RESUMO
A 44-year-old immunosuppressed man developed initial symptoms of intermittent irritation of the left eye three months after cardiac transplantation. Symptoms increased, with decreased vision, photophobia, and lacrimation. Slit lamp examination showed slightly raised, swollen, grayish epithelium in a broad multibranching dendritic pattern associated with fine and medium punctate epithelial erosions that stained slightly with fluorescein. Histopathologic study of the corneal epithelial scraping demonstrated swollen epithelial cells with intranuclear and intracytoplasmic viral inclusions. Viral cultures manifested a cytopathic pattern characteristic of cytomegalovirus 14 days after inoculation on human embryonic lung cells (MRC-5). Pretransplantation cytomegalovirus IgM and IgG serologic titers were negative (less than 1:16 for IgG, no IgM noted) until the onset of symptoms. Subsequently, IgM titers rose against cytomegalovirus consistent with concurrent infection.
Assuntos
Infecções por Citomegalovirus/transmissão , Transplante de Coração/efeitos adversos , Ceratite/etiologia , Adulto , Anticorpos Antivirais/análise , Humanos , Imunoglobulina G/análise , Imunoglobulina M/análise , Terapia de Imunossupressão/efeitos adversos , Masculino , Complicações Pós-OperatóriasRESUMO
The Vitek AMS automated instrument method for identification of Enterobacteriaceae was compared with two rapid manual methods intended for the same purpose, the Micro ID System and the API 20E Same-Day procedure, on a series of 400 consecutive fresh clinical isolates. Results were compared with identifications obtained using the API 20E System with overnight incubation and supplemental tube biochemicals (when needed). Both the final (8-hour) and a manually requested, presumptive 5-hour result from the AMS were compared with the 4-hour results provided by the Micro ID and the 5-hour results provided by the API. The Micro ID system proved to be the most rapid and accurate of the three test systems by correctly identifying 96.8% (387/400) of isolates. The API 20E using 5-hour readings identified 90.7% (363/400) of isolates, although 96.8% (387/400) could be identified if supplemental overnight tests were employed to separate profile codes with "good likelihood, but low selectivity." The AMS correctly identified 88.8% (355/400) isolates after 5 hours, and 95.0% (380/400) following 8 hours incubation.