BackgroundThe two major indications for tonsillectomy are recurrent tonsillitis (RT) and peritonsillar abscess (PTA). Unlike PTAs, which are primarily treated surgically, RT is often cured by tonsillectomy only after a series of failed drug therapy attempts. Although the bacteriological background of RT has been studied, the reason for the lack of success of conservative therapeutic approaches is not well understood.MethodsIn a prospective study, tonsil specimens from 130 RT patients and 124 PTA patients were examined for the presence of extra- and intracellular bacteria using antibiotic protection assays. Staphylococcus aureus isolates from RT patients were characterized by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), spa-typing and MSCRAMM-gene-PCR. Their ability for biofilm formation was tested and their cell invasiveness was confirmed by a flow cytometric invasion assay (FACS), fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) and immunohistochemistry.Findings S. aureus was the predominant species (57.7%) in RT patients, whereas Streptococcus pyogenes was most prevalent (20.2%) in PTA patients. Three different assays (FACS, FISH, antibiotic protection assay) showed that nearly all RT-associated S. aureus strains were located inside tonsillar cells. Correspondingly, the results of the MSCRAMM-gene-PCRs confirmed that 87% of these S. aureus isolates were invasive strains and not mere colonizers. Based upon PFGE analyses of genomic DNA and on spa-gene typing the vast majority of the S. aureus isolates belonged to different clonal lineages.ConclusionsOur results demonstrate that intracellular residing S. aureus is the most common cause of RT and indicate that S. aureus uses this location to survive the effects of antibiotics and the host immune response. A German translation of the Abstract is provided as supplementary material (Abstract S1).
To investigate whether submicroscopic chromosomal deletions or duplications can be causative of unclear syndromic nephropathies, we analyzed ten patients with congenital abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tract or glomerulopathies combined with important extrarenal anomalies by whole-genome array-based comparative genomic hybridization. In a 14-year-old girl presenting with hematuria, proteinuria, mental retardation (MR), sensorineural hearing loss, dysmorphisms, and epilepsy, we detected a microdeletion in chromosome Xq22.3-q23. This deletion was verified and characterized by fluorescence in situ hybridization and multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification analyses, found to be de novo, uniallelic and 3.3 Mb in size. Electron microscopy of a kidney biopsy showed glomerular basement membrane thinning and segmental splitting of the lamina densa compatible with Alport syndrome. Cranial magnetic resonance and diffusion tensor imaging detected a severe neuronal migration disorder with double cortex formation and pronounced reduction of the fronto-occipital tract system. Thus, in one of ten patients with unclear syndromic nephropathies we identified a previously undescribed contiguous gene syndrome at Xq22.3-q23. The microdeletion contains the X-linked Alport syndrome gene COL4A5, the MR genes FACL4 and PAK3, and parts of the X-chromosomal lissencephaly gene DCX associated with double cortex formation in girls, MR, and epilepsy. The phenotype in our patient combines features of the Alport-MR contiguous gene syndrome with lissencephaly.
There was no difference in frequency of conjunctival intraepithelial neoplasia between HIV-positive or HIV-negative patients. HIV-positive patients with a squamous cell carcinoma were on average 17 years younger. UV radiation is the main risk factor and HIV infection is a possible carcinogenic cofactor. Investigations on additional viral infections as possible pathogenetic factors and on changed tumor suppressor genes are needed.
A 53-year-old female patient presented with a palpable mass in the right medial orbit which had been present for 18 months. The left eye had been enucleated in childhood due to a perforating injury. An orbital biopsy performed ex domo showed unspecific inflammatory tissue but no definite diagnosis was made and systemic therapy with corticosteroids was unsuccessful. A second orbital biopsy was performed in our clinic and revealed a solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) of the orbit. Medial orbitotomy with tumor excision followed and the histological examination of the excised tumor established the diagnosis of SFT of the orbit with focal sarcomatous transformation. The patient presented 3 years later with a new orbital mass in a control MRI examination. Relapse was suspected and orbitotomy with excision of the mass was performed. The histological examination revealed a relapse of the SFT with sarcomatous transformation in the whole extent of the tumor. Radiotherapy with a dosis of 59.4 Gy was subsequently performed. The patient remained tumor-free in the most recent control examination 3 years later.
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