Elimination and transduction of drug resistance was examined in methicillinresistant strains of Staphylococcus aureus. Irreversible spontaneous loss and "curing" by aging of cultures and by treatment with ethidium bromide indicated that the determinants for penicillinase production and chloramphenicol resistance, and probably also for neomycin resistance, were located extrachromosomally. On the other hand, the determinants of resistance to erythromycin, streptomycin, tetracycline, and methicillin could not be eliminated by acridines, ethidium bromide, rifampin, sodium dodecyl sulfate, ultraviolet (UV) irradiation, growth at 43.5 C, aging of cultures, or combinations of these treatments. The stimulation of transduction frequency by UV irradiation of phage in the case of the stable markers, but not in the case of the unstable ones, supported further the hypothesis of chromosomal location of the markers of methicillin, erythromycin, tetracycline, and streptomycin resistance and extrachromosomal location of the determinants for penicillinase production and chloramphenicol resistance. Neomycin resistance could not be transduced. Joint elimination and co-transduction of the determinants for penicillinase production and resistance to chloramphenicol and neomycin were not observed, indicating the location of these markers on separate, mutually compatible plasmids. Co-transduction of chromosomal resistance determinants was usually less than 1 %, which makes the location of these genes in a circumscribed area of the chromosome improbable.
SUMMARY Pancreatitis is seldom seen as a severe complication of renal transplantation. In a review on 1321 renal transplants, 23 cases with 12 deaths are reported (Johnson and Nabseth, 1970). Single case reports may be added. In our departments pancreatitis has proved to be a fairly frequent complication. It developed in 10 (7 %) of 147 patients with renal transplantation one week to seven and a half years after transplantation (patients with primary hyperparathyroidism excluded). Three of the eight acute cases had haemorrhagic pancreatitis, in two of them leading to death. Two patients had chronic calcifying pancreatitis. Pancreatitis was complicated in one case by abscess formation and in two by severe haemorrhage into a pseudo-cyst. In two patients the diagnosis was made at necropsy only and death was probably not related to the acute pancreatitis. The exact pathogenesis of pancreatitis after renal transplantation cannot be precisely assessed. Possible contributing factors are treatment with corticosteroids, azathioprin, and L-asparaginase, early hypercalcaemia after transplantation, surgery, infections of bacterial or viral origin, and unknown immunological processes.Pancreatitis is referred to as an infrequent and severe complication of renal transplantation. In a series of 1321 patients with renal transplants 23 cases (1-7%) with 12 deaths have been observed (Johnson and Nabseth, 1970). Other reports concern only single
The contents of the proximal jejunum and distal ileum were cultured quantitatively in eight patients who were undergoing intestinal bypass procedure for obesity. Five jejunal specimens were sterile, and three contained low counts of a predominantly aerobic flora. Ileal contents yielded variable but usually higher counts than in the jejunum, and there were similar numbers of anaerobes and aerobes. In three patients in whom a bypass was established, contents of the functioning small bowel showed counts of 10(5.0)-10(7.6) colony-forming units/ml. These counts exceeded the counts in the normal terminal ileum, and the flora qualitatively resembled that of feces. Four specimens from excluded loops revealed colonization with fecal organisms, and the counts ranged between 10(6.4) and 10(9.7) colony-forming units/ml. In jejunoileal bypass both the functioning small bowel and the excluded loop become colonized with colonic flora, a phenomenon that may contribute to some of the side effects of this procedure.
Report on 3 cases of spontaneous perforation of a pancreatic pseudocyst into the stomach; presenting symptom was in each case an acute upper GI-bleeding. The pseudocyst was endoscopically seen as a well delineated, hemorrhagic protrusion into the stomach. After full perforation the spontaneous ostium had the appearance of a surgical anastomosis. High amylase concentration in the aspirate ave further diagnostic evidence. All 3 patients survived, 2 of them without surgery.
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