We describe a 57-year-old man with steroid-dependent myasthenia gravis and progressive ulcerating leg nodules due to clarithromycin-resistant Mycobacterium chelonae. The patient was successfully treated with linezolid.
Although clinicopathologic conferences (CPCs) have been valued for teaching differential diagnosis, their instructional value may be compromised by hindsight bias. This bias occurs when those who know the actual diagnosis overestimate the likelihood that they would have been able to predict the correct diagnosis had they been asked to do so beforehand. Evidence for the presence of the hindsight bias was sought among 160 physicians and trainees attending four CPCs. Before the correct diagnosis was announced, half of the conference audience estimated the probability that each of five possible diagnoses was correct (foresight subjects). After the correct diagnosis was announced the remaining (hindsight) subjects estimated the probability they would have assigned to each of the five possible diagnoses had they been making the initial differential diagnosis. Only 30% of the foresight subjects ranked the correct diagnosis as first, versus 50% of the hindsight subjects (p less than 0.02). Although less experienced physicians consistently demonstrated the hindsight bias, more experienced physicians succumbed only on easier cases.
We reviewed the clinical, radiographic, and histologic features of nine patients with AIDS and pulmonary disease due to Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC). Pulmonary MAC disease was defined by (1) the isolation of MAC from two or more lower respiratory tract specimens or from a single lung biopsy sample, (2) an infiltrate revealed by chest radiography, and (3) the absence of other identified pulmonary pathogens or malignancies. Pulmonary MAC disease was present in five (2.5%) of 200 patients with disseminated MAC infection and in four additional patients without evidence of dissemination, as assessed by blood culture. The median CD4 cell count at the time of presentation was 90/microL. Pulmonary MAC disease was the initial AIDS-defining infection in five patients and presented within a median of 5 months after the initial infection in four patients. Radiographic patterns for these nine patients included consolidating or nodular infiltrates and cavitation. The histopathology of pulmonary MAC disease was characterized by granulomatous inflammation, often associated with necrosis and few evident organisms. The conditions of all patients treated with multidrug regimens clinically improved.
Toxoplasmosis is a common, largely asymptomatic infection. Early reports of acquired disease noted frequent dermatologic manifestations, whereas recent reviews of toxoplasmosis stress the lymphadenopathic presentation of the disease. We report the case of a patient with acute toxoplasmosis associated with a prominent macular and papular rash involving the palms and soles. We have reviewed the literature on dermatologic manifestations of acute acquired toxoplasmosis to underscore the importance of considering toxoplasmosis in the differential diagnosis of febrile illnesses with varied dermatologic presentations.
We report, to our knowledge, the first isolation of VDE from a burn unit. Our experience was similar to earlier reports, in that continuous administration of vancomycin and previous VRE isolation preceded the recovery of VDE. Given the increasing prevalence of VRE as a nosocomial pathogen, intensive care units must now be attuned to the emergence of VDE as serious pathogen.
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