A male patient 68 years, suffering from pyoderma gangrenosum which was resistant to conventional treatment, received clofazimine 400 mg daily for 5 months, then reducing to 300 mg daily for the next 6 months. Eleven months after starting the drug, he was admitted to hospital with severe abdominal pain, laparotomy revealing infarction of the spleen, with violaceous congestion of the small bowel. The spleen was removed and post-operative recovery was satisfactory. Histopathological examination of the spleen (removed at operation) and of tissue from a duodenal biopsy (taken postoperatively) showed large numbers of striations and outlines suggestive of crystal deposition. Mesenteric lymph node revealed a massive accumulation of crystals in cortical and medullary sinuses. The findings emphasize that clofazamine should not be used in high dosage over prolonged periods of time, except under close clinical and laboratory supervision, and for conditions not amenable to other drugs.
The efficacy of three mechanisms of defence against jejunal bacterial colonization (i.e. gastric acid, vagal and pyloric integrity and intestinal IgA) has been investigated. Only in subjects with disturbance of all three mechanisms did significant jejunal colonization occur, and this was invariably associated with severe diarrhoea. Clearly normal intestinal IgA is of critical importance in the prevention of jejunal bacterial colonization in the vagotomized subject.
With the object to strengthen the clinical status of tuberculous sarcoidosis, we present in this article, the case records published in internationally recognized journals by specialists. From review of clinical material, we have also formulated a table that defines diagnostic criteria of tuberculous sarcoidosis.
Purpose. To evaluate the role of the musculo-skeletal apparatus in patients with angina pectoris despite normal coronary angiograms. Design. A survey of patients and controls investigated by blinded observers. Setting. A tertiary cardiologic referral centre. Subjects. Thirty women and 18 men (mean age 52.9 years) with chest pain of an average duration of 3 years and 11 months were investigated. All had normal resting electrocardiograms. No patients showed evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy or valvular heart disease on echocardiography and all had a normal coronary angiogram. All had left ventricular ejection fraction >50%, and none had signs of coronary vasospasm. Eighteen healthy persons (10 women and eight men, mean age 51.2 years) served as controls.
Main outcome measures.The group frequency of chest wall complaints, spinal radiograph and physical examination findings; pressure pain thresholds. Results. The patients had significantly more complaints of pain from the neck, chest, and thoracic spine, and sensations and pain radiating to the arms than the controls. The patients had more degenerative findings on radiograph than the controls, mainly at levels C4-C7. Physical examination showed that abnormal findings were significantly more frequent in patients than in the control group in the anterior and posterior chest wall, in the spine at levels Th1-Th6 and in the muscles of the neck and shoulder girdle. There were no statistically significant differences in pain thresholds or in neurological examination. Conclusion. The musculo-skeletal abnormalities observed in the patients could include reflex mechanisms. Whether the abnormal findings are mainly responsible for the angina pectoris symptoms or merely epiphenomena warrants further study.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.