Apparent recurrence of progressive systemic sclerosis in a renal allograft
P. B. Woodhall, R. C. McCoy, J. C. Gunnells and H. F. Seigler
A young woman with progressive systemic sclerosis (PSS) and renal failure
who received a renal transplant from her mother suffered accelerated loss
of allograft function in the absence of hyperacute rejection or severe
hypertension. A biopsy specimen and pathologic examination of the
transplanted organ showed a fluorescent antibody pattern and vascular
changes that were indistinguishable from those in the patient's native
kidneys. This clinical sequence is a departure from the relative success of
renal transplantation in the few previously reported cases of PSS where it
has been used as therapy for renal failure.