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Query: UMLS:C0026918 (
Mycobacterium
)
52,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Skin ulcer
due to
Mycobacterium
ulcerans is presented. The patient come from East of French Guyana. Growth of this mycobacteria is obtained with diphasic Lowenstein medium at 30 degrees C. Diagnostic of M. ulcerans results from mycolic acids study.
...
PMID:[Cutaneous ulcer from Mycobacterium ulcerans. Apropos of 1 case in French Guiana]. 142 70
Adult, aquarium-reared Oreochromis mossambicus (Tilapia mossambica), which were naturally infected with
Mycobacterium
marinum, displayed non-healing
skin ulcers
and other clinical signs considered to be typical of piscine mycobacteriosis. However, in addition, they frequently had melanotic foci in the skin and spleen, due to the presence of pigment cells surrounding the cutaneous and splenic inflammation. Such melanotic foci have never been reported in response to mycobacteriosis. All fish also have variable numbers of melanomacrophages which appeared to replace pancreatic acini. The relationship of the pancreatic melanomacrophages to the pathogenesis of mycobacteriosis is uncertain, but such lesions may have contributed to the chronic cachexia associated with this case.
...
PMID:Some unusual features of mycobacteriosis in the cichlid fish Oreochromis mossambicus. 236 49
A taxonomic study has been made on a mycobacterial strain isolated from
skin ulcer
lesion of a 19 year-old Japanese girl who has lived only in Japan. By numerical classification, in which 108 characters were used, 6 isolates of this strain formed one cluster together with
Mycobacterium
ulcerans strains. However, the isolates were distinguished from the M. ulcerans strains, forming a subcluster. The isolates were differentiated by the characters shown in Table 2 from authentic M. ulcerans strains. The mycolic acids of the strain ATCC 33788 isolated from Japanese girl were distinguished from those of the type strain ATCC 19423 of M. ulcerans. The number of carbon atoms of alpha-mycolate of the former centered at 80, whereas those of the strain ATCC 19423 at 76. The number of carbon atoms of the alpha-unit was 24 in both strains and the number of double bonds was 2 in both strains. The strain ATCC 33788 showed a 100% similarity with the strain ATCC 19423 in DNA hybridization. In view of the above results, we have concluded that the strain belongs to a new subspecies of M. ulcerans (M. ulcerans subsp. shinshuense). Until now, M. ulcerans infection has occurred only in three area of the world, Africa, Oceania, and South and Middle America. Our case is the first case of M. ulcerans infection discovered in an area other than the above. However, the strain was not the same as the M. ulcerans described previously but differed from it in mycolic acids and some biological and biochemical characteristics.
...
PMID:[A taxonomic study on a mycobacterium which caused a skin ulcer in a Japanese girl and resembled Mycobacterium ulcerans]. 259 60
A case of tuberculous
skin ulcer
is reported. The biopsy specimen did not reveal acid-fast bacteria but cultures grew
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. A high index of suspicion is needed to diagnose mycobacterial ulcers correctly. The classification of the cutaneous tuberculoses is discussed.
...
PMID:Tuberculous ulcer of the skin. 314 60
Skin ulcers
were found in 7 koalas from Raymond Island in the Gippsland Lakes of southeastern Australia. Ulcers in 4 koalas showed loss and underrunning of cutaneous tissue, with coagulative necrosis of subcutaneous tissue. These lesions contained large numbers of acid-fast bacilli, and areas of granulation tissue formation and superficial inflammation were present.
Mycobacterium
ulcerans was isolated from 2 of these animals. The ulcers from the other 3 koalas contained both M. ulcerans and M. scrofulaceum, and in these the necrotic tissue was surrounded by a granulomatous reaction which, in one case, extended into bone. Four of the koalas had more than one ulcer. The possible origin of the infections is discussed.
...
PMID:Skin ulcers caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans in koalas near Bairnsdale, Australia. 651 93
The microflora of 55 patients with leprosy
skin ulcers
was studied and related to a weighted inflammatory score (IS). The control group consisted of 18 ulcers with different underlying pathology. Leprosy ulcers were characterized by the exclusive presence of two types of branching gram-positive rods; a particular interesting proposal is that
Mycobacterium
leprae share common antigens with these unusual "leprosy ulcer associated" organisms and group G beta-hemolytic streptococci. In the leprosy group, corynebacteria and branching rods accounted for 97% of gram-positive bacilli and Bacillus species constituted only 3%. In the control group, B. species formed 50% of gram-positive rods; the rest were corynebacteria (p = 0.03). In the leprosy group, one third of the gram-positive bacteria were branching rods; none of them was acid fast. Ten of them were identified as Arcanobacterium haemolyticum, and the remaining 7 could not be identified. The IS of leprosy patients was lower than in the control group. The presence of more than two species of facultative or aerobic gram-negative rods or single species of pyogenic gram-positive cocci correlated with a high IS. The presence of two or more different pyogenic cocci resulted in a lower IS. Further studies into the nature of leprosyunique organisms as well as the inflammation inhibition factors in mixed infections are warranted. It is recommended that management of ulcers should consist of the application of local disinfection and early treatment of episodes of inflammation with a combination of fluoroquinolone and penicillin.
...
PMID:Microbial colonizers in leprosy skin ulcers and intensity of inflammation. 886 61
Mycobacterium
ulcerans is an environmental bacterium which causes chronic
skin ulcers
. Despite significant epidemiological evidence to suggest that water is the source of infection, the organism has never been identified in the environment. Environmental water samples were collected from a small town in which an outbreak of 29 cases had occurred in a 3-year period. These were examined by mycobacterial culture and PCR amplification. Similar to previous studies, M. ulcerans was not cultured from the water samples. However, five samples were positive for M. ulcerans by PCR. These samples were collected from a swamp and a golf course irrigation system within the outbreak area. This is the first time that M. ulcerans has been demonstrated to be present in the environment and supports the postulated epidemiology of disease due to this organism.
...
PMID:Detection of Mycobacterium ulcerans in environmental samples during an outbreak of ulcerative disease. 932 83
Animal models for
Mycobacterium
ulcerans infections (Buruli ulcer) include guinea pigs, rats, and mice, but each has limitations in replicating the spectrum of human disease. Here, 19 adult nine-banded armadillos were inoculated intradermally with M. ulcerans. Injection sites were examined and skin samples obtained for histologic and microbiology studies. Necropsies were conducted to assess systemic involvement. In group 1 (n = 4), 2 animals developed progressive
skin ulcers
with undermined borders at the injection sites within 6-10 weeks. Biopsies showed features similar to human disease including extensive necrosis in the deep dermis and subcutaneous fat, mixed cellular infiltrates, and acid-fast bacilli (AFB). In group 2 (n = 15), 5 animals developed progressive
skin ulcers
, 3 had evanescent papulo-nodules, 3 died shortly after inoculation of unknown causes, and 4 showed no signs of infection. Lesion samples from 3 animals with progressive ulcers were culture positive for AFB. Our findings indicate that nine-banded armadillos are susceptible to M. ulcerans and may develop cutaneous lesions that closely mimic Buruli ulcer.
...
PMID:Transmission of Mycobacterium ulcerans to the nine-banded armadillo. 1058 96
Investigation into recent declines in striped bass health in the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland resulted in the isolation of a putative new species of
Mycobacterium
. This isolate was obtained from fish showing
skin ulcers
and internal granulomas in various organs. The isolate was slow growing at 28 degrees C; was nonchromogenic; showed no activities of nitrate reduction, catalase activity, Tween 80 hydrolysis, tellurite reduction, or arylsulfatase reduction; grew best at low salt concentrations; and was urease and pyrazinamidase positive. By PCR a unique insertional sequence was identified which matched nothing in any database. Analysis of the nearly complete 16S rRNA gene sequence also indicated a unique sequence which had 87.7% sequence homology to
Mycobacterium
ulcerans, 87.6% homology to
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, and 85.9% homology to
Mycobacterium
marinum. Phylogenetic analysis placed the organism close to the tuberculosis complex. These data support the conclusion that the isolate probably represents a new mycobacterial species.
...
PMID:Detection of a new Mycobacterium species in wild striped bass in the Chesapeake Bay. 1115 32
Mycobacterium
ulcerans is a slow-growing, acid-fast bacillus that causes chronic necrotizing
skin ulcers
known as Buruli ulcers. Previously reported information on immunity to this mycobacterium is limited. We examined immune responses to M. ulcerans and M. bovis BCG in patients with M. ulcerans disease and in 20 healthy control subjects (10 tuberculin test positive and 10 tuberculin test negative). Cell-mediated immunity was assessed by stimulating peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) with whole mycobacteria and then measuring PBMC proliferation and the production of gamma interferon (IFN-gamma). Humoral immunity was assessed by immunoblotting. PBMC from all subjects showed significantly greater proliferation and IFN-gamma production in response to stimulation with living mycobacteria compared with killed cells. However, PBMC from subjects with past or current M. ulcerans disease showed significantly reduced proliferation and production of IFN-gamma in response to stimulation with live M. ulcerans or M. bovis than PBMC from healthy, tuberculin test-positive subjects (P < 0.001) and showed results in these assays comparable to those of tuberculin test-negative subjects (P > 0.2). Serum from 9 of 11 patients with M. ulcerans disease, but no control subject, contained antibodies to M. ulcerans. The results indicate that patients with M. ulcerans infection mount an immune response to M. ulcerans as evidenced by antibody production, but they demonstrate profound systemic T-cell anergy to mycobacterial antigens. These findings may explain some of the distinct clinical and pathological features of M. ulcerans-induced disease.
...
PMID:Immune response to infection with Mycobacterium ulcerans. 1117 46
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