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Annals of Clinical and Laboratory Science, Vol 24, Issue 6, 521-532
Copyright © 1994 by Association of Clinical Scientists


Articles

Intestinal microsporidiosis. Report of five cases

T Sun, MH Kaplan, S Teichberg, G Weissman, T Smilari, and C Urmacher

Five cases of intestinal microsporidiosis are reported, including one case of a heterosexual female acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patient, three homosexual males, and one bisexual male AIDS patients with detailed description of their clinical course. These five cases underscore the severity of immunodeficiency in patients with microsporidiosis. All patients had multiple opportunistic infections and a CD4 cell count below 100/microliters long before diarrhea developed. This is the first kinetic study of helper T-lymphocytes in cases of microsporidiosis. Diagnosis was made by duodenal biopsies stained with Brown and Brenn or Gram-Weigert technique (confirmed by electron microscopy) and by stool smears stained with a modified trichrome technique. However, the best preparation was plastic sections stained with toluidine blue, which demonstrated both the spores and plasmodia clearly. In our evaluation, Giemsa stain was also acceptable for identification of microsporidian spores in both intestinal biopsies and stool smears, but there was a failure to identify the organism on hematoxylin and eosin, acid-fast, periodic acid-Schiff, and Gomeri's methenamine silver stained preparations. Therapeutic attempts using albendazole, metronidazole, octreotide, and zidovudine (AZT) failed to eradicate microsporidia in these patients.


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C. Franzen and A. Muller
Molecular Techniques for Detection, Species Differentiation, and Phylogenetic Analysis of Microsporidia
Clin. Microbiol. Rev., April 1, 1999; 12(2): 243 - 285.
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