A 27-year-old man with a history of cocaine abuse ingested a large quantity of street cocaine in an apparent suicide attempt. Shortly thereafter, he developed tonic-clonic seizures and became cyanotic. An arterial blood gas sample, collected in the emergency department, appeared chocolate-brown and showed pO2 279 mmHg, pCO2 53 mmHg, and pH 7.15. Hemoglobin spectral analysis revealed significant methemoglobinemia (37%). Subsequent gas-chromatographic and mass-spectral analysis of urine confirmed the presence of cocaine (106 mg/L), benzoylecgonine (94 mg/L), and other metabolites. Further testing revealed the presence of benzocaine, a compound known to produce methemoglobinemia. A powder submitted as the "cutting" substance was shown to be benzocaine. When confronted with a possible cocaine overdose (particularly by ingestion), the physician should consider the possible clinical effects of adulterants, especially local anesthetics such as benzocaine.
Periurethral polytetrafluoroethylene (Teflon) injections have been reported to be successful for the treatment of urinary incontinence after transurethral resection or radical prostatectomy. However, the use of polytetrafluoroethylene is controversial due to reports of distant migration and granulomatous reaction after periurethral injection. We report on a patient with a history of periurethral polytetrafluoroethylene injection for postoperative stress incontinence in whom bladder outlet obstruction developed and who underwent repeat transurethral resection 9 years later. Pathological examination revealed that the material responsible for the obstruction was almost totally composed of a foreign body giant cell response to the polytetrafluoroethylene implant ("teflonoma").
The translocation t(15;17) associated with acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) results in fusion of the retinoic acid receptor alpha (RARA) gene on chromosome 17 with the putative transcription factor gene, PML, on chromosome 15. We report three cases of APL with complex cytogenetic translocations and five cases with atypical phenotypic features with rearrangements within or adjacent to the second intron of the RARA gene. Two patients demonstrated three-way translocations involving chromosomes 3, 15, and 17, but with differing breakpoints on the short arm of chromosome 3. A third patient developed a complex karyotype at the time of third relapse, but with no change in RARA and PML gene rearrangement pattern. Three patients had normal karyotypes; however, only small numbers of cells could be analyzed. One patient's leukemic cells expressed the T-cell-associated antigen CD2 and revealed T-cell receptor beta and gamma gene rearrangements. The localization of breakpoints to the second intron of the RARA gene in cytogenetically and phenotypically atypical cases provides additional support for a requisite role of the PML/RARA fusion gene in the pathogenesis of APL.
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