Introduction: Hospitals around the world have presented multiresistant Acinetobacter sp. outbreaks. The spread of these isolates that harbor an increasing variety of resistance genes makes the treatment of these infections and their control within the hospital environment more difficult. This study aimed to evaluate the occurrence and dissemination of Acinetobacter sp. multiresistant isolates and to identify acquired resistance genes. Methods: We analyzed 274 clinical isolates of Acinetobacter sp. from five hospitals in Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil. We evaluated the susceptibility to antimicrobial, acquired resistance genes from Ambler's classes B and D, and performed molecular typing of the isolates using enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus-polymerase chain reaction (ERIC-PCR) technique. Results: A high (68%) percentage of multiresistant isolates of Acinetobacter sp. was observed, and 69% were resistant to carbapenems. We identified 84% of isolates belonging to species A. baumannii because they presented the gene bla . The gene bla was detected in 62% of the isolates, and among these, 98% were resistant to carbapenems. Using the ERIC-PCR technique, we identified clones of Acinetobacter sp. spread among the four hospitals analyzed during the sampling period. Conclusions: The data indicate the dissemination of Acinetobacter sp. isolates among hospitals and their permanence in the hospital after one year.
OBJECTIVE: To describe the main clinical and radiological characteristics of patients with
histoplasmosis mimicking lung cancer. METHODS: This was a retrospective descriptive study based on the analysis of the medical
records of the 294 patients diagnosed with histoplasmosis between 1977 and 2011 at
the Mycology Laboratory of the Santa Casa Sisters of Mercy Hospital of Porto
Alegre in the city of Porto Alegre, Brazil. The diagnosis of histoplasmosis was
established by culture, histopathological examination, or immunodiffusion testing
(identification of M or H precipitation bands). After identifying the patients
with macroscopic lesions, as well as radiological and CT findings consistent with
malignancy, we divided the patients into two groups: those with a history of
cancer and presenting with lesions mimicking metastases (HC group); and those with
no such history but also presenting with lesions mimicking metastases (NHC group).
RESULTS: Of the 294 patients diagnosed with histoplasmosis, 15 had presented with lesions
mimicking primary neoplasia or metastases (9 and 6 in the HC and NHC groups,
respectively). The age of the patients ranged from 13 to 67 years (median, 44
years). Of the 15 patients, 14 (93%) presented with pulmonary lesions at the time
of hospitalization. CONCLUSIONS: The clinical and radiological syndrome of neoplastic disease is not confined to
malignancy, and granulomatous infectious diseases must therefore be considered in
the differential diagnosis.
This report describes the identification and characterization of a novel circovirus using metagenomic approaches in respiratory fluid samples from Brazilian free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis). The genome and deduced protein sequences share low identity with another circovirus recovered in distantly related bats from China.
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