Abstract Objectives: In children with severe physical and mental disabilities who repeatedly develop aspiration pneumonia due to intractable aspiration, laryngotracheal separation/tracheoesophageal anastomosis or laryngotracheal separation has been performed in many institutions for the prevention of aspiration, and good results have been reported. However, families sometimes show a marked reluctance to give consent to these surgical techniques because of tracheal transection. A purpose of this study is to evaluate a new surgical procedure for laryngotracheal separation without tracheal transection. Study Design: Case‐series study. Methods: As a new, simple, less invasive surgical technique for the prevention of aspiration without tracheal transection, we performed tracheal closure (tracheal flap method) in six children. A U‐shaped flap of the tracheal anterior wall from the 2nd to the 4th/5th tracheal ring was produced, bent toward the tracheal lumen, and sutured to the tracheal posterior/lateral walls by mattress stitches for tracheal closure. In addition, the closure was covered with a cutaneous U‐shaped flap for reinforcement and a permanent tracheal stoma was constructed. Results: In all six patients, aspiration pneumonia could be prevented without severe complications. Conclusions: Tracheal closure (tracheal flap method) has effects comparable to those of other surgical techniques for the prevention of aspiration, and may be useful for aspiration prevention in children with severe physical and mental disabilities.
We report an extremely rare case of primary small cell carcinoma of the oropharynx.A 74-year-old male patient complaining of massive cervical tumor had a small uvular lesion. A biopsy of the uvular tumor and immunohistochemical analysis led to a histological diagnosis of small cell carcinoma. We diagnosed primary small cell carcinoma of the oropharynx and metastasis to the cervical lymph nodes since he had no chest lesion. He was treated with radiation therapy, because chemotherapy could not be used due to his bad general condition and several severe complications. Eventually, the patient died due to sepsis from a decubitus ulcer, in spite of the satisfactory clinical effect of the radiation therapy on the oropharyngeal primary lesion and the cervical tumor.Small cell carcinoma is a special neoplasm both pathologically and clinically. We should create a protocol for the treatment of laryngopharyngeal small cell carcinoma as a systemic disease.
The protective efficacies of vaccines prepared from Pseudomonas aeruginosa alkaline protease, elastase and exotoxin A toxoids against gut-derived P. aeruginosa sepsis in mice were evaluated. Specific pathogen-free mice given P. aeruginosa strain D4 orally followed by cyclophosphamide (to promote translocation across the gut wall) died of bacteraemia. Mice immunised with one of the three individual toxoid vaccines were not significantly protected when compared to control mice immunised with bovine serum albumin. Combined immunisation with alkaline protease and elastase toxoids likewise showed no significant protective activity. However, combined immunisation with alkaline protease and exotoxin A toxoids significantly increased the survival rate, which reached 60% (compared with a 7.1% survival rate in the control group). These results show that alkaline protease and exotoxin A play important roles as pathogenic factors in gut-derived sepsis and that a combination of the two exoenzyme toxoids represents a logical candidate for vaccination against P. aeruginosa sepsis.
We have characterized clinical and diagnostic features in 18 cases of Legionella pneumonia. Age average of patients was 62.0 years old (male: female= 14: 4) and underlying diseases were observed in 12 patients. Legionella pneumonia were diagnosed in 3, 5, 8 and 9 cases by culture, serum antibody measurement, urinary antigen detection and PCR, respectively. Sixteen cases were caused by L. pneumophila, while the other 2 cases were L. bozemanii pneumonia and L. pneumophila or L. dumoffii pneumonia. Chest X-rays of those patients showed multiple pneumonia shadows in 14 cases, alveolar shadows in 10 cases, pleural effusion in 5 cases. Blood-gas analysis on admission indicated hypoxemia in all cases with abnormal A-a D02. Laboratory findings showed abnormal data in WBC, CRP, LDH, CPK and liver function tests (ex. GOT, GPT) in most cases. Serum antibody testing showed positive by 5 weeks after onset of pneumonia, but 10 cases of Legionella pneumonia diagnosed by other techniques were judged to be negative. In urinary antigen detection test, 6 and 2 cases showed positive 1 and 4 weeks after onset of pneumonia, respectively. Macrolide antibiotics were administered in all cases during the episode, but delay of macrolide administration was observed in 3 of 4 cases of dead outcome. Serum antibody measurement, urinary antigen detection and PCR, in addition to culture of bacteria, may be required for exact diagnosis of Legionella infection.
Tinea pedis and tinea unguium are common infectious diseases, and many elderly people are reported to contract these infections. In this study, to investigate whether strains of the same origin are spreading inside a long-term care facility, we analyzed Trichophyton rubrum and Trichophyton mentagrophytes, isolated from the residents and staff at the facilities located in the Kanto area, using a genomic analytical method targeting tandem repeat regions in the nontranscribed spacer (NTS) region of ribosomal DNA. Five NTS types were confirmed in T. rubrum. T. rubrum of various types (types 1 to 5) was detected at each facility, but there was no isolate specific to one facility only. Eight NTS types of T. mentagrophytes were detected, and T. mentagrophytes that carried an NTS type that was confirmed at one facility only (types C4II, F4II, and D4II) was isolated. These T. mentagrophytes sequence types were isolated from several subjects residing at the same facility. This study proved that a T. mentagrophytes strain of the same type had spread in long-term care facilities. We believe in the importance of cleaning at a long-term care facility as a countermeasure to the spread of Trichophyton species.