To examine whether urinary excretions of plasma proteins with molecular radii of 45-55 A and different isoelectric points such as IgG (pI = 7.4) and ceruloplasmin (pI = 4.4) increase selectively in normoalbuminuric type 2 diabetic patients, urinary albumin excretion rate (AER), renal clearances of IgG, ceruloplasmin and alpha2-macroglobulin, and creatinine clearance (Ccr) were studied in timed overnight urine samples of 36 diabetic outpatients and 16 control subjects. Furthermore, to examine effect of glycemic control on these urinary protein excretions, the same analysis was performed before and after glycemic control in 17 diabetic inpatients admitted for glycemic control. Renal clearances of IgG and ceruloplasmin were significantly higher in diabetic outpatients than in the control group, whereas AER and renal clearance of alpha2-macroglobulin did not differ. Glycemic control caused significant decreases in renal clearances of IgG and ceruloplasmin, accompanied with tendency for Ccr to decrease (p = 0.055). The present results, together with our previous finding of selectively increased urinary excretions of 45-55 A sized plasma proteins in parallel with enhanced glomerular filtration rate after acute protein loading, led us to conclude that enhanced intraglomerular hydraulic pressure may cause increases in clearances of IgG and ceruloplasmin, and that this change can be reversed by strict glycemic control in normoalbuminuric diabetic patients.
The sensitivity and the specificity of a new commercial rapid 10-min adenovirus antigen immunochromatography (IC) test were determined by comparison with the sensitivity and specificity of virus isolation. Of 169 pharyngeal swabs from children with suspected adenovirus respiratory tract infections, 95 (56%) were culture positive for adenovirus. The IC test was sensitive (detecting 69 of these 95 infections [72.6%]) and completely specific (identifying 74 of 74 specimens [100%]) when it was compared with cell culture. The test detected adenovirus serotypes 1, 2, 3, 5, and 7 with almost equal sensitivities. This test is not only rapid and easy to perform but also sensitive and specific for adenovirus respiratory tract infections. The test is sufficiently rapid to be used at the bedside or in an outpatient clinic, with the result being available during a patient’s first examination.
M ycoplasma pneumoniae is a major cause of community-acquired pneumonia, and macrolideresistant M. pneumoniae is a serious concern in Asia (1-3). Throughout Japan, an outbreak of macrolideresistant M. pneumoniae infection occurred during 2011-2012 (2). After this outbreak, the number of drug-resistant strains decreased for every year from 2013 through 2019. In contrast, China and South Korea still showed a high rate of macrolide resistance in M. pneumoniae during 2014-2018 (1,3). We determined antimicrobial drug susceptibility and performed analysis by using multilocus sequence typing (MLST), clonal complexes (CCs), and P1 gene typing for M. pneumoniae isolated from children to identify trends concerning this bacterium in Japan. The Study We obtained nasopharyngeal swab samples from patients who had pneumonia or bronchitis at 21 medical institutions throughout Japan during October 2018-July 2019. We collected samples after obtaining informed consent from patients or their family members (Ethics Committee approval no. 2016-0015,
By means of a continuous canine kidney cell line (MDCK), influenza viruses were rapidly isolated from specimens collected from patients with respiratory disease. The cell line proved more sensitive than either eggs or rhesus monkey cells for currently circulating influenza A and B strains. Influenza viruses caused a distinct cytopathology within 5 days of inoculation if trypsin-ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid was incorporated into the medium. Sufficient hemagglutinin was produced on the initial tissue culture passage to allow direct identification of isolates by hemagglutinin inhibition tests. A variety of other respiratory viruses replicated in MDCK, and over a 10-month period 211 of 600 specimens (35%) yielded viruses.
Of pediatric patients with purulent meningitis seen at the institutions listed in the title page of this paper between 1986 and 1994, 93 patients treated with antibiotics and dexamethasone (DXM) were compared with 91 patients treated with antibiotics alone. The patients receiving antibiotics with dexamethasone achieved overall improvement in inflammatory symptoms and signs and cerebrospinal fluid findings and became afebrile significantly earlier than those receiving antibiotics alone. However, some of the patients became febrile again. The secondary fever rate for the DXM group was much higher than that for the antibiotic alone group (p < 0.0001). In most of the rebounded cases, the body temperature rose above 38 degrees C and remained elevated for 2-4 days. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was cultured daily in 54 and 32 patients receiving antibiotics with and without DXM, respectively. Although this study was not a controlled study in a strict sense, these patients compared. In both groups, the CSF became mostly culture-negative within 48 hours. In a few patients receiving DXM, however, it became culture-negative after 72 hours or longer. DXM caused an adverse effect in a patient with meningitis caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae. The adverse effect was mild gastrointestinal bleeding, which recovered spontaneously. From the findings described above, the use of DXM combined with antibiotic therapy was considered to accelerate the relief from fever and improvement of inflammatory symptoms and signs and CSF findings. The body temperature rose again in more than half of the patients receiving DXM, but fell to normal spontaneously without treatment. The elevation doubtlessly could not be distinguished from recurrence of the meningitis itself or complications. It seems to be likely that no treatment but careful observation is required even if the fever recurs as far as the CSF findings showed favorable progress with excelluent general conditions. When DXM is given, it is essential that CSF tests and culture are repeated during the early stages and the progress is monitored carefully.
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