ABSTRACT
Patients with alloantibody should be transfused with specific antigen negative blood, and in the case of autoantibody, the least incompatible blood on crossmatching can be transfused. Yet any transfusion cases that possessed autoantibody with the apparent antigen specificity have been rarely reported. A 62 year-old-woman with chronic renal failure underwent tests showing that the direct antiglobulin test was positive (2+) for IgG, the autocontrol test was positive, and the Rh phenotype of her erythrocytes was typed as group CcDEe. One unit of the e-positive packed red cells (PRCs) was transfused before an antibody identification test identified this antibody as autoantibody with an apparent e antigen specificity, but the level of hemoglobin increased from 6.3 g/dL to 7.4 g/dL without a hemolytic reaction or other transfusion side-effects.
Subject(s)
Humans , Anemia, Hemolytic, Autoimmune , Blood Group Incompatibility , Coombs Test , Erythrocytes , Immunoglobulin G , Kidney Failure, Chronic , Phenotype , Sensitivity and SpecificityABSTRACT
Scopulariopsis brevicaulis is a ubiquitous soil saprophyte that commonly causes onychomycosis, accounting for 1-10% of such infections. Rarely, it may be responsible for cutaneous lesions or more severe infections, especially after traumatic or surgical injuries. We report of a 54-year-old female patient who developed facial cellulitis caused by S. brevicaulis, which occurred one year after the patient underwent cosmetic surgery of the face. The patient suffered from febrile sense, pain and a growing mass lesion on her left cheek, which were diagnosed as facial cellulitis associated with foreign material that had been implanted at the time of cosmetic surgery. Three pus cultures from the mass lesion which performed at a week interval yielded the same S. brevicaulis. Surgical removal and drainage by using liposuction procedure resulted in a favorable outcome. To our knowledge this is the first report of S. brevicaulis infection associated with cosmetic surgery in Korea.