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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Yersinia enterocolitica systemic infections are uncommon and
osteomyelitis
due to this organism is very rare. We report a 9-year-old girl with thalassemia major,
liver cirrhosis
, and hemosiderosis who developed
osteomyelitis
of the rib caused by Y enterocolitica type 0:3. Serologic response to the infection was confirmed. No definite source of infection was identified.
...
PMID:Yersinia enterocolitica osteomyelitis in a child. 65 39
The Klebsiella pneumoniae bacillus is a rare cause of acute hematogenous
osteomyelitis
of long bones. Bony involvement usually develops from a bacteremia associated with a Klebsiella pulmonary or urinary tract infection. Diabetes mellitus, alcoholism, or
cirrhosis
are predisposing conditions to the development of this form of
osteomyelitis
. A case report follows in which two sites of Klebsiella
osteomyelitis
were demonstrated by three-phase bone imaging in a patient with both diabetes and alcoholism.
...
PMID:Klebsiella pneumoniae osteomyelitis: demonstration by three-phase radionuclide bone imaging. 266 97
Hepatic function, including plasma bromsulphthalein (BSP) clearance was studied in 20 Papua New Guineans with leprosy: 11 lepromatous (LL) (6 had erythema nodosum leprosum (ENL)) (group A), and 9 tuberculoid or borderline (BT or BB) (group B); 12 controls (group C) were also studied. Four of five with abnormal BSP results had significant complicating or additional factors (hepatic amyloidosis, pustular ENL, hepato-cellular carcinoma and a pyogenic abscess), compared with two of 15 with normal results (tuberculous osteitis and pyogenic
osteomyelitis
). In nine (five from group A, and four from group B) needle liver biopsy histology was assessed: foci of vacuolated phagocytes and histiocytes, and tuberculoid granulomata were the most frequent lesions; none had
cirrhosis
. Leprosy is not associated with impaired hepatocellular function unless a severe complication or coincident disease is concurrently present. In this limited study therapeutic agents were not associated with abnormal liver structure or function. When liver function is abnormal in leprosy, another cause (e.g. secondary amyloidosis, sepsis or malignancy) should be searched for.
...
PMID:Hepatic structure and function in Papua New Guineans with leprosy. 716 38
Haemophilus aphrophilus is rarely implicated as an aetiology of spinal epidural abscess. A 73-year-old woman with
liver cirrhosis
who developed H. aphrophilus bacteraemia complicated with vertebral
osteomyelitis
and spinal epidural abscess is presented. Without surgical decompression, she was successfully treated with cefotaxime for 3 weeks, followed by maintenance with ciprofloxacin for another 10 weeks. The clinical features of eight previously reported cases of vertebral
osteomyelitis
without epidural abscess due to H. aphrophilus are reviewed.
...
PMID:Haemophilus aphrophilus bacteraemia complicated with vertebral osteomyelitis and spinal epidural abscess in a patient with liver cirrhosis. 945 9
Diagnostic difficulties of Gaucher disease, a disorder resulted from a deficient activity of glucocerebrosidase is reported. Gaucher disease was described in the 16 year old male, 5 years after manifestation of the very first symptoms (fracture and
osteomyelitis
). At the age of 14, the
cirrhosis
due to viral hepatitis accompanied with splenomegaly was diagnosed. This findings was not associated with the earlier osseous disorders. Histopathologic examination of the removed spleen facilitate the diagnosis. The second case refers to 20 year old female. Clinical symptoms and additional test pointed to malignant neoplasm of thyroid, the reproductive organs or cancer of indistinguishable primary focus with metastases in the liver. Trepanobiopsy of bone marrow had made an accurate diagnosis possible, while determination of beta-glucosidase activity in peripheral white blood cells, chitotriosidase activity, and molecular investigations of gene specific to beta-glucocerebrosidase proved it.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic difficulties in Gaucher disease: report of two cases]. 1033 43
There are few reports of skeletal infections in patients with
cirrhosis
. We present two such cases, both with alcoholic liver disease, seen over a period of one year. The first, a 46-year-old man, presented as pyrexia of unknown origin, and was found to have pyogenic discitis; he responded to antibiotic and surgery. The second, a 42-year-old man, presented with chest wall abscess and was diagnosed to have tubercular
osteomyelitis
; he expired despite treatment with non-hepatotoxic anti-tubercular drugs.
...
PMID:Skeletal infections in cirrhotics. 1620 13
A 50-year-old woman with noninsulin-dependent diabetes and
cirrhosis of the liver
from hepatitis-B infection presented with right-sided neck and severe shoulder pain. Minimal tenderness and swelling of the right sternoclavicular joint were noted. After 8 days, extensive studies, and several attempts at therapy to relieve the shoulder pain, the right sternoclavicular joint had become more swollen, extremely tender, warm, and erythematous. An arthrotomy of the right sternoclavicular joint revealed pyoarthosis of the joint and
osteomyelitis
of the adjacent clavicle. Both tissue and blood cultures grew Prevotella melaninogenicus. A site of origin for the infection was never found. The patient had an uneventful recovery after treatment with open drainage and parenteral antibiotics. Although this anaerobic organism is known to cause infection at other joint sites, this seems to be the first report of infection of the sternoclavicular joint and proximal clavicle by Prevotella melaninogenicus.This case illustrates the following: 1) neck and shoulder pain may be the presenting symptoms of occult septic arthritis of the sternoclavicular joint, 2) clinical signs of infection, such as fever and leukocytosis, may be absent in the setting of anaerobic joint infections, 3) an arthrotomy should be performed as soon as an infection of the sternoclavicular joint is suspected, 4) anaerobic as well as aerobic cultures should be taken when evaluating septic arthritis 5) 2 or more weeks may be required for identification of an anaerobic organism, such as Prevotella melaninogenicus.
...
PMID:Septic arthritis of the sternoclavicular joint and osteomyelitis of the proximal clavicle caused by prevotella melaninogenicus: a case with several features delaying diagnosis. 1907 30
Mucormycosis is an invasive fungal infection associated with a high mortality rate, especially in immunocompromised hosts. Mucormycosis rarely occurs in cirrhotic patients. Here, we report a case of mucormycosis with underlying
liver cirrhosis
and diabetes mellitus. The patient suffered from maxillary sinusitis and
osteomyelitis
, and the infection was successfully treated with antifungal agents, surgical debridement, and hyperbaric oxygen therapy. The antifungal treatments used were liposomal amphotericin B, itraconazole, and posaconazole. Although our patient had
liver cirrhosis
(Child-Pugh classification B), no hepatic decompensation was developed during the treatment course of posaconazole. This is the first report of the safe and effective use of posaconazole for the treatment of mucormycosis in a cirrhotic patient.
...
PMID:A mucormycosis case in a cirrhotic patient successfully treated with posaconazole and review of published literature. 2274 22
Acute osteomyelitis exists as a refractory disease even now, which usually exhibits systemic symptoms such as fever or malaise and local redness or swelling. The present paper describes a case of acute osteomyelitis of the mandible that was rapidly progressing without typical symptoms. The patient had
liver cirrhosis
, which should be one of the systemic factors that affect immune surveillance and metabolism. Actinomycotic druses and filaments were detected from the sequestrum. These were considered to play a role in the rapid progression of
osteomyelitis
without typical symptoms. There has been no evidence of local recurrence 24 months after surgery.
...
PMID:Rapidly progressing osteomyelitis of the mandible. 2434 2
This article investigates a tattoo as a component of non-verbal semiotics of medical discourse in pathological anatomy. The purpose is to estimate the diagnostic value of tattoos on the body of patients as semiotic and symbolic aspect of medical communication. Tattoos are classified into three types: image tattoos, feature tattoos, and conventional tattoos (symbolic tattoos). Conventional tattoos are the most informative component of medical discourse symbolics because of their diagnostic value. During the investigation it has been found out that criminal tattoos have the greatest value because of their structuring, clear connection with certain diseases (tuberculosis,
liver cirrhosis
), and also valuable are tattoos related to drug and alcohol addiction, which are characteristic for patients with viral hepatitis,
osteomyelitis
.
...
PMID:Tattoos: the relationship of diagnostic and semantic meaning. 2452 33
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