Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine
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Arch. Pathol. Lab. Med. · Jun 2004
Case ReportsFatal hemorrhagic pneumonia concomitant with Chlamydia pneumoniae and parainfluenza virus 4 infection.
Cases of fatal hemorrhagic pneumonia need to be investigated for highly contagious viral causes. While not all hemorrhagic pneumonias are caused by very contagious agents, the etiology must be correctly determined in order to administer appropriate patient care. ⋯ A mixed (polymicrobial) infection contributed to the patient's death. Hemorrhage was likely a result of anticoagulation therapy superimposed on lung tissues damaged by pneumonia. The uncommon nature of this case and the pathogens involved underscore the challenges in infection control and clinical evaluation that hospitals will face when confronted with possibly new and potentially deadly communicable diseases.
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Arch. Pathol. Lab. Med. · Jun 2004
Comparative StudyComparative assays for the HER-2/neu oncogene status in breast cancer.
Tumor marker assays, especially those used to indicate the right therapy, should be standardized. ⋯ The HercepTest and Pathway IHC assay h2n were fully concordant for the 3+ cases. The 3+ cases had to be confirmed in 75% of the tumor area examined. These 2 IHC assays were fully concordant with FISH and CISH. The 2 in situ hybridization (ISH) assays were 94% concordant for the 50 cases. The cutoff signal points for both ISH assays should be 6 or more. Thus, there is no need for the c17 ratio correction. Tumor heterogeneity appears not be a major problem, but our percentage of amplified cases is lower than previously reported. The FDA-approved IHC and ISH assays should give relatively uniform results when used following our recommendations.
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Arch. Pathol. Lab. Med. · Feb 2004
Analysis of deaths during the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic in Singapore: challenges in determining a SARS diagnosis.
An outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), an infectious disease attributed to a novel coronavirus, occurred in Singapore during the first quarter of 2003 and led to 204 patients with diagnosed illnesses and 26 deaths by May 2, 2003. Twenty-one percent of these patients required admission to the medical intensive care unit. During this period, the Center for Forensic Medicine, Health Sciences Authority, Singapore, performed a total of 14 postmortem examinations for probable and suspected SARS. Of these, a total of 8 were later confirmed as SARS infections. ⋯ It is unfortunate that the term atypical pneumonia has been used in conjunction with SARS. Although nonspecific by itself, the term does not accurately reflect the underlying dangers of viral pneumonia, which may progress rapidly to acute respiratory distress syndrome. We observed that the clinical spectrum of disease as seen in our autopsy series included sudden deaths. This is a worrisome finding that illustrates that viral diseases will have a spectrum of clinical presentations and that the diagnoses made for such patients must incorporate laboratory as well as clinical data.