Boyden's nomenclature, which was based on postmortem specimens and published in 1955 prior to the advent of computed tomography (CT), is commonly used to describe the normal segmental bronchial anatomy and various abnormalities. However, several additional anomalies have been recognized since that time, and there is some confusion over the names used to describe these anomalies. Several congenital branching anomalies affecting the trachea, main bronchi, and intermediate bronchus have been reported, all of which can be recognized at chest CT but are often overlooked. These anomalies, which probably occur early in fetal life, can be either supernumerary, with defects occurring at 29-30 days gestation, or displaced, with defects occurring later. Tracheobronchial positional anomalies are often associated with other congenital abnormalities but may be isolated. They often are asymptomatic but can be responsible for pulmonary symptoms such as dyspnea, recurrent pneumonia, and hemoptysis. It is essential that these anomalies are recognized prior to lung resection to avoid complications, especially when video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery is performed. In addition, bronchoscopists should be aware of these anomalies before performing diagnostic or therapeutic bronchoscopic procedures. Awareness of a few key bronchial anatomic principles and use of a lobe-based classification scheme will facilitate recognition of tracheobronchial positional anomalies.
Primary endobronchial tumors are rare in children and they include a broad spectrum of lesions. The aim of this study was to determine the characteristic features, treatments and outcomes of these tumors. We report a retrospective analysis of all patients treated for endobronchial tumor in nine French hospitals between 1990 and 2010 and a comparison of the results with those reported in the medical literature. Twelve tumors were reported: five low grade muco epidermoid carcinomas, two inflammatory myofibroblastic tumors, two hemangiomas, one anaplastic large cell lymphoma, one carcinoid tumor, and one juvenile xanthogranuloma. The mean age of the patients was 7.5 ± 3.5 years. The most common sign revealing the disease was persistent atelectasis or recurrent pneumonia (eight cases). The other revealing signs were a persistent bronchospasm (three cases) and hemoptysis (one case). The clinical presentation, biology, serum tumor markers, and chest X-ray abnormalities were not specific to a particular histological diagnosis. Chest CT scan revealed the presence of an endobronchial tumor in 11 cases. Nine tumors could be diagnosed from a biopsy obtained by video endoscopy. Complete surgical resection was performed in seven patients. Bronchoscopic removal was performed in five cases and was successful in three. There were no deaths. Endobronchial tumors are rare in childhood and their histology is diverse. Chest CT scan and per-endoscopic endobronchial biopsies are required for diagnosis, when possible. Surgical or endoscopic treatment should be discussed by a multidisciplinary team. Despite the multiple etiologies, the prognosis of these tumors is good if diagnosis is early and if resection is complete. Long-term recurrences have been described, so long-term follow-up of these children is recommended.
We sought to clarify functional relationships between baseline and acute stress-induced changes in plasma levels of the stress hormone corticosterone (CORT) and the reproductive hormone testosterone (T), and those of two main metabolites, uric acid (UA) and glucose (GLU). Acute stress in vertebrates generally stimulates the secretion of glucocorticoids, which in birds is primarily CORT. This stimulation is thought to promote behavioral and metabolic changes, including increased glycemia. However, limited information in free-ranging birds supports the view that acutely elevated plasma CORT stimulates glycemia. Acute stress also often decreases the secretion of reproductive hormones (e.g., T in males), but the role of CORT in this decrease and the contribution of T to the regulation of plasma GLU remain poorly understood. We measured initial (pre-stress) and acute stress-induced plasma CORT and T as well as GLU in adult male Rufous-winged Sparrows, Peucaea carpalis, sampled during the pre-breeding, breeding, post-breeding molt, and non-breeding stages. Stress increased plasma CORT and the magnitude of this increase did not differ across life history stages. The stress-induced elevation of plasma CORT was consistently associated with decreased plasma UA, suggesting a role for CORT in the regulation of plasma UA during stress. During stress plasma GLU either increased (pre-breeding), did not change (breeding), or decreased (molt and non-breeding), and plasma T either decreased (pre-breeding and breeding) or did not change (molt and non-breeding). These data provide only partial support to the hypothesis that CORT secretion during acute stress exerts a hyperglycemic action or is responsible for the observed decrease in plasma T taking place at certain life history stages. They also do not support the hypothesis that rapid changes in plasma T influence glycemia.
The Amplicor Mycobacterium tuberculosis test is a new PCR assay for the direct detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from clinical samples. A multicenter study that included six laboratories was done to evaluate the Amplicor test in comparison with direct microscopy and culture (solid or radiometric media), and the culture method was used as the ''gold standard.'' A total of 2,073 specimens, i.e., 1,749 respiratory specimens and 324 other specimens, were tested. A total of 184 cultures yielded M. tuberculosis. Of these 184 cultures, 77 (42%) were smear negative and 23 (12.5%) concerned extrapulmonary specimens. The sensitivity of the Amplicor test for all of the specimens and for extrapulmonary, smear-positive, and smear-negative specimens was 86, 83, 94.5, and 74%, respectively. The sensitivity of direct microscopy in comparison with that of culture was 58%. A total of 95% of patients with culture-proven tuberculosis were diagnosed by the Amplicor test, whereas direct microscopy detected mycobacteria in only 72% of these patients. The Amplicor test exhibited a high degree of specificity (98%). The assay was very rapid and easy to perform.
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