Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0026918 (Mycobacterium)
52,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A patient with Sweet's syndrome and leukopenia is reported. Hematological evaluation revealed hairy cell leukemia (HCL). The clinical picture was dominated by persistent fever, which is a common feature of both Sweet's syndrome and HCL. Since fever frequently reflects concomitant infection in HCL, a thorough search for infectious disease was performed. Blood cultures grew Mycobacterium kansasii. The patient recovered after treatment with recombinant interferon-alpha (r-IFN-alpha) and tuberculostatic drugs. Remarkably, the skin lesions completely regressed within 1 week after the start of r-IFN-alpha. In the literature, Sweet's syndrome is rarely mentioned as a feature of HCL. Mycobacterial disease, especially atypical mycobacteria, is relatively often seen in HCL.
...
PMID:Sweet's syndrome as the presenting symptom of hairy cell leukemia with concomitant infection by Mycobacterium kansasii. 164 63

This study was carried out to understand the antibacterial properties of some spice plants before and after heat treatment in boiling water. The samples included the core and the outer layers of onion, the white and the green parts of green onion, garlic bulb, ginger, ginger root, sweet pepper, chili pepper, brown pepper, and mustard. The test microorganisms included Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhimurium, Vibrio parahaemolyticus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Proteus vulgaris, Staphylococcus aureus, Mycobacterium phlei, Streptococcus faecalis, Bacillus cereus, and Micrococcus luteus. Raw garlic bulb could inhibit all of the test strains. The antibacterial activities of green onion are slightly weak than that of onion. However, green onion could inhibit P. aeruginosa and M. luteus, but onion could inhibit E. coli, P. vulgaris, S. faecalis, and B. cereus. Ginger and ginger root could only inhibit M. luteus. Chili pepper could inhibit V. parahaemolyticus and P. vulgaris. Brown pepper could also inhibit P. vulgaris. Sweet pepper and mustard showed no antibacterial activity to all of the test strains. In general, antibacterial components in the spice plants were heat labile. All the spices tested lost their antibacterial activities within 20 min at 100 degrees C.
...
PMID:[Antibacterial properties of some spice plants before and after heat treatment]. 406 97

We report the case of a 52-year-old woman with a non-tuberculous (atypical) mycobacterial cervical lymphadenitis, caused by Mycobacterium fortuitum, in association with Sweet's syndrome. The cervical lymphadenitis was resistant to medical treatment, and the Sweet's syndrome occurred intermittently. Systemic steroid treatment was required to control the cutaneous symptoms.
...
PMID:Atypical mycobacterial cervical lymphadenitis associated with Sweet's syndrome. 765 87

We report the rare association of Sweet's syndrome with non-tuberculous mycobacteria in five patients (three women, two men, aged 25-41 years). Clinical and histological evidence supported the diagnosis of Sweet's syndrome in all patients. The skin lesions responded well to systemic corticosteroid but recurred in two cases. All of our patients had chronic disseminated non-tuberculous mycobacterial infection. They initially presented with lymphadenopathy and developed involvement in other organs later. All of them were treated as having tuberculous lymphadenitis based on pathological findings before definite diagnosis was made by culture. The organisms isolated were Mycobacterium chelonae in three cases, M. scrofulaceum in one case and M. avium intracellulare complex in one case. All the patients gradually improved with treatment but one had multiple recurrences. The search for an infectious agent, especially non-tuberculous mycobacteria, should be performed in cases of Sweet's syndrome that appear in association with chronic granulomatous lymphadenitis which is recalcitrant to antituberculous drugs.
...
PMID:Sweet's syndrome associated with non-tuberculous mycobacterial infection: a report of five cases. 976 59

In a bioassay guided search for antimycobacterial compounds from higher plants, the root extracts of Elecampane (Inula helenium L.; Asteraceae) and Sweet Coneflower (Rudbeckia subtomentosa Pursh.; Asteraceae) were chemically investigated for their active constituents. Chromatographic fractions of root extracts of l. helenium, which exhibited significant activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis, provided the known eudesmanolides alantolactone, isoalantolactone, and 11 alpha H, 13-dihydroisoalantolactone. Peracid epoxidation of alantolactone and isoalantolactone provided 5 alpha-epoxyalantolactone and 4(15) alpha-epoxyisoalantolactone, respectively and oxidation of alantolactone with OsO4 gave 11,13-dihydroxyalantolactone. Active fractions from R subtomentosa contained the known alloalantolactone and 3-oxoalloalantolactone. The structures of the above compounds were established by spectroscopic methods including 1D and 2D NMR techniques as well as spectral comparison with previously reported data. The molecular structure of 5 alpha-epoxyalantolactone was determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction. Eleven natural and semisynthetic eudesmanolides were tested in a radiorespirometric bioassay for activity against M. tuberculosis. 5 alpha-Epoxyalantolactone and encelin from Montanoa speciosa showed minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of 8 and 16 micrograms ml-1, respectively. Alantolactone, isoalantolactone and its 4 alpha, 15-epoxide, 1,2-dehydro-3-epi-isotelekin and alloalantolactone gave MICs of 32 micrograms ml-1. All other compounds showed MIC values of 128 micrograms ml-1 or higher.
...
PMID:Antimycobacterial eudesmanolides from Inula helenium and Rudbeckia subtomentosa. 1036 42

A case of acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis (Sweet's syndrome) in association with tuberculosis has been reported. However association of the two diseases is not common. It appears as if Mycobacterium tuberculosis present somewhere in the body can induce cutaneous reactions as is the case in erythema nodosum and erythema induratum.
...
PMID:Acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis following tuberculous infection. 1256 24

Sweet's syndrome has been reported to be associated with many underlying conditions, such as non-tuberculous mycobacterial infections (NTMI). In the literature, only twelve patents with Sweet's syndrome in association with NTMI have been reported (most of the patients were from Thailand). Here, the authors report six more patients who developed Sweet's syndrome as a reaction to NTMI. Four patients had Mycobacterium chelonae/abscessus group infection; one patient had been infected with Mycobacterium avium complex first and became infected with M. chelonae/abscessus group 17 months later; and, the other one had Mycobacterium fortuitum infection. In each patient, the skin lesions of Sweet's syndrome relapsed many times while they still had NTMI, and these lesions usually responded well to short courses of systemic steroids without any deterioration of NTMI.
...
PMID:Sweet's syndrome: a reaction to non-tuberculous mycobacterial infections. 1522 31

Mycobacterium fortuitum is a rapidly growing mycobacterium found in soil and water throughout the world. It can cause diseases in immunocompetent patients, usually resulting in localized skin and soft tissue infections. Cervical lymphadenitis caused by M. fortuitum is rare. We report a 46-year-old woman in whom skin lesions of cutaneous polyarteritis nodosa, leucocytoclastic vasculitis and Sweet's syndrome had successively developed before the diagnosis of cervical lymphadenitis caused by M. fortuitum was made. The skin lesions responded to colchicine and systemic corticosteroids but recurred intermittently. After establishment of the diagnosis, she received treatment with clarithromycin and ciprofloxacin. The cervical lymph nodes decreased in size 6 months later and no more new skin lesions were found.
...
PMID:Successive development of cutaneous polyarteritis nodosa, leucocytoclastic vasculitis and Sweet's syndrome in a patient with cervical lymphadenitis caused by Mycobacterium fortuitum. 1554 Oct 94

A 68-year-old woman presented with a 3-month history of nontender, erythematous nodules on the right side of the neck. Subsequently, tender, circinate erythematous plaques appeared on the limbs, accompanied by peripheral leucocytosis. A biopsy specimen obtained from an erythematous plaque revealed diffuse infiltration of neutrophils in the dermis. Treatment with prednisolone improved the erythematous lesions, but upon tapering of prednisolone, numerous areas of indurated erythema with pustules recurred on the face and back accompanied by high fever. Computed tomography of the lung revealed multiple lesions. A smear of gastric juice contained acid-fast bacilli that were identified as Mycobacterium avium by DNA-DNA hybridization. Treatment with multiple antibiotics did not result in a favourable response of the M. avium infection, and dome-shaped, subcutaneous abscesses developed on the limbs and trunk. Sweet's syndrome may thus occur in association with nontuberculous mycobacterial infection.
...
PMID:Sweet's syndrome associated with Mycobacterium avium infection. 1848 19

A 47-year-old Thai female with underlying Sweet's syndrome and disseminated non-tuberculous mycobacterial infection presented with a history of blurred vision on both eyes after being lost to follow-up for eight months. The visual acuity was hand motion on the right eye and counting finger on the left eye. There was moderate inflammation in the anterior chamber and vitreous cavity. Multiple foci of round chorioretinitis were found throughout the fundus on both eyes. The patient denied intravitreous tapping and antibiotic injection. Nevertheless, specimens from several sites were collected for culture and sensitivity test. The result of the culture and sensitivity test revealed rapidly growing mycobacteria on specimens taken from the right inguinal lymph node. The presented case may demonstrate the rare event of bilateral endogenous endophthalmitis with chorioretinitis arising from non-tuberculous mycobacterial infection. The pattern of chorioretinitis demonstrated by the presented report may provide useful clinical information for this rare condition.
...
PMID:Bilateral endogenous endophthalmitis in disseminated NTM infection: a case report. 2167 56


1 2 Next >>