Actinomycosis is a suppurative infection usually due to a facultative anaerobic bacteria, actinomyces israelii. This rare infection has been reported in immunocompetent individuals, with buccal or pharyngeal mucosal erosions. Paradoxically, few cases have been observed after solid organ transplantation: 2 cases after lung, 1 case after heart-lung transplantation and 1 case after renal transplantation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Despite the long history of use of antithymocyte globulins (ATG) in renal transplantation, ideal doses and duration of ATG administration based on the monitoring of T lymphocytes have yet to be defined.
Methods: Two immunosuppressive regimens based on low dose rabbit ATG (thymoglobuline, Imtix-Sangstat, Lyon-France) were assessed during the first year post-transplant: daily ATG (n = 32) where 50 mg of ATG were given every day and intermittent ATG (n = 24) where similar doses of ATG were given for the first three days and then intermittently only if CD3+T lymphocytes (measured by flow cytometry) were > 10/mm3. Both groups received steroids, azathioprine and cyclosporin A (CsA).
The role of cholecystokinin (CCK) in the regulation of gastric emptying of physiological meals containing solids and liquids in humans remains controversial. We studied the role of endogenous CCK in the emptying of a solid/liquid meal administering the new, highly specific and potent CCK-A receptor antagonist lintitript. Gastric emptying was assessed in nine healthy male volunteers using a randomized, double blind, two-period crossover design with oral lintitript (15 mg 1 h prior to meal intake) or placebo on two different days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a deterministic model of the dynamics of two microparasites simultaneously infecting a single host population. Both microparasites are feline retroviruses, namely Feline Immunodeficiency Virus (FIV) and Feline Leukaemia Virus (FeLV). The host is the domestic cat Felis catus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF