With increasing numbers of immune-compromised patients with malignancy, hematologic disease, and HIV, as well as those receiving immunosupressive drug regimens for the management of organ transplantation or autoimmune inflammatory conditions, the incidence of fungal infections has dramatically increased over recent years. Definitive diagnosis of pulmonary fungal infections has also been substantially assisted by the development of newer diagnostic methods and techniques, including the use of antigen detection, polymerase chain reaction, serologies, computed tomography and positron emission tomography scans, bronchoscopy, mediastinoscopy, and video-assisted thorascopic biopsy. At the same time, the introduction of new treatment modalities has significantly broadened options available to physicians who treat these conditions. While traditionally antifungal therapy was limited to the use of amphotericin B, flucytosine, and a handful of clinically available azole agents, current pharmacologic treatment options include potent new azole compounds with extended antifungal activity, lipid forms of amphotericin B, and newer antifungal drugs, including the echinocandins. In view of the changing treatment of pulmonary fungal infections, the American Thoracic Society convened a working group of experts in fungal infections to develop a concise clinical statement of current therapeutic options for those fungal infections of particular relevance to pulmonary and critical care practice. This document focuses on three primary areas of concern: the endemic mycoses, including histoplasmosis, sporotrichosis, blastomycosis, and coccidioidomycosis; fungal infections of special concern for immune-compromised and critically ill patients, including cryptococcosis, aspergillosis, candidiasis, and Pneumocystis pneumonia; and rare and emerging fungal infections.
Patients who undergo mechanical ventilation for severe asthma are at risk of developing diffuse muscle weakness because of acute myopathy. The relative importance of corticosteroids and neuromuscular paralysis in causing the myopathy is controversial, and it is uncertain whether the chemical structure of the drug used to induce paralysis influences the risk of myopathy. Using a retrospective cohort study design, we evaluated 107 consecutive episodes of mechanical ventilation for severe asthma to assess (1) the incidence of clinically significant weakness in patients treated with corticosteroids alone versus corticosteroids with neuromuscular paralysis, (2) the influence of the duration of paralysis on the incidence of muscle weakness, and (3) the relative risk of weakness in patients paralyzed with the nonsteroidal drug atracurium versus an aminosteroid paralytic agent (pancuronium, vecuronium). The use of corticosteroids and a neuromuscular blocking agent was associated with a much higher incidence of muscle weakness as compared with the use of corticosteroids alone (20 of 69 versus O of 38, p < 0.001). The 20 weak patients were paralyzed significantly longer than the 49 patients who received a neuromuscular blocking agent without subsequent weakness (3.4 +/- 2.4 versus 0.6 +/- 0.7 d, p < 0.001). Eighteen of the 20 weak patients had been paralyzed for more than 24 h. The incidence of weakness was not reduced when paralysis was achieved with atracurium as opposed to an aminosteroid neuromuscular blocking agent. In conclusion, corticosteroid-treated patients with severe asthma who undergo prolonged neuromuscular paralysis are at significant risk for the development of muscle weakness, and the risk of weakness is not reduced by use of atracurium.
The spread of tuberculosis in a neighborhood bar can be a major public health problem. The high rate of infection and disease among the contacts was unexpected and was not due to coinfection with the human immunodeficiency virus. Possible explanations include heavy alcohol use among the contacts, high infectivity of the index case, or both. Sputum cultures must be performed in tuberculin-positive contacts who have symptoms, even if the chest films are normal.
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