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Query: UMLS:C0026918 (Mycobacterium)
52,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Between July 1987 and January 1988, five patients dialyzed at a hemodialysis outpatient clinic developed systemic Mycobacterium chelonae abscessus (MCA) infections. Four of the five patients had arteriovenous graft infections, and two died during antimicrobial therapy. Case-patients were more likely than control-patients to have received high-flux dialysis during the 6 mo before their infection (100% vs. 30%, P = .009). MCA was cultured from the hose connected to a water spray device used for manual reprocessing of high-flux but not regular dialyzers. Renalin was the germicide used to manually disinfect dialyzers for reuse and was prepared at a concentration of 2.5%. Laboratory studies documented survival of MCA from two high-flux dialyzers that were reprocessed in a manner similar to that used in the clinic. Early diagnosis with complete rather than partial graft removal in combination with antimicrobial therapy is recommended for MCA graft infections. In addition, 2.5% Renalin did not appear to ensure complete killing of MCA in high-flux dialyzers that were manually reprocessed at this hemodialysis clinic.
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PMID:Mycobacterium chelonae infection among patients receiving high-flux dialysis in a hemodialysis clinic in California. 229 62

Mycobacterium fortuitum, a common saprophyte usually found in water and soil, can also be isolated from sputum and gastric secretions of healthy carriers. Under certain conditions, significant clinical infections due to M. fortuitum do occur. Urinary tract infections are rarely caused by atypical mycobacteria. This report describes a urinary tract infection caused by M. fortuitum in a 73-year-old patient treated with corticosteroids for bronchial asthma, who was successfully treated with ofloxacin.
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PMID:Urinary Mycobacterium fortuitum infection. 233 44

Between January 1 and May 15, 1988, foot infections due to Mycobacterium chelonae subspecies abscessus were diagnosed in eight persons who had undergone invasive procedures at a podiatry office. A cohort study was performed to evaluate risk factors for disease. Persons who underwent procedures before 10:30 AM were more likely to have developed infection than those with procedures after that time (relative risk, 5.6). In addition, procedures involving any of the second through fourth toes were more likely to have resulted in infection than procedures involving only the first and/or fifth toes (relative risk, 4.4). Persons with 0, 1, or 2 risk factors had attack rates of 5%, 14%, and 60%, respectively. Mycobacterium chelonae subspecies abscessus organisms of the same antimicrobial resistance pattern as the patients' strains were cultured from distilled water in a reusable, nonsterilized container. A jet injector used to administer lidocaine was held between procedures in a mixture of the distilled water and a disinfectant as recommended by the manufacturer. Inoculation of patients with mycobacteria by the jet injector may have only occurred early in the day due to slow killing of the bacteria by the disinfectant. The outbreak emphasizes the pathogenicity of this water-associated organism and the need for high-level disinfection of jet injectors.
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PMID:Outbreak of Mycobacterium chelonae infection associated with use of jet injectors. 236 34

The Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare (MAI) group comprised 10.5% of all nontuberculous mycobacteria isolated in the Mycobacterium Reference Laboratory, Tel Aviv, in an 11-year study period. From the Buirej Chest Hospital in Gaza, alone, 273 strains were isolated, representing 12.1% of the specimens from that hospital, while 149 strains (0.24% of all specimens) were isolated from all other institutions. Pulmonary disease was attributed to this organism in 22 patients, 17 of whom were hospitalized (initially for tuberculosis or another lung disease) in Buirej Hospital. The water was thought to be the source of contamination, since MAI strains, similar to those found in sputum, were isolated from it. In 1985, the water system was renovated and the MAI incidence in sputum from this hospital consequently declined.
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PMID:Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare in clinical specimens: etiological factor or contaminant? 238 8

The extracts having diverse immunostimulating activities were obtained as a water-phase fraction from four bacterial species representing the 4 genera (Mycobacterium, Nocardia, Gordona, and Rhodococcus) of Mycobacteriaceae by the phenol-water method, which is commonly used for extraction of endotoxic lipopolysaccharides (LPS) from gram-negative bacteria and amphipathic substances from gram-positives. These fractions, especially those of G. aurantiaca and R. terrae, showed strong stimulatory effects on murine splenocytes, macrophages of mice and guinea pigs, the immunoadjuvant activities in guinea pigs and mice, and the distinct activities inducing a tumor necrosis factor and interferons alpha/beta and gamma in primed mice. The fractions from G. aurantiaca and R. terrae exhibited potent pyrogenicity and the ability to activate the clotting enzyme cascade of the horseshoe crab (Tachypleus tridentatus). Some of these biological activities were not very different from the potency of the reference endotoxic LPS derived from Escherichia coli or Fusobacterium nucleatum. But the test fractions neither showed the activity to prepare rabbit skin to the local Shwartzman reaction, nor reacted with anti-lipid A conventional and monoclonal antibodies. Furthermore, unlike LPS, these fractions stimulated the splenocytes of C3H/HeJ mice (LPS-Nonresponder). Although the fractions showing the above biological activities have not yet been adequately purified, they contained polysaccharides, whose main constituent sugar is mannose with a smaller amount of arabinose, fatty acids consisting primarily of palmitic, stearic, and tuberculostearic acids, and small amounts of peptides and amino sugars. Since components characteristic of known immunomodulators of bacterial origin, namely endotoxins (lipid A's), cell wall peptidoglycans, lipoteichoic acids, cord factors (trehalose dimycolates), or deoxyribonucleic acids, were practically not detected in these fractions, the agent responsible for the above bioactivities is considered to be a novel substance different from the known, bacterial immunomodulators.
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PMID:Possible existence of a novel amphipathic immunostimulator in the phenol-water extracts of Mycobacteriaceae. 244 Dec 33

Mice inoculated intravenously with trehalose-6,6'-dimycolate (TDM), a glycolipid component of the cell wall of Mycobacterium, in an oil-in-water emulsion (TDM emulsion) acquired a high resistance to intranasal infection by influenza virus. Athymic nude mice inoculated with TDM emulsion could not acquire such an augmented resistance to influenza virus infection. The augmented antiviral resistance of TDM emulsion-treated mice was diminished by prior intravenous inoculation of silica particles, which selectively impair macrophage functions. In vitro experiments showed that macrophage cultures treated with TDM emulsion released an activator(s) of T lymphocytes. Histological studies of the lung of TDM emulsion-inoculated mice revealed that a typical granuloma and severe perivascular lymphocyte infiltration appeared, though no such histological change was observed in the lung of control emulsion-inoculated mice. The lungs from TDM emulsion-treated athymic nude mice and the lungs from silica particle- and TDM emulsion-treated mice showed fewer and smaller granulomata and milder perivascular lymphocyte infiltration than a typical granuloma and lymphocyte infiltration in the lungs of TDM emulsion-treated mice. These and earlier results suggest that an acquired antiviral resistance of TDM emulsion-treated mice was caused by elicitation of macrophages with TDM, then activation of T lymphocytes, leading to granuloma formation and an amplified earlier interferon production in response to influenza virus infection.
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PMID:Correlation between augmented resistance to influenza virus infection and histological changes in lung of mice treated with trehalose-6,6'-dimycolate. 246 May 92

The present paper investigates the activity of thiohydrazides containing a structural fragment of oxalic acid against Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium kansasii. The drugs included heterocyclic compounds as well. All compounds under study show medium activity. The minimal inhibition concentrations against Mycobacterium kansasii are approximately 3 times higher than against Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The most effective aromatic compounds have the RM values (silica gel impregnated with silicon oil-water) in the interval of 2.2-2.6.
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PMID:[Antitubercular agents. 45. Antimycobacterial thiohydrazide]. 251 78

Granulomatous lesions of the skin and tendon sheaths after exposure to fish tank or aquarium water are frequently caused by non-tuberculous so-called atypical mycobacteria. Mycobacterium marinum is the species most often isolated from such lesions. Rarely, other non-tuberculous species of mycobacteria may be isolated. In contrast to swimming-pool granuloma as the epidemic form of Mycobacterium marinum infection of man, fish tank granuloma seems to be a rare sporadic human disease that is often misdiagnosed. We report eight cases of fish tank granuloma. Five patients had sporotrichoid lesions, and one patient had a singular lesion. Three patients presented with tenosynovitis. Culture-proven Mycobacterium marinum infection was found in four patients, in one patient the causative organism isolated from the biopsy specimen was identified as Mycobacterium kansasii. In three patients with typical appearance of the lesions and exposure to fish tank water, biopsy specimens for culture were not available, and the diagnosis was histopathologically confirmed. Surgical treatment had an unfavourable outcome in two of three patients. Conservative antimicrobial therapy was evaluated in six patients. Similar to published reports, the treatment with rifampicin in combination with other agents seemed to be a useful therapy. Complete remission was, however, also achieved with doxycycline monotherapy. Microbiological diagnosis should be attempted in suspected cases of fish tank granuloma, and, if therapy is indicated, we strongly suggest primary medical treatment.
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PMID:[Fish breeder granuloma: infection caused by Mycobacterium marinum and other atypical mycobacteria in the human. Analysis of 8 cases and review of the literature]. 253 60

A new series of oxovanadium(IV) complexes of two aromatic acidhydrazides (BH and AH) have been reported. Of these two donors, AH is known to possess considerable in vitro antitubercular activity. At pH 2-4, oxometal complexes of the type [VO(BH/AH)2SO4].nH2O (n = 1, 0) and [VO(BH/AH)(C2O4)H2O].H2O (BH = C6H5CONHNH2 and AH = (2-NH2)C6H4.CO.NHNH2) were obtained. Reactions of [VO(BH/AH)(C2O4)H2O].H2O with a monodentate Lewis base lead to the isolation of metal-ligand complexes [VO(BH/AH)(C2O4)L].nH2O (L = NH3, n = 1, L = py, n = 2). Disposition of the bonding sites of donor molecules around the oxometal acceptor center and status of the metal-oxygen multiple bond have been established. A monomeric and distorted octahedral donor environment for the oxovanadium(IV) ion has been proposed on the basis of the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra and magnetic susceptibility measurements. Antitubercular activities, in vitro, of the oxovanadium(IV) complexes of AH have also been evaluated towards tuberculosis mycobacteria such as Mycobacterium flae, Mycobacterium smegmatis and Mycobacterium H37Rv.
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PMID:Synthesis and reactivity of the oxovanadium(IV) complexes of two N-O donors and potentiation of the antituberculosis activity of one of them on chelation to metal ions: Part IV. 254 95

We investigated an increase in the number of patient specimens yielding Mycobacterium terrae in 1986, isolation of M. terrae was associated with specimens obtained from inpatients at our new hospital, but not with specimens referred from other hospitals [37(+)/144 inpatient specimens versus 2(+)/26 referred specimens, p less than 0.05]. By October 31, 1987, we had identified 163 positive specimens from 131 patients. All M. terrae were isolated from specimens obtained from non-sterile sites, i.e., respiratory, gastrointestinal, or urine. No clinical disease related to M. terrae occurred. Review of procedures and cultures of solutions used in the Microbiology Laboratory suggested the source of M. terrae was not in the Microbiology Laboratory. An analysis of case location showed an association with hospital tier (p less than 0.05), a pattern matching the design of the potable water system of the hospital. M. terrae was cultured from multiple outlets of this system. There appeared to be multiple modes of transmission of M. terrae from this reservoir. Control measures included avoidance of water sources during specimen collection and hyperchlorination of the potable water system. These measures appeared to result in the disappearance of M. terrae from subsequent clinical specimens. We believe this to be the first report defining the epidemiologic aspects of M. terrae contaminating clinical specimens.
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PMID:An outbreak of Mycobacterium terrae in clinical specimens associated with a hospital potable water supply. 260 90


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