Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:6.2.1.7 (BAL)
1,977 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 40-year-old man who lived in a wooden house built 30 years ago presented with complaints of fever, dry cough and dyspnea. Chest X-ray findings showed interstitial shadows throughout bilateral lung fields. After admission, high-dose administration of 3000 mg of methylprednisolone was performed because of deterioration of chest X-ray shadows and symptoms. In a week, clinical data and symptoms improved. Findings of BAL fluid on admission revealed a relative increase of lymphocytes, neutrophils and mast cells, and pathological findings of transbronchial lung biopsy revealed non-caseous granulation and alveolitis. Precipitating antibodies and indirect fluorescent antibodies against Trichosporon cutaneum and Cryptococcus neoformans had positive reactions and T. cutaneum was isolated and identified from the patient's house. A diagnosis of summer-type hypersensitivity pneumonitis was made according to the criteria advocated by Ando et al. This seemed to be a rare case of summer-type hypersensitivity pneumonitis prolonged after isolation from his normal living environment, successfully treated by high-dose administration of steroid.
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PMID:[A case of severe summer-type hypersensitivity pneumonitis treated with high-dose administration of steroid]. 177 Jun 86

Although cryptococcal pneumonia is a well recognized complication of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, optimal diagnostic approaches remain to be defined. During a 32-month period (October 1984 to June 1987), 11 patients were diagnosed with CP at our institution. The diagnosis was established in all 11 patients from specimens obtained via fiberoptic bronchoscopy (ten) and/or double-lumen catheter lavage (one). Direct stains of sedimented bronchoalveolar lavage were positive for organisms characteristic of Cryptococcus neoformans in nine of 11 patients. Transbronchial biopsies were positive (special histologic stains) in six of eight patients; bronchial washings were positive (direct smear) in seven of ten patients, the bronchial brushings were positive on stain in six of nine patients, and in one patient, a Wang transbronchial needle aspirate was positive on stain. Fungal cultures were positive on the BAL in seven of 11 patients, and on the bronchial washings in four of ten patients; the TBBx culture samples were all negative (zero of three). The serum cryptococcal antigen titer was elevated (median = 1:1024) in all eight patients in which it was assayed. Our data suggest that BAL and bronchial washings have a combined sensitivity on smear equal to that of TBBx and superior to that of TBBx fungal culture. The TBBx does not appear to be necessary in this setting. In addition, an elevated serum cryptococcal antigen titer appears to be an important adjunct in the evaluation of pulmonary infiltrates in AIDS.
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PMID:Utility of bronchoscopic sampling techniques for cryptococcal disease in AIDS. 198 97

In U.S. patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia is the most frequent AIDS-defining opportunistic infection. Sputum induction and bronchoscopy are effective techniques for obtaining specimens used to identify P. carinii although debate continues over their optimal use, specifically whether to perform bronchoscopy after a negative induced sputum examination for P. carinii. To evaluate the usefulness of bronchoscopy in this situation, we reviewed all cases of suspected P. carinii pneumonia in which sputum induction for P. carinii was performed at San Francisco General Hospital during a 4-yr period. Bronchoscopy, performed after a negative induced sputum examination, yielded a diagnosis in 50.5% of evaluations. The most frequent diagnoses were P. carinii pneumonia (192), tracheobronchial Kaposi's sarcoma (93), tuberculosis (28), and Cryptococcus neoformans pneumonia (9). Bronchoscopy provided either the only or an earlier diagnosis in 64.3% of tuberculosis cases. Bronchoscopy with BAL was free of complications, and, importantly, a negative BAL examination for P. carinii allowed physicians to discontinue empiric P. carinii pneumonia treatment in 95%. In patients with suspected P. carinii pneumonia with a negative induced sputum examination for P. carinii, early bronchoscopy with BAL should be performed.
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PMID:Suspected Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia with a negative induced sputum examination. Is early bronchoscopy useful? 776 33

We conducted a retrospective investigation of 20 cases of pulmonary cryptococcosis discovered by chest radiographic screening in Nagasaki Prefecture among 2,011,577 persons over a period of 9 years, Apr. 1989-Mar. 1998. Eight males and 12 females between 15 and 72 years of age(mean: 46.6 years) were diagnosed as having pulmonary cryptococcosis. The mean detectability of pulmonary cryptococcosis by screening was 0.99 per 10(5) persons: 1.30 for residents, 0.51 for school children and 0.80 for workers. Chest radiography showed shadows of solitary nodules in 9 patients, multiple nodules in 4, infiltration in 4 and others in 3. Cavities were noted in 7. However, it was difficult to distinguish between pulmonary cryptococcosis from pulmonary tuberculosis and pulmonary cancer based on radiographic data alone. Final diagnoses for 11 and 3 patients, respectively, were made using TBLB or BAL, and lung biopsy. Sixteen patients each underwent an Eiken-Latex agglutination test (serum cryptococcus antigen test) and 15 (93.8%) had positive results. The serum antigen level thus appears to be a useful indicator in the supplementary serological diagnosis of pulmonary cryptococcosis.
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PMID:[Study on pulmonary cryptococcosis disclosed by chest radiographic screening in Nagasaki Prefecture]. 1124 25

A Nordic External Quality Assessment programme in medical mycology was established in 2005. In order to monitor not 'best practice' but the level of routine diagnostics, specimens were designed to resemble clinical samples and laboratories were asked to handle the samples like routine samples. Five simulated clinical samples were distributed to 59 participating Nordic laboratories of clinical microbiology. The specimens contained the following microorganisms: 1) Candida glabrata and C. albicans in a ratio of 1:20; 2) Cryptococcus neoformans; 3) Aspergillus fumigatus, C. albicans and Enterobacter cloacae; 4) C. tropicalis, Klebsiella pneumonia and Enterococcus faecium; 5) None. 66% of the laboratories failed to detect the C. glabrata isolate in sample no. 1. 34% of the laboratories reporting susceptibility results incorrectly reported the Cryptococcus neoformans isolate as fluconazole susceptible. 24% of the laboratories failed to detect Aspergillus fumigatus in specimen no. 3 despite the accompanying clinical information notifying that it was a BAL sample from a neutropenic patient in an ICU. In conclusion, this distribution of simulated clinical samples illustrates that the traditional quality assessment programmes may give a false sense of satisfactory performance, that mycological diagnosis is difficult, and that there is a need of further improvement and attention.
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PMID:Diagnostics of fungal infections in the Nordic countries: we still need to improve! 1745 98