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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (
myositis
)
4,538
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A prospective study of tropical pyomyositis (TP) in the Solomon Islands' Western Province followed 48 cases (mean age 10.6 years) from a population of 20,000 Melanesians over a two-year period. 32 patients were under 10 years and the male:female ratio was 1.7. Affected muscle was painful, swollen and often fluctuant but hard and indurated in presuppurative lesions. Abscesses, single in 40 and multiple in 8 subjects, were sited in the large muscles of the buttock, thigh, shoulder, arm and back on 52 occasions (90%). They contained 5-200 ml of pus which invariably grew penicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus sensitive to cloxacillin and erythromycin. All phage typable strains were identified as group 2 in contrast to the wider range of types found at carrier sites in otherwise healthy controls. TP was preceded by trauma in 30 cases (63%) and 26 (55%) of the patients had pre-existing
pyoderma
. Histological examination of clinically unaffected muscle biopsies from 10 subjects with solitary (7) or multiple (3) abscesses showed no abnormality. Serological evidence of previous infection with adenoviruses or myxoviruses was present in the same proportion (41-42%) of controls as of 22 patients tested. The results provide no evidence for antecedent diffuse
myositis
, viral or parasitic infections or nutritional deficiencies but support the role of trauma in localizing haematogenous skin staphylococci into damaged muscle.
...
PMID:Tropical pyomyositis in the Solomon Islands: clinical and aetiological features. 260 86
New Caledonia is an archipelago in the South Pacific with a high prevalence of acute rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease. Conducted in 2006, this study aimed at characterizing clinical manifestations and microbial features of isolates obtained from invasive Streptococcus pyogenes disease. Clinical and demographic data were collected prospectively. Isolates were biotyped, T typed, emm sequenced, and tested for antibiotic susceptibility. Detection of the speA, speB, speC, and ssa genes was also carried out. The estimated annual incidence of invasive S. pyogenes disease in 2006 was high at 38 cases/100,000 inhabitants in New Caledonia. Invasive isolates were obtained from 90 patients with necrotizing fasciitis (41 cases), bacteremia with no identified focus (12 cases),
myositis
(10 cases), septic arthritis (9 cases), erysipelas (8 cases), postpartum infection (4 cases), myelitis and osteomyelitis (3 cases), severe pneumonia (2 cases), and endocarditis (1 case). The most frequent associated comorbidities were skin lesions (71%) and obesity (29%). Thirty-one different emm types were identified, and the following six accounted for 54% of the isolates: emm15 (15.5%), emm92 (12.2%), emm106 (8.9%), emm74 (6.7%), emm89 (5.6%), and emm109 (5.6%). The speA, speC, and ssa genes were expressed at different frequencies in the various emm types. The first epidemiological study of invasive S. pyogenes disease in New Caledonia highlights that emm type distribution is particular and should be taken into account in the development of an appropriate vaccine. These findings support the prevention of
pyoderma
and other cutaneous lesions in order to limit the development of both invasive disease and poststreptococcal sequelae in the South Pacific.
...
PMID:Clinical and microbial characteristics of invasive Streptococcus pyogenes disease in New Caledonia, a region in Oceania with a high incidence of acute rheumatic fever. 1995 76