1.Studies on the Mycobacteria Isolated from Soil.
Yonsei Medical Journal 1981;22(1):1-20
Acid-fast microorganisms were isolated from 240 soil samples collected at two areas, Hiroshima, Japan and Seoul, Korea. The biological and biochemical characteristics of the isolated mycobacteria were tested and compared with those of 36 reference mycobacteria Strains. The isolation rate and distribution of these mycobacterial species from soil were compared using three kinds of media with emphasis on the two methods of isolation between the different geographical areas. One Strain from each of the 10 species among atypical mycobacteria isolated from soil in both areas was inoculated into ddY mice and the pathogenicity compared with that of Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv up to 6 weeks. Susceptibility of the reisolated acid-fast bacilli to antimycobacterial agents was tested in vitro. Antibody responses against various mycobacterial antigens were tested using lepromatous type and tuberculoid type patient sera by the agar gel immunodiffusion. 1) No significant differences in the distribution of acid-fast bacilli were observed between soil samples from the two regions. 2) Rapid growers were by far the most frequent acid-fast bacilli isolated while no photochromogens were isolated from these soil samples. In addition, a minimal number of fastidious mycobacteria were isolated but not cultivable in subcultures. 3) Some of these soil acid-fast bacilli were capable of inducing only transient bacteriological and pathologic changes in mouse organs. 4) Acid-fast bacilli reisolated from organs of these infected mice were, in general, found to be resistant to antimycobacterial agents. 5) M. scrofulaceum antigen showed a precipitation reaction in agar gel immunodiffusion with the highest number of sera from leprosy patients.
Animal
;
Leprosy/immunology
;
Mice
;
Mycobacteria, Atypical/drug effects
;
Mycobacteria, Atypical/isolation & purification*
;
Mycobacteria, Atypical/pathogenicity
;
Mycobacterium/isolation & purification*
;
Mycobacterium Infections/pathology
;
Soil Microbiology*
2.Sequential Bilateral Lung Resection in a Patient with Mycobacterium Abscessus Lung Disease Refractory to Medical Treatment.
Seung Heon LEE ; Joo Won MIN ; Sang Won UM ; Seon Sook HAN ; Sung Koo HAN ; Young Soo SHIM ; Jae Joon YIM
Yonsei Medical Journal 2010;51(1):141-144
Mycobacterium abscessus (M. abscessus) is the second most common nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) in South Korea. Nevertheless, the diagnosis and treatment of M. abscessus lung disease can be problematic. Surgical resection has been tried for patients with localized M. abscessus lung disease refractory to medical treatment. Here, we report on a 25-year-old woman with M. abscessus lung disease who had been diagnosed and treated three times for pulmonary tuberculosis. She was initially diagnosed as having M. intracellulare lung disease; however, M. abscessus was isolated after several months of medication. She had multiple bronchiectatic and cavitary lesions bilaterally, and M. abscessus was repeatedly isolated from her sputa despite prolonged treatment with clarithromycin, ethambutol, moxifloxacin, and amikacin. She improved only after sequential bilateral lung resection. Based on the experience with this patient, we suggest that, if medical treatment fails, surgical resection of a diseased lung should be considered even in patients with bilateral lesions.
Adult
;
Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology/*therapeutic use
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Lung Diseases/*drug therapy/*microbiology/surgery
;
Mycobacteria, Atypical/drug effects/*physiology
3.Clonal Dissemination of Extended-Spectrum beta-Lactamase (ESBL)-Producing Klebsiella pneumoniae Isolates in a Korean Hospital.
Kwan Soo KO ; Joon Sup YEOM ; Mi Young LEE ; Kyong Ran PECK ; Jae Hoon SONG
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2008;23(1):53-60
In this study, we investigated the molecular characteristics of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates that were recovered from an outbreak in a Korean hospital. A new multilocus sequence typing (MLST) scheme for K. pneumoniae based on five housekeeping genes was developed and was evaluated for 43 ESBL-producing isolates from an outbreak as well as 38 surveillance isolates from Korea and also a reference strain. Overall, a total of 37 sequence types (STs) and six clonal complexes (CCs) were identified among the 82 K. pneumoniae isolates. The result of MLST analysis was concordant with that of pulsedfield gel electrophoresis. Most of the outbreak isolates belonged to a certain clone (ST2), and they produced SHV-1 and CTX-M14 enzymes, which was a different feature from that of the K. pneumoniae isolates from other Korean hospitals (ST20 and SHV-12). We also found a different distribution of CCs between ESBL-producing and -nonproducing K. pneumoniae isolates. The MLST method we developed in this study could provide unambiguous and well-resolved data for the epidemiologic study of K. pneumoniae. The outbreak isolates showed different molecular characteristics from the other K. pneumoniae isolates from other Korean hospitals.
Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field
;
Hospitals
;
Humans
;
Klebsiella pneumoniae/*classification/enzymology/genetics/isolation & purification
;
Sequence Analysis, DNA
;
beta-Lactamases/*biosynthesis
;
Mycobacteria, Atypical/*drug effects/genetics/isolation & purification