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      An unusual complication of a common endemic disease: clinical and laboratory aspects of patients with brucella epididymoorchitis in the north of Iran

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          Abstract

          Background

          Brucella epididymoorchitis(BEO) is a focal complication of human brucellosis and has been reported in 2-20% of patients with brucellosis. Brucellosis is an endemic disease in Iran. The incidence of the disease in this country is 34 per 100 000 per year.

          Methods

          In a retrospective study, we identified 30 cases of Brucella epididymoorchitis in two teaching hospitals in the north of Iran during 1997-2009.

          Findings

          Epididymoorchitis occurred in 11.1% of male patients with brucellosis. The average age was 25.5 ± 12.43 years. Pain and scrotal swelling (100%) and fever (96.7%) were the most common symptoms. Different treatment regimens were administered including doxycycline plus rifampin (60%), doxycycline plus rifampin plus aminoglycoside for the first two weeks (36.6%) and doxycycline plus cotrimoxazole(3.4%). Ten percent of the patients did not respond to antibiotic therapy and required surgical drainage or orchiectomy.

          Conclusions

          In brucellosis endemic areas, clinicians who encounter patients with epididymoorchitis should consider the likelihood of brucellosis. A careful history and physical examination and an immediate laboratory evaluation help to make a correct diagnosis. Generally, classical therapy of brucellosis is adequate for the treatment of epididymoorchitis.

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          Most cited references14

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          Brucellosis: an overview.

          M Corbel (1997)
          Brucellosis remains a major zoonosis worldwide. Although many countries have eradicated Brucella abortus from cattle, in some areas Brucella melitensis has emerged as a cause of infection in this species as well as in sheep and goats. Despite vaccination campaigns with the Rev 1 strain, B. melitensis remains the principal cause of human brucellosis. Brucella suis is also emerging as an agent of infection in cattle, thus extending its opportunities to infect humans. The recent isolation of distinctive strains of Brucella from marine mammals has extended its ecologic range. Molecular genetic studies have demonstrated phylogenetic affiliation to Agrobacterium, Phyllobacterium, Ochrobactrum, and Rhizobium. Polymerase chain reaction and gene probe development may provide more effective typing methods. Pathogenicity is related to production of lipopolysaccharides containing a poly N-formyl perosamine O chain, CuZn superoxide dismutase, erythrlose phosphate dehydrogenase, stress-induced proteins related to intracellular survival, and adenine and guanine monophosphate inhibitors of phagocyte functions. Protective immunity is conferred by antibody to lipopolysaccharide and T-cell-mediated macrophage activation triggered by protein antigens. Diagnosis still centers on isolation of the organism and serologic test results, especially enzyme immunoassay, which is replacing other methods. Polymerase chain reaction is also under evaluation. Therapy is based on tetracyclines with or without rifampicin, aminoglycosides, or quinolones. No satisfactory vaccines against human brucellosis are available, although attenuated purE mutants appear promising.
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            Epididymoorchitis due to Brucella mellitensis: a retrospective study of 59 patients.

            Epididymoorchitis is a focal form of human brucellosis described in 2%-20% of patients with brucellosis. We assessed 59 cases of Brucella epididymoorchitis (BEO) between 1991 and 1999. The median age of patients was 34 years (range, 15-75 years). The onset of symptoms was acute in 46 patients (78%). Scrotal pain and swelling (100% of patients), fever (88%), and sweating (73%) were the most common symptoms. Brucella species was isolated from blood cultures in 41 patients (69%) and from epididymal aspiration in 4 patients. Treatment consisted of a combination of a doxycycline and an aminoglycoside (n=39) or rifampin (n=10); trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole with rifampin (n=3); or trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole as monotherapy (n=7). The median duration of therapy was 45 days (range, 21-90 days). The infections of 9 patients (15%) failed to respond to therapy, and 15 patients relapsed (25%). Three patients with necrotizing orchitis whose infections were unresponsive to antibiotics required an orchiectomy. In general, classical brucellosis therapy is adequate for BEO.
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              Clinical findings, diagnostic approach, and outcome of Brucella melitensis epididymo-orchitis.

              We have studied 912 patients with brucellosis. Of these, 631 (69.2%) were male and 48 had epididymo-orchitis, giving an incidence of epididymo-orchitis of 7.6%. The duration of symptoms before diagnosis was 52.5 +/- 70 days. All the patients had fever, swelling, and scrotal pain, but only 2 (4.2%) reported urinary symptoms. Seven patients (14.5%) had leukocyte figures above 11 x 10(9)/L, and urine analysis was normal in 69% of the patients. Blood cultures were positive in 65.8% of cases. A total of 33 patients (68.8%) received a combination of doxycycline plus streptomycin and 13 (27.1%) doxycycline plus rifampin. The overall percentage of failure or relapse was 8.8%: 7.1% in the doxycycline plus streptomycin group and 20% in the doxycycline plus rifampin group. None of the patients required surgery. Pending clinical trials to confirm the results, conservative management with a combination of doxycycline for 2 months and streptomycin for 14 to 21 days appears to be adequate and could avoid unnecessary orchiectomy.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                BMC Res Notes
                BMC Research Notes
                BioMed Central
                1756-0500
                2011
                11 August 2011
                : 4
                : 286
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of infectious disease, North Iranian tropical and infectious disease research center, Mazandran university of medical sciences, Iran
                Article
                1756-0500-4-286
                10.1186/1756-0500-4-286
                3170334
                21834966
                53935804-e350-4f3c-b7e9-630254a982aa
                Copyright ©2011 Davoody et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 8 March 2011
                : 11 August 2011
                Categories
                Short Report

                Medicine
                testicular abscess,epididymoorchitis,brucellosis
                Medicine
                testicular abscess, epididymoorchitis, brucellosis

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