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Efficacy of pyrimethamine for the prevention of donor-acquired Toxoplasma gondii infection in heart and heart-lung transplant patients
53
Citations
11
References
1992
Year
Seven (11%) of the first 65 patients who received heart transplants at Papworth Hospital were mismatched for Toxoplasma gondii. Of these, four (57%) experienced T. gondii infection and two died. The remaining two had severe symptoms and received anti-T-gondii chemotherapy for a year after transplantation. In an attempt to reduce the impact of donor-acquired T. gondii in our heart transplant recipients, we decided in April 1984 to give prophylactic pyrimethamine to all T. gondii-mismatched patients. In this study, 7 years later, we review the efficacy of this policy. Five of 37 (14%) patients given prophylactic pyrimethamine acquired T. gondii infection; only one was symptomatic, and none died. This compares with 100% symptomatic infection in the pre-1984 patients, who did not receive prophylactic pyrimethamine. We believe that our experience has shown that pyrimethamine is effective in reducing the incidence and severity of primary donor-acquired T. gondii infection in mismatched heart and heart-lung transplant recipients.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
1983 | 202 | |
1960 | 177 | |
1965 | 157 | |
1989 | 140 | |
1987 | 62 | |
1982 | 57 | |
1988 | 42 | |
1985 | 40 | |
Indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for immunoglobulin G and four immunoassays for immunoglobulin M to Toxoplasma gondii in a series of heart transplant recipients J. F. Sluiters, Aggie H.M.M. Balk, C. E. Essed, Journal of Clinical Microbiology TransplantationTransplantation MedicineImmunologyPathologySerologic Testing | 1989 | 36 |
1982 | 25 |
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