RESUMO
An examination of an adult male buried from the post-classical necropolis of La Selvicciola (Viterbo, Latium, Italy; 4th-6th centuries AD) revealed a series of skeletal lesions. The lesions, both proliferative and lytic, ranging in size from small (around 0.01 mm) to extensive (up to 16.00 mm) pits, occurred at multiple sites. A holistic approach assessed lesion type, frequency and location in a differential diagnosis, which included myeloma, metastatic carcinoma, tuberculosis, leukemia, osteomyelitis, and mycoses. It was concluded that a mycosis, specifically Cryptococcosis, was the most likely cause of these lesions. Both macroscopic analyses and X-ray scans support our diagnosis. We also provide a methodological scheme as a model for examining unknown lesion patterns.
Assuntos
Sepultamento/história , Criptococose/diagnóstico , Micoses/história , Adulto , Sepultamento/métodos , Criptococose/história , Diagnóstico Diferencial , História Antiga , Humanos , Itália , Leucemia/diagnóstico , Masculino , Mieloma Múltiplo/diagnóstico , Micoses/diagnóstico , Osteomielite/diagnóstico , Osteomielite/históriaRESUMO
La aspergilosis invasiva es una enfermedad infecciosa producida por un hongo del género Aspergillus. La infección se adquiere generalmente por vía respiratoria al inhalar las esporas que se encuentran en altas concentraciones en el aire, el suelo y sobre todo en la materia orgánica en descomposición. El diagnóstico es difícil realizarlo, por tanto el tratamiento muchas veces se instaura de manera tardía; una vez instaurada la infección el pronóstico es muy malo. Se presenta el caso de un paciente masculino de 9 años de edad, con desnutrición severa y pancitopenia, atendido en el Hospital Materno Infantil de Tegucigalpa, a quien en la autopsia se le demostró aspergilosis invasiva. No se encontró publicaciones locales sobre este tema...
Assuntos
Criança , Aspergillus/virologia , Aspergilose Broncopulmonar Alérgica , Aspergilose , Pneumopatias Fúngicas/complicações , Micoses/históriaRESUMO
This article describes the events leading to the discovery of the fumonisins in South Africa in 1988 and highlights the first 10 years (1988-1998) of fumonisin research. The predominant fungus isolated from moldy corn implicated in a field outbreak of equine leukoencephalomalacia (ELEM) in South Africa in 1970 was Fusarium verticillioides (F. moniliforme). This fungus was also prevalent in moldy home-grown corn consumed by people in high-incidence areas of esophageal cancer (EC) in the Transkei region of South Africa. Culture material on corn of F. verticillioides strain MRC 826, which was isolated from moldy corn in Transkei, was shown to cause ELEM in horses, porcine pulmonary edema (PPE) syndrome in pigs, and liver cancer in rats. A short-term cancer initiation/promotion assay in rat liver was used to purify the carcinogen(s) in the culture material. These efforts finally met with success when fumonisins B1 and B2 novel mycotoxins with cancer-promoting activity in rat liver, were isolated from culture material of F. verticillioides MRC 826 at the Programme on Mycotoxins and Experimental Carcinogenesis of the Medical Research Council in Tygerberg, South Africa. Following the elucidation of the chemical structure of the fumonisins, these carcinogenic mycotoxins were shown to occur naturally in moldy corn in Transkei. Shortly thereafter, high levels of fumonisins in the 1989 U.S. corn crop resulted in large-scale field outbreaks of ELEM and PPE in horses and pigs, respectively, in the United States. Subsequently the fumonisins were found to occur naturally in corn worldwide, including corn consumed as the staple diet by people at high risk for EC in Transkei and China. These findings, together with the fact that the fumonisins cause field outbreaks of mycotoxicoses in animals, are carcinogenic in rats, and disrupt sphingolipid metabolism, have resulted in much worldwide interest in these compounds during the first 10 years after the discovery of the fumonisins in 1988.