Cases reported "Agammaglobulinemia"

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1/49. A case of intra-abdominal multiple lymphangiomas in an adult in whom the immunological evaluation supported the diagnosis.

    A 60-year-old patient with intra-abdominal lymphangiomatosis is described. He presented with anaemia due to enteric haemorrhage, hypoproteinaemia with heavy hypogammaglobulinaemia and T-cell lymphopenia. Duodenal biopsy showed lymphangiectasia while a small bowel study revealed several filling defects in the terminal ileum. On exploratory laparotomy, numerous inoperable lymphangio-haemangiomata were found, involving the small and large intestine, appendix, mesenterium, gallbladder and main biliary tract. The importance of T-cell lymphopenia and hypogammaglobulinaemia in the diagnosis of intra-abdominal lymphangiomatosis with lymphangiectasia is stressed.
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2/49. diagnosis of ataxia telangiectasia with the glycophorin A somatic mutation assay.

    There are no widely applied definitive laboratory tests for the diagnosis of ataxia telangiectasia (AT). We, and others, have previously reported significantly elevated levels of in vivo somatic mutation in blood samples from known AT patients, observations that might form the basis for a useful prospective laboratory test for confirmation of a clinical diagnosis of AT. In the present case, a 4 1/2-year-old black female was suspected of having AT based on ataxic gait and chronic upper respiratory infections. blood work-up showed low IgG2 and elevated alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), consistent with the AT phenotype. Her peripheral blood karyotype was normal, however, with no spontaneous breakage observed among 100 solid stained metaphases. lymphocytes from AT patients often show elevated levels of chromosome rearrangement, especially at sites of immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor genes. Therefore, a blood sample was analyzed with the glycophorin A (GPA) in vivo somatic mutation assay. The GPA assay detects and quantifies the phenotypically variant erythrocytes resulting from loss of heterozygosity for the MN blood group. The patient had a 10-fold increased frequency of variant erythrocytes with a phenotype consistent with simple loss of the N allele, which is characteristic of AT. In addition, the variant cell distribution for this patient showed three other, more qualitative hallmarks of AT: a normal frequency of allele loss and duplication events, a unique ridge of cells of intermediate phenotype between the normal and mutant peaks, and evidence of similar ongoing mutational loss of the M allele. Together with clinical data, these distinctive qualitative and quantitative features of the GPA assay allow for a diagnosis of AT with a projected accuracy of 95%. Therefore, we suggest that the GPA assay, which can be performed on < 1 ml of blood and completed in less than a day, be considered as a confirmatory laboratory test for a clinical diagnosis of AT.
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3/49. Acute tubulointerstitial nephritis following intravenous immunoglobulin therapy in a male infant with minimal-change nephrotic syndrome.

    A boy aged 4 years with nephrotic syndrome (NS) was referred to our hospital because of the third relapse of NS. Hypogammaglobulinemia associated with massive proteinuria was observed at the presentation. Residual urinary tract infection required intravenous piperacillin and immunoglobulin therapy (IVIG). Soon after IVIG, he complained of high fever with chills, bilateral knee joint pain, dry cough and chest discomfort. Although he did not develop renal insufficiency, a transient increase in the urinary beta2-microglobulin and decrease in the serum complement hemolytic activity were observed. These clinical manifestations spontaneously ceased. A percutaneous renal biopsy for his NS performed 19 days after the episode of allergic reaction revealed tubulointerstitial nephritis (TIN) with marked eosinophil infiltrates. Glomeruli showed minor glomerular abnormalities. Renal complications associated with IVIG treatment have been reported to date, however, acute TIN has rarely been seen.
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ranking = 82.963602443755
keywords = tract infection, tract
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4/49. zinc therapy of depressed cellular immunity in acrodermatitis enteropathica. Its correction.

    A child with hypogammaglobulinemia and intractable diarrhea underwent parenteral alimentation for five months. A clinical syndrome of acrodermatitis enteropathica subsequently developed associated with a depression in thymus-dependent lymphocyte (T cell) numbers, abnormal T-cell mitogen-induced blast transformation, and anergy to skin test antigens. Plasma zinc levels were found to be abnormally low. zinc therapy resulted in dramatic resolution of the clinical manifestations of acrodermatitis enteropathica. Cell-mediated immune function was also restored to normal, suggesting an important role for zinc and possibly other trace metals in cellular immune responses.
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5/49. Infections in patients with immunodeficiency with thymoma (Good syndrome). Report of 5 cases and review of the literature.

    Immunodeficiency with thymoma (Good syndrome, GS) is a rare, adult-onset condition that is characterized by thymoma, hypogammaglobulinemia, and low numbers of peripheral B cells. CD4 T lymphopenia and an inverted CD4:CD8 T-cell ratio may be present. Here we report 5 patients with GS and infectious complications who were seen at 3 institutions between 1983 and 1999. Three patients had recurrent sinopulmonary infections, 3 had severe cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease, and 1 had pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. review of the literature identified 46 other reports of infections in GS patients. The infections reported in all 51 patients included recurrent sinopulmonary infection (19 cases with documented respiratory pathogens), generally with encapsulated bacteria, most often haemophilus influenzae (11 cases); CMV disease (5 cases); bacteremia (7 cases); oral or esophageal candidiasis (6 cases); persistent mucocutaneous candidiasis (5 cases); chronic diarrhea (5 cases with documented stool pathogens); urinary tract infections (4 cases); P. carinii pneumonia (3 cases); tuberculosis (2 cases); Kaposi sarcoma (1 case); disseminated varicella (1 case); candidemia (1 case); wound infection with clostridium perfringens (1 case); mycoplasma arthritis (1 case); and other infections. patients with GS present with a spectrum of sinopulmonary infections and pathogens similar to common variable immunodeficiency (CVID). Compared with patients with CVID, opportunistic infections, including severe CMV disease, P. carinii pneumonia, and mucocutaneous candidiasis, appear to be more common in patients with GS, and patients with GS may have a worse prognosis. GS should be ruled out in patients with thymoma or CVID who develop severe, especially opportunistic, infections. Treatment with intravenous immune globulin is recommended for all patients with GS.
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6/49. survival of wild polio by a patient with XLA.

    BACKGROUND: X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) is a primary immunodeficiency characterized by failure of B-cell differentiation and hypogammaglobulinemia. In addition to being susceptible to bacterial infections, patients with XLA are also susceptible to enteroviruses. Systemic enterocytopathogenic human orphan virus (ECHO), coxsackie virus, and vaccine-related polio infections have caused severe morbidity and high mortality rates in XLA patients. OBJECTIVE: We report a 54-year-old male with molecularly defined XLA who survived wild poliomyelitis in childhood before the diagnosis of XLA. methods: At age 5, in 1951, the patient contracted wild polio, characterized by diarrhea and motor weakness. He subsequently developed recurrent sinusitis, bronchitis, and pneumonia, and at age 31 was found to be hypogammaglobulinemic and was started on immunoglobulin replacement. Laboratory evaluation at age 47 revealed an immunoglobulin g of 256 mg/dL, and B-cells (CD19) of 0.1%. mutation analysis of Bruton's tyrosine kinase revealed a 26-basepair deletion between nucleotides 146 and 173 within the plextrin homology domain, resulting in a frameshift and premature termination. CONCLUSIONS: Resolution of wild poliovirus infection is possible in patients with XLA.
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7/49. Rapidly fatal acute bacterial myocarditis in a nonneutropenic child with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in remission.

    The authors report a fatal case of acute bacterial myocarditis in a nonneutropenic child with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. She was admitted to the hospital with a urinary tract infection resulting from and remained persistently febrile despite resolution of the infection. On hospital day 4 signs of acute cardiac failure developed. Despite aggressive resuscitation measures, she died. Pathologic examination revealed the cause of death to be bacterial myocarditis. In addition, she was found to have a generalized decrease in her serum immunoglobulin levels. Acute bacterial myocarditis in patients with malignancy has been rarely reported. The rapid clinical deterioration and death in the patient in this report is particularly interesting.
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8/49. von Recklinghausen disease in a patient with X-linked agammaglobulinemia.

    A 33-year-old man was referred to our hospital because of intractable cellulitis in his left lower leg. He was diagnosed with agammaglobulinemia at the age of 6 years and had been receiving gamma-globulin supplementation since then. Laboratory examination revealed a markedly reduced number of B cells, decreased protein amount of Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) in monocytes, and a single base substitution of C994-->T(missense mutation of Arg288-->Trp) in BTK gene, confirming the diagnosis of X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA). The patient also had characteristic features of von Recklinghausen disease, such as numerous subcutaneous nodules, cafe-au-lait spots, Lisch nodules in the iris and spinal scoliosis. biopsy of a subcutaneous nodule confirmed a neurofibroma. Although the influence of XLA on the development of von Recklinghausen disease is unknown for the moment, this is, to our knowledge, the first report of a patient with XLA who also developed von Recklinghausen disease.
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9/49. A concurrent occurrence of cutis laxa, dandy-walker syndrome and immunodeficiency in a girl.

    We report on a 17-y-old girl with inherited cutis laxa, immunodeficiency and dandy-walker syndrome. Immunodeficiency manifested itself by decreased and fluctuating levels of IgG, IgA and IgM and intermittent leucopenia causing increased susceptibility to respiratory tract infections. dandy-walker syndrome (agenesis of the cerebellar vermis with a large posterior fossa cyst communicating with an enlarged 4th ventricle) was shown on a CT scan but with the exception of macrocrania, no typical signs or symptoms were observed at the age of 17. Loose hyperextensible skin with pendulous skinfolds as a manifestation of cutis laxa was observed from birth. Anomalies of the right pulmonary artery, abnormal branching of the left arteria subclavia (arteria lusoria) from the left aortic arch and bicuspidal aortic valve were also present. CONCLUSION: The combination of the rare disorders cutis laxa, dandy-walker syndrome and immunodeficiency is reported here for the first time.
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ranking = 1728.8768101062
keywords = respiratory tract infection, respiratory tract, tract infection, tract
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10/49. A 55-year-old man with hypogammaglobulinemia, lymphopenia, and unrelenting cutaneous warts.

    A 55-year-old white man with a history of hypertension, fibromyalgia, and colonic polyps presented with unrelenting plantar warts on his hands and feet for the past 4 years. He was otherwise healthy and without a history of recurrent infections. physical examination was unremarkable except for extensive warts on his hands and feet. Pertinent laboratory findings included hypoalbuminemia, hypogammaglobulinemia, and lymphopenia most severely affecting CD4( ) T cells. Testing for hiv infection was negative. This clinical and laboratory presentation suggested a combined humoral and cellular immunodeficiency syndrome that could be best explained by loss of lymphocytes, immunoglobulins, and other serum proteins. Additional immunologic testing revealed a marked reduction in peripheral blood naive (CD4( )CD45RA( )) T cells. A 24-hour stool collection showed a markedly elevated alpha(1)-antitrypsin level. These findings were most consistent with the diagnosis of intestinal lymphangiectasia, a type of protein-losing enteropathy associated with hypoalbuminemia, hypogammaglobulinemia, and lymphopenia, characterized by a preferential loss of naive CD4( ) T cells into the gastrointestinal tract. This case illustrates the importance of considering intestinal loss of immunoglobulins and lymphocytes in the differential diagnosis of the adult patient who presents with laboratory evidence of a combined humoral and cellular immunodeficiency. It also underscores the diagnostic utility of the clinical immunology laboratory and how flow cytometry, in particular, can contribute to an understanding of pathogenic mechanisms.
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