3 research outputs found

    Tuberculosis of the Common Bile Duct

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    The intrahepatic biliary tree can occasionally be infected by Mycobacteriurn tuberculosis, but tuberculosis of the common bile duct has not previously been reported. A 38-year-old man with obstructive jaundice, who was originally thought to have cholangiocarcinoma associated with opisthorchiasis (a common combination in Thailand), was finally proved to have tuberculosis of the common bile duct with adjacent tuberculous lymphadenitis. Following T-tube drainage and antitubercular therapy, he made a complete recovery. The importance of a tissue diagnosis in all cases of obstructive jaundice is emphasized to avoid missing rare but curable diseases

    Fibrosis, Connexin-43, and Conduction Abnormalities in the Brugada Syndrome.

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    BACKGROUND: The right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) is acknowledged to be responsible for arrhythmogenesis in Brugada syndrome (BrS), but the pathophysiology remains controversial. OBJECTIVES: This study assessed the substrate underlying BrS at post-mortem and inĀ vivo, and the role for open thoracotomy ablation. METHODS: Six whole hearts from male post-mortem cases of unexplained sudden death (mean age 23.2 years) with negative specialist cardiac autopsy and familial BrS were used and matched to 6 homograft control hearts by sex and age (within 3 years) by random risk set sampling. Cardiac autopsy sections from cases and control hearts were stained with picrosirius red for collagen. The RVOT was evaluated in detail, including immunofluorescent stain for connexin-43 (Cx43). Collagen and Cx43 were quantified digitally and compared. An inĀ vivo study was undertaken on 6 consecutive BrS patients (mean age 39.8 years, all men) during epicardial RVOT ablation for arrhythmia via thoracotomy. Abnormal late and fractionated potentials indicative of slowed conduction were identified, and biopsies were taken before ablation. RESULTS: Collagen was increased in BrS autopsy cases compared with control hearts (odds ratio [OR]: 1.42; pĀ = 0.026). Fibrosis was greatest in the RVOT (OR: 1.98; pĀ = 0.003) and the epicardium (OR: 2.00; pĀ = 0.001). The Cx43 signal was reduced in BrS RVOT (OR: 0.59; pĀ = 0.001). Autopsy and inĀ vivo RVOT samples identified epicardial and interstitial fibrosis. This was collocated with abnormal potentials inĀ vivo that, when ablated, abolished the type 1 Brugada electrocardiogram without ventricular arrhythmia over 24.6 Ā± 9.7 months. CONCLUSIONS: BrS is associated with epicardial surface and interstitial fibrosis and reduced gap junction expression in the RVOT. This collocates to abnormal potentials, and their ablation abolishes the BrS phenotype and life-threatening arrhythmias. BrS is also associated with increased collagen throughout the heart. Abnormal myocardial structure and conduction are therefore responsible for BrS
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