Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0040425 (tonsillitis)
1,594 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fusobacterium necrophorum is a non-spore-forming gram-negative anaerobic bacillus that may be the causative agent of localized or severe systemic infections. Systemic infections due to F.necrophorum are known as Lemierre's syndrome, postanginal sepsis or necrobacillosis. The most common clinical course of severe infections in humans is a progressive illness from tonsillitis to septicemia in previously healthy young adults. A septic thrombophlebitis arising from the tonsillar veins and extending into the internal jugular vein leads to septicemia and septic emboli contributing to the development of necrotic abscesses especially in lungs and other tissues such as liver, bone and joints. In this case report, a previously healthy man with pneumonia and empyema due to F.necrophorum has been presented. A 22 year-old man suffering from sore throat for seven days was admitted to emergency department with ongoing fever and dysphagia for three days. On admission he was already taking amoxicillin-clavulanic acid and his complaints were relieved with continuation of therapy to a total of 10 days. However, five days after the cessation of treatment he developed productive cough, fever and generalized myalgia. On physical examination, there were crackles on right lower lung, and chest X-ray revealed pulmonary consolidation on the right middle lobe. Levofloxacin therapy was started based on the diagnosis of pneumonia. While polymorphonuclear leucocytes and intracellular gram-negative bacilli were seen in Gram stained sputum smear, sputum culture was reported as normal flora. Although the patient's status had started to improve with treatment, his condition deteriorated with development of fever and dyspnea. Chest X-ray revealed consolidation, pulmonary infiltrates, pleural effusion and air-fluid level on the right. Meropenem, clarithromycin and linezolid were initiated and a chest tube was inserted with the preliminary diagnosis of necrotizing pneumonia, empyema and type-1 respiratory failure. While there was no growth on bronchoalveolar lavage fluid culture, thoracentesis material inoculated into thioglycolate broth revealed turbidity. Further inoculation onto Schaedler agar which was incubated under anaerobic conditions, yielded growth of catalase negative, indol positive, gram-negative anaerobic bacilli identified as F.necrophorum by BBL Crystal system (Becton Dickinson, USA). The detailed history of the patient revealed that fish bone had stuck in his throat a week ago. Clarithromycin and linezolid were discontinued and he was recovered within six weeks of meropenem treatment. F.necrophorum infection should be considered in the differential diagnosis of persistent head and neck infections with rapidly progressive metastatic necrotic lesions especially in healthy young adults and clindamycin or metranidazol should be added to the treatment protocols.
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PMID:[Pneumonia caused by Fusobacterium necrophorum: is Lemierre syndrome still current?]. 2209 Mar 4

A 37-year-old patient was transferred to Haematology from the ENT Emergency Department where he had been admitted due to tonsillitis. He displayed anaemia and leukopenia and had agranulocytosis in the study. A day later the patient had blast crisis, and was diagnosed with myeloid acute leukaemia. Due to blast crisis the patient experienced sudden back pain, with oliguria and renal function deterioration followed by anaemia, in the context of haemolysis consistent with thrombotic microangiopathy, and as such, we were consulted. We began treatment with plasmapheresis and on the following day we performed haemodialysis (we carried out a total of 12 sessions of plasmapheresis until haemolysis disappeared). Five days later there was respiratory failure, and the patient was consequently transferred to the Intensive Care Unit, where he continued treatment with plasmapheresis and haemodialysis. The patient remained anuric thereafter, requiring haemodialysis, with no sign of renal recovery. Once platelet levels normalised with haematology chemotherapy, a percutaneous renal biopsy was performed, which confirmed the diagnosis of cortical necrosis. Finally, the patient underwent renal replacement therapy by regular haemodialysis.
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PMID:Renal cortical necrosis secondary to thrombotic microangiopathy in the context of acute promyelocytic leukaemia blast crisis. 2424 70

We report a 21-year-old young male with Lemierre's syndrome presented as tonsillitis and Fusobacterium septicemia with respiratory failure and required intensive care. Lemierre's syndrome is the septic embolic complication of recent pharyngeal illness. Fusobacterium spp. accounts for the majority of cases. High index of suspicion is needed and prolonged antibiotic is advised. It is seldom seen in intensive care but should never be forgotten.
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PMID:A Case of Lemierre's Syndrome in Intensive Care Unit. 2953 56

We present the case of a 14 years-old male (with poor living condition, non-smoker) hospitalized for a sudden onset of a rest dyspnea, mucopurulent cough. We found bronchial sibilant rales, wheezing, cyanosis, peripheral adenopathies, hepatosplenomegaly, purulent tonsillitis. the chest-x-ray revealed bilateral mediastinal lymphadenopathy and bilateral lung infiltrations. Spirometry: severe mixed ventilator dysfunction without reversibility. Sputum: negative microscopy and culture for Koch bacillus. Stool examination: cysts of Lamblia giardia. The patient refused bronchoscopy and mediastinoscopy, so it was performed axillary lymph node biopsy which confirmed sarcoidosis (non-caseating epithelioid granulomas). The treatment included antibiotics, antiparasites, oral and inhaled corticosteroids (CS), bronchodilators, oxygen, with clinical/functional improvement after 3 months. CS was followed 1.5 years with poor compliance. A relapse occurred after 3 years and the CS were reinserted. The computerized tomography (CT) scan revealed a diffuse interstitial fibrosis with bronchiectasis. The case particularity relies on the atypical early onset of the sarcoidosis, with respiratory failure and progression to lung fibrosis despite CS treatment. The association of proinflammatory risk factors such as multiple infections needs to be noted.
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PMID:Advanced Sarcoidosis with Apparent Onset by Respiratory Failure. 3004 88