We examined frozen sections of frontal cortex, medulla, and dorsal root ganglia from a patient with small-cell lung cancer and paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis, involving the medulla and dorsal root ganglia, with a panel of antibodies reactive for IgG, IgM, C3, B cells, T cells, T cell subsets, macrophages, and class I and II (HLA-DR) major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens. We detected an antineuronal antibody (anti-Hu) in the serum and CSF of the patient and found deposits of IgG in the periphery of some neurons in dorsal root ganglia. The infiltrates were almost exclusively T cells with a predominance of CD8-positive cells. Neurons did not express class I or II MHC antigens. Satellite cells in the dorsal root ganglia from the patient and controls were HLA-DR-positive. These data indicate that CD8-positive T cells predominate in the inflammatory infiltrates of paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis. IgG deposits may be relevant in the damage of the sensory neurons.
High alcohol intake is the main risk factor for developing community-acquired pneumonia in middle-aged people. This situation also confers a worse prognosis in these patients, who should be treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics for a longer period.
We examined the prevalence of high ethanol intake, hypertension, and other risk factors for intracerebral hemorrhage in a case-control study of 24 young and middle-aged patients with intracerebral hemorrhage. We recorded ethanol consumption, history of hypertension, liver disease, cigarette smoking, and mild or severe coagulation disorder in each case of intracerebral hemorrhage and in 48 control patients matched by sex and age. In univariate matched analyses, the frequencies of high ethanol intake (/?=0.009), hypertension (p=0.05), and coagulation disorder (p=0.05) were higher in the cases than in the controls. After controlling for possible confounding factors, we found that high ethanol intake and hypertension were the only independent risk factors for intracerebral hemorrhage (p=0.02 and/7=0.05, respectively). The hemorrhagic lesion found in cases with a high ethanol intake tended to be located in the cerebral lobes (p=0.0l), contrasting with the typical basal ganglia location of hypertensive hematomas (p=0.009). We conclude that chronic, high ethanol intake should be considered as an important risk factor for lobar hematomas in young and middle-aged people. (Stroke 1990;21:1529-1532)
Background-Oesophageal motor abnormalities have been reported in alcoholism. Aim-To investigate the effects of chronic alcoholism and its withdrawal on oesophageal disease. Patients-23 chronic alcoholic patients (20 men and three women; mean age 43, range 23 to 54). Methods-Endoscopy, manometry, and 24 hour pH monitoring 7-10 days and six months after ethanol withdrawal. Tests for autonomic and peripheral neuropathy were also performed. Motility and pH tracings were compared with those of age and sex matched control groups: healthy volunteers, nutcracker oesophagus, and gastro-oesophageal reflux disease. Results-14 (61%) alcoholic patients had reflux symptoms, and endoscopy with biopsy showed oesophageal inflammation in 10 patients. One patient had an asymptomatic squamous cell carcinoma. Oesophageal motility studies in the alcoholic patients showed that peristaltic amplitude in the middle third was >150 mm Hg (95th percentile (P95) of healthy controls) in 13 (57%), the ratio lower/ middle amplitude was <0 9 in 15 (65%) (>0.9 in all control groups), and the lower oesophageal sphincter was hypertensive (>23.4 mm Hg, P95 ofhealthy controls) in 13 (57%). All three abnormalities were present in five (22%). Abnormal reflux (per cent reflux time >2.9, P95 of healthy controls) was shown in 12 (52%) alcoholic patients, and was unrelated to peristaltic dysfunction. Subclinical neuropathy in 10 patients did not effect oesophageal abnormalities. Oesophageal motility abnormalities persisted at six months in six patients with ongoing alcoholism, whereas they reverted towards normal in 13 who remained abstinent; reflux, however, was unaffected.Conclusions-Oesophageal peristaltic dysfunction and reflux are frequent in alcoholism. High amplitude contractions in the middle third of the oesophagus seem to be a marker of excessive alcohol consumption, and tend to improve with abstinence. (Gut 1996; 38: 655-662)
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