Abstract

Patients after solid organ transplantation are at increased risk of developing herpes zoster and are more likely to develop major complications such as cutaneous dissemination, post-herpetic neuralgia and visceral organ involvement. We report on a 68-year-old woman being varicella-zoster virus (VZV)-seropositive prior to transplantation, who developed fatal VZV meningoencephalitis after renal transplantation presenting with non-specific neurologic symptoms. The case illustrates that VZV reactivation may occur in renal transplant recipients in the absence of skin lesions. Approaches towards risk assessment pre-transplantation and prophylactic regimens for the prevention of VZV recurrence are needed.

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