Abstract

Kidney transplant represent the last resort for the patients with end-stage renal disease, but this revolutionary method of treatment is accompanied by multiple complications, the dermatological being among the most common. Bassal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, cutaneous lymphoma and Kaposi’s sarcoma are just few of the complications. We present the case of a 62 years old patient, which at the age of 54 he underwent a kidney transplant, without other personal pathological history. This patient presented to the clinic for multiple skin lesions: on the right earlobe and nasal wing, on the right arm and on the bilateral legs, with slow evolution of about two years, round-ovals, relatively well delimited, with dimensions between 0.4/0.3cm-2.5/2.4cm, red-brown, covered by bloody crusts (lesions located in the calves).

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