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Cat-scratch disease osteomyelitis

Skeletal Radiology, 2003
We report on a patient who presented with osteomyelitis of a rib and adjacent abscess as a rare and atypical manifestation of cat-scratch disease. Radiographic findings showed an osteolytic lesion with adjacent mass. Biopsy, serology and polymerase chain reaction technique are essential for the final diagnosis. Prognosis is excellent with full recovery.
S, Heye   +3 more
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Parinaud's Oculoglandular Syndrome in Cat Scratch Disease.

New England Journal of Medicine, 2018
Parinaud’s Oculoglandular Syndrome in Cat Scratch Disease A 5-year-old girl who frequently played with a cat presented with an eyelid papule and preauricular and submandibular masses on the left side of her face.
Catalina Arango-Ferreira, J. Castaño
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Multifocal pelvic osteomyelitis in a child associated with cat-scratch disease: a case report and review of the literature

Paediatrics and International Child Health, 2018
Bone infections in cat-scratch disease (CSD) are uncommon and the diagnosis can be missed. A 3-year-old boy with multifocal pelvic osteomyelitis caused by Bartonella henselae is reported. Serological tests were negative but DNA was detected by polymerase
K. Zellali   +7 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Familial cat-scratch disease

The American Journal of Surgery, 1966
Summary A presentation is given of familial cat-scratch disease almost identically involving the husband and wife but not the two children. While several cats were present in the home, no known trauma from cats was recalled. Skin-test antigen was unavailable.
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Oculoglandular Cat-Scratch Disease

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1960
Cat-scratch disease, first described by Debre1and Foshay,2is a disease of unknown etiology, characterized by frequent history of a cat scratch, a local granulomatous lesion, and regional lymphadenopathy which sometimes progresses to suppuration. No bacteria have been isolated, from either the cats or the afflicted persons. Mollaret3was able to transmit
G, VAN LEEUWEN, C E, BROOKE
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Cat-Scratch Disease

A.M.A. Archives of Dermatology, 1959
History In 1932, alert to the repeatedly recurring history of cat scratch in patients whose clinical diagnosis of tularemia could not be confirmed by specific agglutination, Lee Foshay, a microbiologist of Cincinnati, sorted out a group of cases and called them cat-scratch fever.
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Diagnosis of Cat-Scratch Disease

Pediatrics, 1985
To the Editor.— Cat-scratch disease remains the most common cause of single-node lymphadenopathy among young people except that caused by obvious signs of infection such as skin lesions and infections of the mouth and throat.1 The discovery of a Gram-negative organism, not stainable with routinely used stains, in sections from the ...
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Cat-scratch Disease Therapy

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1989
Sir.—Since my original experience1with cat-scratch disease, I have remained interested in it and impressed with its stubborn resistance to therapy. During the last 3 months I have treated 11 children (Table) for catscratch disease with 20 mg/kg of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole twice daily for 7 days, and all 11 have shown prompt improvement.
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Treatment of cat-scratch disease

Current Opinion in Pediatrics, 2001
Cat-scratch disease is an infection caused by Bartonella henselae, a fastidious gram-negative bacillus acquired from exposure to an infected kitten or cat. The most common manifestation of human disease is lymphadenitis. Atypical forms of infection include Parinaud oculoglandular syndrome, stellate neuroretinitis, persistent fever without localizing ...
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Cat-scratch Disease Update

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1984
The article by Carithers, "Cat-scratch Disease Associated With an Osteolytic Lesion," 1 serves to remind us of the diverse presentations of cat-scratch disease (CSD), such as encephalitis, osteomyelitis, thrombocytopenic purpura, and/or the oculoglandular syndrome of Parinaud.
openaire   +2 more sources

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