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I would like
to start this talk with a case presentation that deals with the topic. I
warn you that this is a difficult and complex patient, in critical
condition, so I’m looking forward to your help with the diagnosis and
treatment. The patient is an elderly woman, beloved
in her community, who comes to your surgery with a list of serious problems.
She has night sweats and fevers that have been getting worse for the last
few years. She has difficulty breathing, and on exam seems to have suffered
from some sort of aspiration pneumonia. She has alopecia, having lost many
of the individual fibers that used to cover her body. Her normal
gastrointestinal flora have been invaded by a few noxious species, and she
seems to have lost the variety of normal bacteria that help to ensure normal
nutrition and GI function. And her skin is fissured, inflamed, gouged,
scraped, denuded, and cracking in many places. These dermatological
excoriations are caused by a small but extremely industrious organism whose
numbers have grown exponentially over the last few years, displacing and
even eliminating other organisms that used to be widely distributed on the
skin of our patient. Let me finish this brief history by showing you a
picture of the patient. |