Drug-induced hypersensitivity syndrome (DIHS) is a severe form of drug eruptions associated with viral reactivations. Autoimmune diseases have been reported to develop several months or years after the resolution of DIHS. We describe a 36-year-old man with cervical lymphadenopathy and an erythematous eruption affecting the face and neck, which evolved into clinically evident systemic lupus erythematosus. He had had an episode of DIHS 4 years previously, in which human herpesvirus-6 and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) were reactivated. Expression of EBV-encoded RNA was detected in the lymph node. On the basis of findings in this patient, we suggest that EBV is pathogenically important in the sequence of events leading to the onset of systemic lupus erythematosus and that patients with a history of DIHS may be at a risk of eventually developing autoimmune diseases.
Background: Pseudo-outbreaks of non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) in association with the water supply system in hospitals have been previously reported. We found that the frequency of NTM isolation in clinical samples increased after the reconstruction and renovation of a hospital in Japan in 2014. Aim: To analyse NTM, their possible relationship with the hospital water supply system, and outcomes of preventive measures. Methods: Environmental samples obtained from the water supply in hospital wards were tested for NTM. On obtaining positive results, the bacteria were further analysed using polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Findings: The PCR products of NTM showed that most samples tested positive for Mycobacterium paragordonae. Because none of the analysed patients developed any disease due to these bacteria, this event was considered a pseudo-outbreak. Investigation of the water supply system revealed that samples obtained from the recently attached aerators/ rectifiers during hospital renovation tested positive for these bacteria. Therefore, measures to remove aerators/rectifiers and prevent patients from drinking tap water in the hospital were introduced. Thereafter, the frequency of NTM-positive samples significantly decreased in the hospital.
Conclusion:This study is one of the few reports which reveal the possibility of pseudooutbreaks of M. paragordonae in hospitals, hence raising the question whether aerators/rectifiers should be used in hospitals at all, because their mesh structure may promote NTM proliferation in supplied water. The importance of surveillance of bacteria derived from the environment, particularly after hospital reconstruction/renovation, is re-emphasized.
Somatic mutations of the MEN type 1 (MEN1) gene were recently shown to be responsible for tumorigenesis in 13-26% of sporadic, nonfamilial primary hyperparathyroidism. However, it is unknown whether these mutations are also involved in tumorigenesis of parathyroid glands occurring during high phosphate therapy for hypophosphatemic rickets or osteomalacia. A male patient with adult-onset, hypophosphatemic osteomalacia had been treated with 1alpha-OHD3 and oral phosphate for 13 yr when tertiary hyperparathyroidism developed. After total resection of four enlarged parathyroid glands and autotransplantation of a hyperplastic gland, the patient has continued to do well for the last 2 yr. Sequence analysis of the coding exons of MEN1 gene revealed a 36-bp deletion with a 2-bp insertion (exon 2) in the right upper parathyroid gland accompanied with loss of heterozygosity at 11q13 locus and a heterozygous mutation of 2-bp deletion (AG) in exon 10 in the right lower gland, in which microsatellite instability was also found. No MEN1 gene mutation was detected in the other two hyperplastic parathyroid glands or in the peripheral blood. These findings indicate that MEN1 gene mutations contributed to tumorigenesis of the right upper parathyroid gland in this case of phosphate-induced tertiary hyperparathyroidism. Very recently a bone tumor was found in the right femoral neck, and the tumor (chondroblastoma) was resected.
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