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5.
Clin Microbiol Rev ; 21(4): 594-605, 2008 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18854482

ABSTRACT

SUMMARY: In 1984, children presented to the emergency department of a hospital in the small town of Promissão, São Paulo State, Brazil, with an acute febrile illness that rapidly progressed to death. Local clinicians and public health officials recognized that these children had an unusual illness, which led to outbreak investigations conducted by Brazilian health officials in collaboration with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The studies that followed are an excellent example of the coordinated and parallel studies that are used to investigate outbreaks of a new disease, which became known as Brazilian purpuric fever (BPF). In the first outbreak investigation, a case-control study confirmed an association between BPF and antecedent conjunctivitis but the etiology of the disease could not be determined. In a subsequent outbreak, children with BPF were found to have bacteremia caused by Haemophilus influenzae biogroup aegyptius (H. aegyptius), an organism previously known mainly to cause self-limited purulent conjunctivitis. Molecular characterization of blood and other isolates demonstrated the clonal nature of the H. aegyptius strains that caused BPF, which were genetically distant from the diverse strains that cause only conjunctivitis. This led to an intense effort to identify the factors causing the unusual invasiveness of the BPF clone, which has yet to definitively identify the virulence factor or factors involved. After a series of outbreaks and sporadic cases through 1993, no additional cases of BPF have been reported.


Subject(s)
Disease Outbreaks/history , Haemophilus Infections/epidemiology , Haemophilus Infections/microbiology , Haemophilus influenzae/classification , Haemophilus influenzae/pathogenicity , Bacteremia/epidemiology , Bacteremia/history , Bacteremia/microbiology , Brazil/epidemiology , Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. , Conjunctivitis/epidemiology , Conjunctivitis/history , Conjunctivitis/microbiology , Haemophilus Infections/complications , Haemophilus Infections/history , Haemophilus influenzae/genetics , Haemophilus influenzae/isolation & purification , History, 20th Century , Humans , United States , Virulence
6.
Am J Med Sci ; 332(3): 123-30, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16969141

ABSTRACT

A 41-year-old mariner developed acute arthritis affecting his legs more than his arms or hands during a violent storm on his return from the first of four voyages of discovery. He experienced repeated attacks of the arthritis over the ensuing 14 years, which on at least two occasions were accompanied by painful eyes "much affected with bleeding." He died shortly before his 55 birthday "quite paralyzed and bedridden." Who was he, and what was the likely etiology of his disorder?


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Reactive/diagnosis , Arthritis, Reactive/history , Conjunctivitis/diagnosis , Conjunctivitis/history , Famous Persons , Diagnosis, Differential , HLA-B27 Antigen/genetics , History, 15th Century , History, 16th Century , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
7.
Surv Ophthalmol ; 48(4): 369-88, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12850227

ABSTRACT

Ligneous conjunctivitis (McKusick 217090) is a rare form of chronic conjunctivitis characterized by the development of firm fibrin-rich, woody-like pseudomembraneous lesions mainly on the tarsal conjunctivae. Less frequently, similar lesions may occur on other mucous membranes of the body indicating that these manifestations are part of a systemic disease. Histopathological findings from affected humans and (plasminogen-deficient) mice indicate that wound healing, mainly of injured mucosal tissue, is impaired due to markedly decreased (plasmin-mediated) extracellular fibrinolysis. Pseudomembraneous lesions of the eyes and other mucosal tissue mainly contain clotted fibrin(ogen). Actually, systemic plasminogen deficiency has been linked to ligneous conjunctivitis in humans and mice. In one case, ligneous conjunctivitis has been induced by antifibrinolytic treatment with tranexamic acid. Further rare associated disorders of ligneous conjunctivitis are congenital occlusive hydrocephalus and juvenile colloid milium. This review outlines the historical background, clinical characteristics of ligneous conjunctivitis and its associated complications, histological abnormalities of pseudomembraneous lesions, inheritance, hemostasiologic and molecular genetic findings in affected patients, current treatment approaches, and the plasminogen-deficient mouse as an animal model.


Subject(s)
Conjunctivitis , Animals , Chronic Disease , Conjunctivitis/complications , Conjunctivitis/epidemiology , Conjunctivitis/history , Conjunctivitis/metabolism , History, 19th Century , Humans , Mucous Membrane , Plasminogen/deficiency
13.
Klin Monbl Augenheilkd ; 175(6): 841-5, 1979 Dec.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-552013

ABSTRACT

In the years 1910/13 two endemic infections of the conjunctiva were found in Samoa in addition to ocular manifestations of filiariosis. One of these infections was obviously trachoma, the other an acute micrococcus catarrhalis conjunctivitis by diplococcus samoensis.


Subject(s)
Conjunctivitis/history , Conjunctivitis/microbiology , Filariasis/complications , Filariasis/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Independent State of Samoa , Trachoma/history
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