Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The exact mechanisms by which Neisseria gonorrhoeae invades the mucosal lining to cause local and disseminated infections are still not fully understood. The ability of gonococci to infect the human ureter and the mechanism of gonococcal infection in a stratified epithelium were investigated by using distal ureters excised from healthy adult kidney donors. In morphological terms, this tissue closely resembles parts of the urethral proximal epithelium, a site of natural gonococcal infection. Using piliated and nonpiliated variants of N. gonorrhoeae MS11, we demonstrated the importance of pili in the attachment of gonococci to native epithelial cells as well as their association with epithelial damage. By electron microscopy we elucidated the different mechanisms of colonization and invasion of a stratified epithelium, including adherence to surface cells, invasion and eventual release from infected cells, disintegration of intercellular connections followed by paracellular tissue infiltration, invasion of deeper cells, and initiation of cellular destruction and exfoliation resulting in thinning of the mucosa.
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PMID:Experimental infection of native human ureteral tissue with Neisseria gonorrhoeae: adhesion, invasion, intracellular fate, exocytosis, and passage through a stratified epithelium. 923 3

BACKGROUND Neisseria-associated conjunctivitis is a rare cause of bacterial conjunctivitis in adults, with Neisseria gonorrhoeae as the primarily identified infectious strain. Here, we present a rare case of bacterial conjunctivitis due to Neisseria sicca in a 34-year-old immunocompetent man with no prior medical or ocular history. CASE REPORT A 34-year-old man with no significant past medical or ocular history presented with a 3-day history of left periorbital edema, ocular pain, and copious purulent discharge. Bacterial conjunctivitis was suspected due to the rapidity of onset and purulence. Peripheral corneal thinning was identified. Preliminary culture results showed gram-negative diplococci, and the patient was treated for gonococcal infection. Final cultures identified Neisseria sicca, a rarely pathogenic strain of Neisseria species. CONCLUSIONS This is the second reported case of Neisseria sicca-associated conjunctivitis, and the first reported case to have corneal involvement. Neisseria sicca, while typically non-pathogenic, may manifest as conjunctivitis in immunocompetent hosts with a low-risk sexual history.
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PMID:Neisseria sicca: A Rare Cause of Bacterial Conjunctivitis. 3253 85