Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pathomorphologic findings in an 11 month old boy with severe combined immunodeficiency (case 1) and in a 4-month old boy with reticular dysgenesia (case 2) are reported. Case 1: The bone marrow exhibited regular granulo-, erythro- and thrombopoiesis. The hypoplastic thymus consisted exclusively of epithelial reticulum cells. The spleen and lymph nodes showed considerable depletion of lymphocytes in both the T- and B-cell areas. There was a complete lack of all lymphatic structures in the gastrointestinal tract and aplasia of the tonsils. Death resulted from Candida sepsis in conjunction with giant cell pneumonia closely resembling Hecht's pneumonia in measles. Case 2: The bone marrow showed a total lack of granulopoiesis. The storngly dysplastic thymus weighed only 1 g. The spleen, the lymph nodes and the gastrointestinal tract exhibited a very strange histologic structure resulting from a complete absence of lymphocytes and plasma cells. The tonsils were aplastic, the para-thyroid glands as well as the other endocrine glands were normally developed. The cause of death was Klebsiella sepsis and Pneumocystis pneumonia, the latter without the characteristic interstitial plasma cell infiltration. The importance of the immune system for activation of the nonspecific mechanisma of defense is discussed with respect to the two types of immunodeficiency states described here.
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PMID:Pathomorphologic findings in severe combined immunodeficiency and reticular dysgenesia. 81 95

Systemic fungal infections have long been recognized in terminally ill patients with cancer. Systemic candidiasis is the most common, the incidence having increased in the last few years. Eight children diagnosed as having systemic candidiasis during a two-year period (1987-1988) are presented. Three had an isolated fungal pneumonitis, two an hepatosplenic candidiasis, one a multisystemic involvement (hepatosplenic, pulmonary and nodular skin lesions) and the remaining two patients had a Candida sepsis with no visceral lesions having been documented. All patients had neutropenia and prolonged fever no responsive to broad spectrum antibiotics. We would like to underline the importance of an early and prolonged antifungal therapy, especially in hepatosplenic candidiasis, in order to obtain the cure.
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PMID:[Systemic candidiasis in children with cancer]. 261 32

Candidemia in critically ill patients is a significant source of mortality. To identify perioperative risk factors accounting for patient death, we performed a retrospective study of 46 surgical patients with fungemia during the period from 1981 to 1990. Twenty patients survived (43%), and 26 died (57%). Mortality was associated with age older than 46 (p < 0.02, unpaired Student's t-test) and concomitant renal failure, hepatic failure, postoperative shock, or adult respiratory distress syndrome (p < 0.0001, p < 0.0001, and p < 0.05, respectively, chi 2 test). Survival was not influenced by the presence of diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, gastrointestinal hemorrhage, pneumonia, alcohol consumption, steroid use, or enteral/parental nutrition. Bacterial speticemia developed in 26 patients (11 lived, 15 died) and typically preceded or was concomitant with the onset of fungal sepsis (88%). Candida albicans was the fungal species most commonly isolated from blood cultures (30 of 46). Its was cultured from other sites in addition to blood in 30 patients. Candidemia carries a higher risk of mortality in older patients and in those with multiple organ dysfunction. Other immunocompromised conditions such as diabetes and steroid use did not increase mortality. These findings suggest that the pathogenicity of Candida sepsis is not solely related to opportunistic superinfections but may reflect failure of other host defense mechanisms. Moreover, the frequent occurrence of bacterial septicemia prior to the development of Candida sepsis further emphasizes the importance of fungal surveillance cultures to detect early fungal colonization in the critically ill.
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PMID:Candida sepsis in surgical patients. 784 Mar 97