while human…
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Taxonomy
TopicsToxoplasma gondii Research Studies · T-cell and Retrovirus Studies · Leptospirosis research and findings
