20 research outputs found

    Chronic meningococcemia in a 16-year-old boy: a case report

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    Herein, we present a case of meningococcal disease in a patient presenting with of a three-week history of fever, cutaneous vasculitis and joint pain, in whom chronic meningococcemia was retained as presumptive diagnosis, after the disease evolved towards meningitis. This unusual case illustrates the great heterogeneity in possible clinical presentations of Neisseria meningitidis infections and underlines that diagnosis should always be evocated when facing the triad of fever, vasculitic skin eruption and big joints arthralgia, in a person in otherwise good general condition

    Guillain-Barré Syndrome, Greater Paris Area

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    We studied 263 cases of Guillain-Barré syndrome from 1996 to 2001, 40% of which were associated with a known causative agent, mainly Campylobacter jejuni (22%) or cytomegalovirus (15%). The cases with no known agent (60%) peaked in winter, and half were preceded by respiratory infection, influenzalike syndrome, or gastrointestinal illness

    Mycobacterium abscessus and Children with Cystic Fibrosis

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    We prospectively studied 298 patients with cystic fibrosis (mean age 11.3 years; range 2 months to 32 years; sex ratio, 0.47) for nontuberculous mycobacteria in respiratory samples from January 1, 1996, to December 31, 1999. Mycobacterium abscessus was by far the most prevalent nontuberculous mycobacterium: 15 patients (6 male, 9 female; mean age 11.9 years; range 2.5–22 years) had at least one positive sample for this microorganism (versus 6 patients positive for M. avium complex), including 10 with >3 positive samples (versus 3 patients for M. avium complex). The M. abscessus isolates from 14 patients were typed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis: each of the 14 patients harbored a unique strain, ruling out a common environmental reservoir or person-to-person transmission. Water samples collected in the cystic fibrosis center were negative for M. abscessus. This major mycobacterial pathogen in children and teenagers with cystic fibrosis does not appear to be acquired nosocomially

    Inaccuracy of Single-Target Sequencing for Discriminating Species of the Mycobacterium abscessus Group▿

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    We determined nucleotide sequences of rpoB, hsp65, and sodA in 59 clinical isolates (from 58 patients) of the Mycobacterium abscessus group. Identification to the species level, based on three target genes, was concordant for 44 isolates (25 M. abscessus, 13 Mycobacterium massiliense, and 6 Mycobacterium bolletii isolates) and discordant for 15 isolates which had “interspecific composite patterns.” Sequence analysis of five housekeeping genes also showed composite patterns in 8 of these 15 isolates

    Specific Distribution within the Enterobacter cloacae Complex of Strains Isolated from Infected Orthopedic Implants▿

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    Bacteria belonging to the Enterobacter genus are frequently isolated from clinical samples but are unusual causative agents of orthopedic implant infections. Twelve genetic clusters (clusters I to XII) and one sequence crowd (sequence crowd xiii) can be distinguished within the Enterobacter cloacae nomenspecies on the basis of hsp60 sequence analysis, and until now, none of these clusters could be specifically associated with a disease. In order to investigate if specific genetic clusters would be involved in infections of orthopedic material, two series of bacterial clinical isolates identified as E. cloacae by routine phenotypic identification methods were collected either from infected orthopedic implants (n = 21) or from randomly selected samples of diverse anatomical origins (control; n = 52). Analysis of the hsp60 gene showed that genetic clusters III, VI, and VIII were the most frequent genetic clusters detected in the control group, whereas cluster III was poorly represented among the orthopedic implant isolates (P = 0.006). On the other hand, E. hormaechei (clusters VI and VIII), but not cluster III, is predominantly associated with infections of orthopedic implants and, more specifically, with infected material in the hip (P = 0.019). These results support the hypothesis that, among the isolates within the E. cloacae complex, E. hormaechei and hsp60 gene sequencing-based cluster III are involved in pathogenesis in different ways and highlight the need for more accurate routine Enterobacter identification methods
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