S. Tubiana). y Bruno Hoen and Xavier Duval contributed equally. z The members of COMBAT study group are listed at the Acknowledgments section.
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Clinical Microbiology and Infectionj o u r n a l h o m e p a g e : w w w . c l i n i c a l m i c r o b i o l o g y a n d i n f e c t i o n . c o m
A surveillance program for invasive pneumococcal disease was undertaken in Puyde-Dĵme, an administrative district of the region Auvergne in France, from 1 January 1994 to 31 December 1998. A total of 214 cases were identified. The annual incidence of invasive pneumococcal disease increased (P=0.04) from 5.5 in 1994 to 9.3 cases per 10(5) person-years in 1998. The highest incidences were for children <2 years of age (59.2 cases per 10(5) person-years) and for adults > or = 65 years (18 cases per 10(5) person-years). Clinical diagnoses, available in 200 patients, included acute pneumonia (62%), meningitis (10%), sepsis without focus (20%), and others (8%). The most frequent chronic medical conditions of the patients included smoking, alcoholism, cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases, and malignancies. Thirty-one percent of the isolates were nonsusceptible to penicillin. Penicillin resistance (MIC > or = 0.1 mg/l) was more frequent (P=0.02) in cancer patients. The overall case-fatality rate was 21.5%. Risk factors for death were age, sex, and underlying diseases of the patients, along with the severity of illness. These population-based findings should convince clinicians to offer pneumococcal vaccine to patients at high risk for invasive pneumococcal disease, thereby increasing vaccination coverage levels in France.
Background: Lemierre's syndrome presents a classic clinical picture, the pathophysiology of which remains obscure. Attempts have been made to trace genetic predispositions that modify the host detection of pathogen or the resultant systemic reaction.
Diagnosis of tuberculoma is difficult because of its tumorlike aspects. This report describes the case of a male who displayed a hemiplegia revealing an intracranial mass. Neuroimaging was consistent with a glioblastoma; however, the definite diagnosis was a tuberculoma. Clinical features of tuberculomas are nonspecific. Even though the neuroimaging features are sensitive, they are much less specific, with variability related to the tuberculoma course. Investigations leading to the diagnosis are histologic analysis showing a granuloma with or without caseating necrosis, and the microbiologic identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Every intracranial tumor with malignant radiologic and clinical appearance must evoke a suspicion for tuberculoma.
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