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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We evaluated a patient with disseminated
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis and
Mycobacterium
chelonae infection, of which he died. He also developed autoimmune (type I)
diabetes
and primary hypothyroidism. His serum contained a high titer of immunoglobulin G autoantibody to interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) capable of blocking in vitro responses to this cytokine by peripheral blood mononuclear cells from normal donors. These results suggest that autoantibodies to IFN-gamma can induce susceptibility to disseminated
mycobacterial infection
, which may be refractory to chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Autoantibodies to interferon-gamma in a patient with selective susceptibility to mycobacterial infection and organ-specific autoimmunity. 1467 69
Fever of unknown origin (FUO) is a common syndrome. A total of 94 patients (57 men and 37 women; mean age, 56.3 +/- 19 years, range, 18-86 years) who met the criteria of FUO were included in this study.
Mycobacteriosis
was diagnosed in 22 (23%) of these patients (13 men and 9 women), including 9 with disseminated disease and 13 with pulmonary disease. There was no significant statistical difference in age, sex, short-term survival status (3 months), and other clinical parameters between patients with and without mycobacteriosis. Clinical manifestations may be specific or nonspecific. The most common initial presentations in patients with mycobacteriosis were respiratory tract symptoms, mainly of cough and dyspnea, observed in 11 (50%) patients, and disturbance of consciousness in 6 (27%). The associated conditions included malnutrition (4 patients, 18%),
diabetes mellitus
(3, 14%), and renal failure (3, 14%). Four (18%) patients had a history of pulmonary tuberculosis or tuberculous spondylitis in their early adulthood. The 2 most common findings on chest radiograph were interstitial (41%) and nonspecific infiltrative (32%) patterns. In conclusion, mycobacteriosis remains the leading cause of FUO in southern Taiwan and it is important to screen for this treatable disease in all cases of FUO.
...
PMID:Mycobacteriosis in patients with fever of unknown origin. 1472 53
We treated a 42-year-old man with pulmonary tuberculosis presenting as a round mass in a cavitary lesion that resembled a fungus ball. These findings appeared within a short time. The diagnosis was confirmed by isolation of
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis from his sputum. He also had
diabetes mellitus
that was poorly controlled. The patient was treated with antituberculous chemotherapy and insulin therapy. With these treatments, the roentgenographic abnormalities resolved fairly rapidly.
...
PMID:[Pulmonary tuberculosis mimicking fungus ball]. 1511 57
A 68-year-old man with adult-onset
diabetes mellitus
suffered an accidental puncture wound to the palm of his hand while playing with his pet dog. He received cephalosporin prophylaxis for 1 week. No inflammation occurred. Six months later, a mass developed near his elbow. It was removed. Histopathology revealed granulomas containing acid-fast bacilli (AFB). No culture was done. Swelling and decreased motion of the wrist and fingers developed. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed inflammation of the flexor compartment of the hand, wrist, and forearm. Surgical incision and drainage yielded purulent material, granulomatous inflammation, with AFB. Cultures yielded
Mycobacterium
kansasii. Several surgical procedures were required; M kansasii was recovered. He received isoniazid and rifampin for 1 year and prolonged rehabilitation. After 4 years, he was relatively asymptomatic, with good function of wrist and fingers. We believe this to be the first report of tenosynovitis caused by M kansasii in association with a dog bite.
...
PMID:Tenosynovitis caused by Mycobacterium kansasii associated with a dog bite. 1516 45
The diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis is often delayed due to atypical clinical features and difficulty in obtaining positive bacteriology. We reviewed 232 cases of pulmonary tuberculosis diagnosed in Kedah Medical Centre, Alor Setar from January 1998 to December 2002. All age groups were affected with a male predominance (Male:Female ratio = 60:40). Risk factors include underlying
diabetes mellitus
(17.7%), positive family history (16.8%) and previous tuberculosis (5.2%). Nearly half (45.3%) of patients had symptoms for more than one year. Only 22% of patients had typical symptoms of tuberculosis (prolonged recurrent fever, cough, anorexia and weight loss), whilst others presented with haemoptysis, chronic cough, COPD, bronchiectasis, general ill-health, pyrexia of unknown origin or pleural effusion without other systemic symptoms. Fifteen percent of the patients presented with extrapulmonary diagnosis. Ninety percent of the patients had previous medical consultations but 40% had no chest radiograph or sputum examination done. The chest radiographs showed 'typical' changes of tuberculosis in 62% while in the other 38% the radiological features were 'not typical'. Sputum direct smear was positive for acid-fast bacilli in only 22.8% of patients and 11.2% were diagnosed base on positive sputum culture. Sputum may be negative even in patients with typical clinical presentations and chest radiograph changes. Bronchial washing improved the diagnosis rate being positive in 49.1% of cases (24.1% by direct smear and the other 25.0% by culture). In 16.8% of cases, the diagnosis was based on a good response to empirical anti-tuberculosis therapy in patients with clinical and radiological features characteristic of tuberculosis. In conclusions, the clinical and radiological manifestations of pulmonary tuberculosis may be atypical. Sputum is often negative and bronchoscopy with washings for
Mycobacterium
culture gives a higher yield for diagnosis. In highly probable cases, empirical therapy with antituberculosis drugs should be considered because it is safe and beneficial.
...
PMID:Pulmonary tuberculosis--a review of clinical features and diagnosis in 232 cases. 1553 27
I have been engaged in the diagnosis and treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis for about 25 years. I have presented many interesting tuberculosis cases such as cavity, nodule, infiltration, miliary pattern, and bronchial tuberculosis. I summarized that the key point of the diagnosis for pulmonary tuberculosis is, 1) X-ray diagnosis shows no specific findings, so it is important to remind pulmonary tuberculosis as not unusual disease. I will make a proposal to insert pulmonary tuberculosis in the guideline for the diagnosis of pneumonia by the Japanese Respiratory Society. 2) Sputum PCR examination is very rapid and useful diagnostic method. The diagnostic evaluation of PCR is equal or over that of AFB culture. 3) CT diagnosis is useful for the detection of minimal pulmonary shadow or cavity lesion. 4) Brocho-fiberscopic examination is useful for the detection of the
Mycobacterium
in the bronchial brushing smear or washing samples. We should suspect bronchial tuberculosis in the cases with strongly positive sputum smear without cavity shadow. 5) The rate of complication with
diabetes mellitus
is significantly higher than that of 10 years ago in adult male tuberculosis patients. Recently 1 of 4 patients complicated with
diabetes mellitus
in adult male patients.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic key-point of the pulmonary tuberculosis]. 1572 89
The humoral immune responses of 69 active tuberculosis (TB) patients against three major mycobacterial lipid antigens, monoacyl phosphatidylinositol dimannoside (Ac-PIM2), trehalose 6,6'-dimycolate (TDM-T) and trehalose 6-monomycolate (TMM-T) from
Mycobacterium
bovis BCG Tokyo 172, were examined by ELISA. IgG antibodies from active TB patients were reactive against each of the three lipid antigens (Ac-PIM2, TDM-T and TMM-T), giving positive results of 42.0-59.4%. If tests were combined and an overall positive was scored when any of the three tests was positive, sensitivity was 71.0%, showing better discrimination between patients and normal subjects. Although this value is not satisfactory for the clinical diagnosis of active TB, it is still higher than values for Determinar TBGL (56.5%) and MycoDot (31.9%) test results, both of which are commercially available. IgG antibody responses to particular lipid antigens in an individual patient differed diversely between patients. Positive IgG antibody rates and IgG antibody levels to lipid antigens were mostly paralleled by the amount of mycobacteria excreted and by the severity of pathological lesions (size and cavity formation). Serologically positive responsiveness was shown in 60.0% of tuberculin skin test (TST)-negative TB patients. Furthermore, seropositivity for multiple-antigen ELISA in active TB patients was demonstrated in other possible immune-suppressed cases, such as senile,
diabetes mellitus
and fulminant TB patients. Therefore, in contrast to tests based on cellular immune responses such as the TST, the humoral immune responses of TB patients against mycobacterial lipid antigens were disease-specific and were shown to be useful for the early diagnosis of active TB disease in conjunction with smear and cultivation tests, even if cellular immune responses are decreased.
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation of serodiagnosis of active tuberculosis by multiple-antigen ELISA using lipids from Mycobacterium bovis BCG Tokyo 172. 1623 93
Recently, mouse models for latent (LTB) and slowly progressive primary tuberculosis (SPTB) have been established. However, cytokine profiles during the two models are not well established. Using quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) we studied the expression levels of interleukin (IL)-2, IL-4, IL-10, IL-12, IL-15, interferon (IFN)-gamma and tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha during the course of LTB and SPTB in the lungs and spleens of B6D2F1Bom mice infected with the H37Rv strain of
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis (Mtb). The results show that, except for IL-4, cytokine expression levels were significantly higher during SPTB than LTB in both the lungs and spleens. During LTB, all the cytokines (except IL-2 in the lungs) had higher expression levels during the initial period of infection both in the lungs and spleens. During SPTB, the expression levels of IL-15 increased significantly from phases 1 to 3 in the lungs. The expression levels of IL-10, IL-12 and IFN-gamma increased significantly from 2 to 3 in the lungs. IL-10 and IL-15 increased significantly from phases 2 to 3, whereas that of TNF-alpha decreased significantly and progressively from phases 1 to 3 in the spleens. Over-expression of proinflammatory cytokines during active disease has been well documented, but factor(s) underlying such over-expression is not known. In the present study, there was a progressive and significant increase in the expression levels of IL-15, together with Th1 cytokines (IL-12 and IFN-gamma) during SPTB but a significant decrease during LTB. IL-15 is known to up-regulate the production of proinflammatory cytokines, IL-1beta, IL-8, IL-12, IL-17, IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha and has an inhibitory effect on activation-induced cell death. IL-15 is known to be involved in many proinflammatory disease states such as rheumatoid arthritis, sarcoidosis, inflammatory bowel diseases, autoimmune
diabetes
, etc. Our results, together with the above observations, suggest that IL-15 may play an important role in mediating active disease during Mtb infection.
...
PMID:Cytokine profile during latent and slowly progressive primary tuberculosis: a possible role for interleukin-15 in mediating clinical disease. 1636 49
Rapidly growing mycobacteria (RGM) have emerged as important human pathogens that can cause a variety of diseases. Thirty isolates of the pathogenic RGM were recovered from patients who attended King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital during 1997 and 2003. There were 16 isolates of
Mycobacterium
chelonae, ten isolates of M. fortuitum and four isolates of M. abscessus. Clinical data was available in only nine patients (five males and four females) including six M. chelonae, two M. abscessus, and one M. fortuitum. The mean age was 37 years (range: 13-62 years). The associated conditions were present in five patients including two
diabetes
, one HIV infection, one pregnancy, one SLE and one chronic renal failure. A wide spectrum of clinical features was observed. These included two chronic pulmonary infections, two post-traumatic wound infections, two disseminated infections, one lymphadenitis, one keratitis and respiratory colonization. AFB staining was positive in six patients (66.67%). The MIC of one M. chelonae and one M. abscessus were determined by Epsilon test. For M. chelonae, the MIC of clarithromycin, amikacin, ciprofloxacin, sulfamethoxazole and imipenem were 0.25, 2.0, 1.00, > 64, and 0.54 microg/ml, respectively. For M. abscessus, the MIC of clarithromycin, amikacin, ciprofloxacin, tetracycline and sulfamethoxazole were 0.016, 0.016, 0.038, > 16 and 0.002 microg/ml, respectively. Six of eight patients (75%) were initially treated with four first-line antituberculous drugs (isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide and ethambutol) before obtaining the culture result. Of these, three patients with pulmonary and disseminated infections improved after a prolonged course of these combinations. The patients improved after switching to specific anti-RGM antibiotics. One patient died after 10 months of therapy of four anti-tuberculous drugs. One patient with post-traumatic wound infection was cured with surgical debridement and dicloxacillin. One patient improved after treatment as acute bronchitis with oral amoxicillin. An extensive review of the literature of RGM infections in Thailand is also presented.
...
PMID:Rapidly growing mycobacteria in King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital and review of the literature in Thailand. 1640 50
Cord formation of
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis complex is very uncommon in smear specimen prepared directly from sputum, although such a finding is well known in solid or liquid media and has recently been evaluated as a rapid method for presumptive identification in special liquid media (BACTEC or MGIT). We examined 308 (
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis 271 and Nontuberculous mycobacteria 37) positive smear specimens prepared directly from sputum in our hospital. These specimens all showed a "modified Gaffky scale" as +2 or more and this cord formation was found in four cases (five specimens). Each of these specimens was from a patient with severe lung tuberculosis showing cavity formation and each patient was complicated severe
diabetes mellitus
. The morphology of cord formation on smear specimens prepared directly from sputum was similar to that in liquid or solid media, and consequently the relevant bacilli were identified as
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis complex by PCR examination. In this study, we assessed "cord formation" in smear specimen prepared directly from sputum as a more rapid presumptive identification of
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis complex based on microscopic morphology, as well as cord formation in liquid or solid media.
...
PMID:["Cord formation" in smear specimen prepared from sputum for a more rapid method of presumptive identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis]. 1654 30
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