Background : The combined use of liquid media and solid media is recommended for mycobacterial culture. We evaluated diagnostic performance of combination of BACTEC Mycobacteria Growth Indicator Tube (MGIT; Becton Dickinson, USA) and 2% Ogawa media (Korean Institute of Tuberculosis, Korea) for recovery of mycobacteria.Methods : In September 2007, 1,764 specimens from 1,059 patients were cultured with MGIT and Ogawa. Acid fast bacilli (AFB) smear was fluorochrome-stained. The isolates were identified into Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) and nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) with PCR using Seeplex TB Detection Kit (Seegene, Korea). Recovery rate, time to detection (TTD), contamination rate, mixed growth rate and species distribution were analyzed.Results : Two hundred thirty-five specimens (13.3%) from 165 patients (15.6%) were positive for mycobacterial culture. Recovery rates of mycobacteria from the group using both media, MGIT only, and Ogawa only were 13.3%, 12.1%, and 7.8%, respectively. While MGIT recovered 98.9% of MTB and 79.7% of NTM, Ogawa recovered 65.9% of MTB and 54.1% of NTM. TTDs of total mycobacteria/MTB/NTM in MGIT and Ogawa were 10.6/11.4/9.7 days and 31/29/33 days, respectively. MGIT TTDs of total mycobacteria/MTB/NTM from AFB-positive specimens were significantly shorter than those of AFB-negative specimens; 8.2/9.5/4.4 days vs 11.6/12.7/10.7 days. Contamination and mixed growth rate of MGIT were 9.6% and 3.7%. Primary culture of Ogawa recovered 1 MTB and 1 NTM among the 170 MGIT-contaminated specimens and 38 mycobacteria among 66 specimens that showed mixed cultures of MGIT.Conclusions : MGIT warrants sensitive and rapid isolation of mycobacteria. However, the combination of MGIT and Ogawa is more desirable to recover mycobacteria in the case of contaminations or mixed cultures. (Korean J Lab Med 2008;28:299-306)
The prevalence of occult HBV in the setting of renal transplantation was higher than that in the general population of Korea, and no reactivation of hepatitis B was observed in patients with OBI in the post-renal transplantation period.
Histiocytic sarcoma (HS) is a very rare neoplasm that often shows an aggressive clinical course and systemic symptoms, such as fever, weight loss, adenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly and pancytopenia. It may present as localized or disseminated disease. We describe here a 63-yr-old male who manifested systemic symptoms, including fever, weight loss and generalized weakness. Abdominal and chest computed tomography failed to show specific findings, but there was suspicion of multiple bony changes at the lumbar spine. Fusion whole body positron emission tomography, bone scan and lumbar spine magnetic resonance imaging showed multiple bone lesions, suggesting a malignancy involving the bone marrow (BM). Several BM and bone biopsies were inconclusive for diagnosis. Necropsy showed replacement of the BM by a diffuse proliferation of neoplastic cells with markedly increased cellularity (95%). The neoplastic cells were positive for lysozyme and CD68, but negative for T- and B-cell lineage markers, and megakaryocytic, epithelial, muscular and melanocytic markers. Morphologic findings also distinguished it from other dendritic cell neoplasms.
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