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Mycobacterium haemophilum Masquerading as Leprosy in a Renal Transplant Patient

Copeland, Nathanial K; Arora, Navin S; Ferguson, Tomas M
Opportunistic infections following immunosuppression in solid organ transplant (SOT) patients are common complications with the skin being a common sight of infection. Nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) are rare but potential causes of skin infection in SOT patients. We present a case of an adult male immunosuppressed following renal transplantation who presented with an asymptomatic rash for several months. The patient's skin eruption consisted of erythematous papules and plaques coalescing into an annular formation. After failure of the initial empiric therapy, a punch biopsy was performed that demonstrated nerve involvement suspicious for Mycobacterium leprae. However, culture of the biopsy specimen grew acid-fast bacilli that were subsequently identified as M. haemophilum. His rash improved after a prolonged course of clarithromycin and ciprofloxacin. Both organisms are potential causes of opportunistic skin infections and can be difficult to distinguish with similar predilection for skin and other biochemical and genetic similarities. Ultimately they can be distinguished with culture as M. haemophilum will grow in culture and M. leprae will not. This case was unique due to nerve involvement on biopsy which is classically seen on biopsies of leprosy.
PMCID:3863494
PMID: 24369511
ISSN: 2090-6463
CID: 3688182

Conventional, emerging, heredity, lifestyle, and psychosocial coronary risk factors: relationships to subclinical atherosclerosis

Taylor, Allen J; Arora, Navin S; Bindeman, Jody; Bhattari, Saroj; Feuerstein, Irwin M; O'malley, Patrick G
The authors examined the relationship between calcified coronary atherosclerosis and an array of cardiovascular risk factors in sequential logistic models to determine the extent to which these markers overlap in their identification of patients at risk for developing coronary heart disease. The prevalence of coronary artery calcium using electron beam computed tomography was 19.4% in this cross-sectional study of a prospective, consecutive, screening cohort of 1999 healthy United States Army personnel (aged 39-50 years). The proportion of the total variance of coronary artery calcium explained by sequential logistic models incorporating conventional, emerging, hereditary, lifestyle, and psychosocial cardiovascular risk variables increased progressively from 9.7% to 14.5%. The best-fit logistic model for the prediction of coronary artery calcium identified age, male gender, Framingham risk score, total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, smoking, a family history of coronary heart disease, white race, physical inactivity, and lower depression scores as significant independent correlates of coronary artery calcium. These data indicate that the explanatory power of models for atherosclerosis can be significantly improved with the use of emerging, heredity, lifestyle, and psychosocial factors. The large residual variance, however, supports the potential of atherosclerosis imaging to incrementally and independently identify coronary heart disease risk.
PMID: 16407700
ISSN: 1520-037x
CID: 3688162

Relation between coronary artery calcium and incident chest pain in a community-dwelling screening population

Taylor, Allen J; Arora, Navin S; Feuerstein, Irwin; Bindeman, Jody; Perron, Tracy; Cao, Feng; O'malley, Patrick G
Incident chest pain occurred in 30.3% of 1,743 asymptomatic healthy men and women who were followed for up to 4 years. Proportions of patients who had coronary artery calcium were similar among those who had no chest pain, noncardiac pain, atypical pain, or cardiac chest pain. Incident chest pain is common and should be examined according to a patient's pretest probability of developing coronary artery disease, without excessive influence of the presence of coronary artery calcium.
PMID: 15979434
ISSN: 0002-9149
CID: 3688142

Intracardiac leiomyomatosis: iliac vein to right-ventricular outflow tract [Case Report]

Bennett, Edward S; Arora, Navin S; Kay, Martin; Robinson, Timothy T; Fergus, Icilma
BACKGROUND:A 58-year-old female with a history of hypertension and asthma presented to an internist for a routine physical examination. A grade II/VI systolic ejection murmur and electrocardiogram abnormalities were noted. She was referred to a cardiologist for further assessment. INVESTIGATIONS/METHODS:Transthoracic echocardiography, transesophageal echocardiography, contrast-enhanced CT and MRI, exploratory laparotomy. DIAGNOSIS/METHODS:Intracardiac leiomyomatosis. MANAGEMENT/RESULTS:Surgical excision.
PMID: 16265563
ISSN: 1743-4297
CID: 3688152

Differential diagnosis of intracavitary tumors obstructing the right ventricular outflow tract [Case Report]

Gopal, A S; Stathopoulos, J A; Arora, N; Banerjee, S; Messineo, F
Three cases of right ventricular outflow tract obstruction caused by 3 distinct tumors-myxoma, sarcoma, and presumed metastatic tumor-diagnosed by transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography are presented. The differences among these 3 types of tumors with similar clinical and echocardiographic findings are highlighted, and a review of the pertinent literature is discussed. By applying the approximate frequencies of cardiac tumors categorized by type and site, statistically, an intracavitary right ventricular outflow tract tumor is 70 to 140 times more likely to be malignant than benign; furthermore, if it is a primary cardiac tumor, it is approximately 2 times more likely to be a sarcoma than a myxoma.
PMID: 11547282
ISSN: 0894-7317
CID: 3726532

Utility of transesophageal echocardiography for the characterization of cardiovascular anomalies associated with Turner's syndrome [Case Report]

Gopal, A S; Arora, N S; Vardanian, S; Messineo, F C
This case illustrates the complementary value of transesophageal echocardiography to routine transthoracic echocardiography in an asymptomatic adult patient with Turner's syndrome. The combined findings of bicuspid aortic valve, severe aortic dilation, coarctation of the aorta, and type A aortic dissection were clearly delineated by transesophageal echocardiography.
PMID: 11174436
ISSN: 0894-7317
CID: 3726522

Right ventricular myxoma [Letter]

Gopal, A S; Arora, N S; Messineo, F C
PMID: 10660393
ISSN: 0028-4793
CID: 3726512