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Interdigital intertrigo of the feet due to therapy-resistant Fusarium solani
We report a case of bilateral intertrigo of the third and fourth interdigital spaces of the feet in a 34-year-old immunocompetent Senegalese male. A diagnosis of Fusarium solani infection was made. Systemic and topical therapy with terbinafine led to clinical but not mycological recovery. As this mould is potentially dangerous for immunodepressed subjects, early diagnosis and rigorous follow-up of skin diseases caused by this agent are advisabl
New acquisitions in Helicobacter pylori characterisitcs
The protection of Helicobacter pylori from the gastric acid exerted by urease is based on an increase of the bacterial periplasmic pH and membrane potential. Ammonia generated from urea induces apoptosis of gastric cells in vitro, and inhibits gastric somatostatin release in animals, which could have consequences on the physiology of digestion in general. The type s1/m1 structure of the vacA gene is associated with the production of high levels of cytotoxin. Strains with m2 region type, formerly considered devoid of toxic activity, are fully toxic when assayed with cell lines other than HeLa cells, which possibly lack receptors for m2 VacA type. The enhanced gastric mucosa damage associated with infection by cytotoxic organisms could be explained by the varying of effects exerted by VacA on target cells: extracellular secretion of acidic hydrolases, cytoskeletal alterations, actin rearrangement, reduction of epidermal growth factor binding to its receptor, inhibition of the stimulation of CD4+ T cells proliferation induced by the antigen presenting cells. Organisms that possess the pathogenicity island cag (cag+) induce an increased inflammation and transduction of signals to the host cells; however, they reduce the apoptosis of colonised cells. The results of an investigation on the possible influence of a variable cagA status on the extension of apoptosis have indicated that this kind of programmed death is disengaged from the possession of cagA by Helicobacter pylori organisms colonising the same gastric areas. It is likely that the whole pathogenic potential of cag+ organisms is far from being completely explored, as suggested by the recent finding that the expression of a bacterial adhesin (called BabA) involved in binding to the blood group antigen Lewis b is associated with the presence of cag
Immunohistochemical study of subcutaneous phaeohyphomycoses
Immunohistochemical study of inflammatory infiltrate was carried out in five cases of subcutaneous phaeohyphomycosis before and after therapy. The infections were due to the genus Alternaria in four cases and genus Cladosporium in one. In four cases, infiltrating T cells with helper memory phenotype were slightly more abundant after therapy (70-80% versus 75-90% of T lymphocytes) and those with suppressor cytotoxic phenotype were slightly less abundant (20-25% versus 10-15%). In one case, CD8+, Tia-1+ lymphocytes constituted 50% of the T-cell infiltrate before and after therapy. In all cases, the infiltrate contained many CD79 a+ plasma cells, which increased slightly after therapy, and a high CD1a positivity of dendritic cells (presumably Langerhans cells) before and after therapy. The CD1a+ cells were detected in the epidermis and in granulomatous infiltrate; in the dermis and subcutis, many were close to fungal structures. In four cases, intra-epidermal CD1a+ cell number was slightly lower than in control skin. CD68+ cells were not found in the epidermi
TECNICHE CHIRURGICHE A CONFRONTO NELLA PATOLOGIA SURRENALICA. RISULTATI DI UN'ANALISI STATISTICA
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