Neurosyphilis is a difficult clinical stage of syphilis as there is no ideal method for diagnosis and workup requires lumbar puncture which may sometimes provide ambiguous results especially in HIV co-infected patients. Enzyme immunoassay is a widely used screening test for syphilis in serum, but its test performance was not well studied in cerebrospinal fluid. To examine the diagnostic performance of cerebrospinal fluid-enzyme immunoassay (CSF-EIA) in neurosyphilis, we conducted a prospective study for two years. All consecutive patients admitted for workup of neurosyphilis under the Social Hygiene Service, in Hong Kong, were included. Laboratory tests on CSF included several serological tests, CSF cell count, and protein. Forty-five patients were prospectively recruited, of which 29 people were living with HIV / AIDS. Using diagnostic case definition standard stipulated in the IUSTI 2008 guidelines, 17 patients satisfied the diagnosis of neurosyphilis. The CSF-EIA test provided 100% in both sensitivity and negative predictive value; its specificity was 46.4% (13/28, 95% CI 31.8-61%). Specificity improved to 80.8% (95% CI: 68.4-93.2%) with optical density cut-off value at 1.4 for cases with CSF red cell counts <600/mm(3) This is the first study on use of CSF-EIA in neurosyphilis. CSF-EIA showed high sensitivity and high negative predictive value in the study population and the presence of CSF red cells < 600/mm(3)might not affect its accuracy.
Forty-four Hong Kong Chinese adults comprising 10 cases of fingernail and 42 cases of toenail onychomycosis were recruited for a 3-weekly itraconazole pulse therapy. Each pulse consisted of seven consecutive daily 400 mg doses with a 3-week interval between treatments. All patients in the fingernail group and 37 in the toenail group completed the study. The clinical cure, clinical response and mycological cure rates at week 36 were 70, 90 and 90% for fingernail and 35, 81 and 68% for toenail groups, respectively. Side-effects including biochemical abnormalities were minimal, and returned to normal upon cessation of treatment. We conclude that itraconazole pulse therapy is very effective, safe and well-tolerated for fingernail and toenail onychomycosis.
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