Disseminated disease caused by non-tuberculous, environmental mycobacteria (EM) reflects impaired host immunity. Disseminated disease caused by Mycobacterium scrofulaceum has primarily been reported in patients with AIDS. Moreover, observing M. scrofulaceum as the agent of localized disease in childhood has become increasingly rare. We report the first case of disseminated disease caused by M. scrofulaceum in a child with inherited interferon-gamma receptor 1 (IFN-gammaR1) complete deficiency. As in this case, mycobacterial bone infections in IFN-gammaR1 deficiency can sometimes mimic the clinical picture of chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis.
We report on a boy, born to consanguineous parents, who had arthrogryposis, cholestatic liver disease, and renal dysfunction. The child died at age 2 months, and autopsy showed pigmentary storage disease in liver cells, nephrocalcinosis, and rarefaction of motor neuron cells in the anterior horns of spinal cord. This association, reported in 1979 by Nezelof et al., is a distinctive syndrome. The possibility of an autosomal recessive or an X-linked inheritance is discussed.
Two cases of Fusarium infection in children with neuroblastoma are reported. One of the patients had an overwhelming infection and the diagnosis was based on isolation of Fusarium moniliforme from blood and skin biopsy, and histological findings. The second patient developed chronic polyarthritis and Fusarium solani was cultured from synovial fluid samples taken from two different joints four months apart. No histological documentation of infection was obtained. The response to antifungal therapy was unfavourable. Both patients died, but in the second case the relationship between fungal infection and death was not established.
Bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia (BOOP) is a clinicopathological entity with well-defined diagnostic criteria, which can be idiopathic or produced by a variety of biological processes. We describe the occurrence of BOOP in three children, one with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia and two with acute promyelocytic leukaemia.In the three patients, BOOP developed 10-20 days after a course of therapy with cytosine arabinoside and anthracyclines. The possible relationships between the small conducting airway lesions, lung toxic reaction to the drugs and/or nonidentified infectious agents are discussed.
Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis (CMC) is a syndrome characterised by immune deficiency, often presenting familial dominant inheritance and association with autoimmune endocrinopathies. We report on a patient with CMC who died at 5 years of age of a brain haemorrhage following the rupture of a basilar-artery aneurysm. Candida hyphae in the basilar artery were found at autopsy. A common immunologic abnormality in CMC is the failure of patient's T-lymphocytes to produce cytokines, which are essential for expression of cell-mediated immunity to Candida. Therefore, long-term treatment is mandatory.
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