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1.
J Mycol Med ; 30(4): 101043, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32948435

ABSTRACT

Candida tropicalis is an emerging fungal pathogen associated with high mortality. We aimed to compare adherence capability of C. tropicalis to polystyrene and epithelial cell lines (HeLa and Vero), and determine whether adherent blastoconidia is cell-type specific. Blastoconidia adhesion to epithelial cells and polystyrene were determined by crystal violet assay. The percentage of epithelial cells with adhered blastoconidia and the number of adhered blastoconidia per cell line were determined by light microscopy. The correlation between adhesion surfaces was assessed by Pearson's correlation coefficient. The adhesiveness of C. tropicalis to polystyrene was greater than that observed for ephitelial cells. High correlation values (r2 0.9999222, p 0.007941) were found for the adhesion capability between biotic and polystyrene surface for isolates 100.10 (obtained from blood) and 335.07 (obtained from tracheal secretion). The number of adherent blastoconidia per HeLa cell was greater in comparison to that observed for Vero cells (P<0.05). Further, high correlation (r2 1, p 0.0001) was found for the adhesion ability between HeLa cells and Vero cells. The results suggest a correlation of C. tropicalis adhesion capability among different surfaces, and that the adhesion to epithelial cells is specific to the cell type.


Subject(s)
Candida tropicalis/physiology , Cell Adhesion/physiology , Epithelial Cells/microbiology , Polystyrenes , Animals , Candida tropicalis/isolation & purification , Candida tropicalis/pathogenicity , Candida tropicalis/ultrastructure , Chlorocebus aethiops , Epithelial Cells/ultrastructure , HeLa Cells , Humans , Microscopy, Confocal , Polystyrenes/chemistry , Surface Properties , Vero Cells
2.
Minerva Anestesiol ; 66(4): 201-6, 2000 Apr.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10832269

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: It is a current opinion that local anesthesia (LA) is the primary choice in surgical treatment of the inguinal region, particularly herniorrhaphy. The LA technique personally used for herniorrhaphy is described: it consists of iliohypogastric, ilioinguinal and genito-femoral nerve blocks, and incision line anesthetic infiltration. METHODS: From January 1998 to April 1999, 95 patients underwent inguinal herniorrhaphy employing LA: 77 (81%) in elective surgery, 18 (19%) in emergency; 2 cases with bilateral hernia (97 total LA procedures). RESULTS: Partial success was obtained in only 8 cases (8.4%), which required an association with a hypnotic drug ("blended anesthesia": propofol or midazolam): there were no cases of conversion to general anesthesia. Specific complications of local anesthetic drugs infiltration developed in 8 cases on 97 LA procedures (8.2%), but none required reoperation: 6 inguinal hematomas, 1 female external genitalia hematoma, 1 hematocele. CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, it is stressed that LA is the technique of choice in herniorrhaphy and surgery of other inguinal pathologies, associating high success rates, rare complications and rapid dismissal: this allows for easy management of the patients and a very important reduction of sanitary costs. The association of LA-hypnotic drugs (blended anesthesia) represents another important resource, since it avoids general anesthesia in many cases and allows a rapid psychophysical recovery.


Subject(s)
Anesthesia, Local , Hernia, Inguinal/surgery , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Anesthesia, Local/methods , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
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