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Volume 21, Number 9—September 2015
CME ACTIVITY - Synopsis

Mycobacterium abscessus Complex Infections in Humans

Meng-Rui Lee, Wang-Huei Sheng, Chien-Ching Hung, Chong-Jen Yu, Li-Na Lee, and Po-Ren HsuehComments to Author 
Author affiliations: National Taiwan University Hospital Hsin-Chu Branch, Hsin-Chu, Taiwan (M.-R. Lee, W.-H. Sheng, C.-C. Hung, C.-J. Yu, L.-N. Lee, P.-R. Hsueh); National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan (M.-R. Lee, W.-H. Sheng, C.-C. Hung, C.-J. Yu, L.-N. Lee, P.-R. Hsueh)

Main Article

Figure 5

Brain computed tomography scan images for a patient with central nervous system infection caused by Mycobacterium abscessus subsp. bolletii. Arrows indicate abnormal nodular pachymeningeal thickening and leptomeningeal and intraparenchymal extension with multiple rim-enhancing lesions in the right cerebellum (A) and right temporal lobe (B), indicating cerebral abscesses.

Figure 5. Brain computed tomography scan images for a patient with central nervous system infection caused by Mycobacterium abscessus subsp. bolletii. Arrows indicate abnormal nodular pachymeningeal thickening and leptomeningeal and intraparenchymal extension with multiple rim-enhancing lesions in the right cerebellum (A) and right temporal lobe (B), indicating cerebral abscesses.

Main Article

Page created: August 14, 2015
Page updated: August 14, 2015
Page reviewed: August 14, 2015
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