Surgical drainage (and sometimes excision) of infected lymph node

Surgical drainage (and sometimes excision) of infected lymph nodes and abscesses involving the liver, skin, rectum, kidney and brain is often necessary for healing, particularly for the visceral abscesses. Daily prophylaxis

with Bactrim and/or Itraconazole is recommended during infection-free periods. For more detailed treatment see more options, the interested reader is referred to Roos et al. [1]. One of the main reasons to make a rapid diagnosis of the severe forms of CGD is that such patients may be treated successfully with a bone marrow transplant [7-9]. A few reports suggest that gene therapy may eventually be successful both in X-linked and autosomal CGD [10, 11]. Thus, there are many reasons to identify precisely the genetic defect in patients with CGD. Patients suspected of suffering from CGD (Table 2) must be diagnosed by the inability of their blood phagocytes to generate

reactive oxygen species. This can be performed in various ways. The woman is a relative (mother, sister, daughter, maternal aunt, maternal grandmother) of a CGD patient The woman has symptoms of CGD (see Table 2a) The woman is a relative of a CGD patient R788 and has discoid lupus symptoms Carriership or occurrence of CGD should be tested functionally [NADPH oxidase activity in the neutrophils with a per-cell assay, e.g. nitro-blue tetrazolium (NBT) slide test or dihydrorhodamine-1,2,3 (DHR) assay] and genetically Cell press Usually, purified blood neutrophils [12] are used for these tests, but total leucocytes or even diluted full blood can also be used. Blood can be sent by courier to the testing laboratory, but several precautions must be taken. Ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA) or heparin blood can be used for NADPH oxidase activity testing and for preparation of neutrophil lysate for NADPH oxidase component expression by Western blot. In the case of EDTA blood, the neutrophil fraction purified from it must

be recalcified and left for 30 min at room temperature before NADPH oxidase activity can be measured. For DNA preparation, EDTA blood is superior. The blood transport must take place in polypropylene tubes (completely filled) and at room temperature. This means, for instance, no transport in plane cargo compartments. The blood must arrive at the place of investigation within 48 h after vena puncture, preferably within 24 h. A control blood sample must be shipped together with the sample from the presumed patient and/or relative(s). All assays must be performed in parallel with the control cell preparation. The NADPH oxidase enzyme that is affected in CGD reduces molecular oxygen to the one-electron radical superoxide (O2−), which is subsequently reduced further to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). The reducing equivalents for this reaction are derived from NADPH, which is converted into NADP+ and H+.

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