Αρχειοθήκη ιστολογίου

Τετάρτη 12 Σεπτεμβρίου 2018

Case Report of Transmissible Gastroenteritis Coronavirus Infection Associated with Small Intestine and Brain Lesions in Piglets

Viral Immunology, Ahead of Print.


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Copyright

ELSEVIER

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Nasal Airway Obstruction

OTOLARYNGOLOGIC CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA

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Contents

Erratumxv

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CME Accreditation Page



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Forthcoming Issues

Facial Palsy: Diagnostic and Therapeutic Management

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Erratum

An error was made in the June 2018 issue of Otolaryngologic Clinics (Volume 51, Issue 3) in the article, "Regional Overview of Specific Populations, Workforce Considerations, Training and Diseases in Latin America" by Drs. J. Pablo Stolovitzky and Jacqueline Alvarado.

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Transient severe distributive shock due to early dumping syndrome: a case report

Early dumping syndrome characterized by palpitation, dizziness, cold sweat, feebleness, and abdominal symptoms, occurs within 30 minutes after meals in patients who have undergone gastrectomy. This case report...

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Erratum

In the Review article, "Challenges in the treatment of asthma in children and adolescents" (Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol. 2018;120:382-388), on page 386, the legend for Figure 2 should have read as follows.

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Life in the FAST lane

Oral immunotherapy (OIT) for the treatment of food allergy represents a potential groundbreaking breakthrough in the management of food allergy.1 The standard dogma of food allergy has been that this is a disease without treatment, other than having a variable likelihood of outgrowing the allergy to the selected foods.2 Since 2006, there has been a steady increase in federally funded and other academic investigations of OIT to various foods that have been dominated mainly by studies of peanut, milk, and egg.

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Hidden allergens in food allergy

A 5-year-old girl with a history of tree nut allergy presented to our office with a chief concern of a recent episode of anaphylaxis without suspected ingestion of a known allergen. The history was obtained from the patient's mother and chart review.

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Allergen immunotherapy

Many allergy specialists would suggest that we have come a long way over the past 107 years since the initial publications from the Laboratory of the Department for Therapeutic Inoculations of Saint Mary's Hospital1,2 described the efficacy of subcutaneous allergen immunotherapy (AIT) in pollen allergy. Currently, there is a robust literature showing that AIT has efficacy in the treatment of asthma, prevents the development of further sensitization in mono-sensitized patients, decreases the progression to asthma in those undergoing subcutaneous AIT for allergic rhinitis, and provides persistent therapeutic effect even years after a 3- to 5-year course.

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Diane E. Schuller, MD (1943–2018)

The American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI) family lost a dedicated member and former past president with the passing of Diane E. Schuller, MD, one of the great leaders of our organization. Diane was born on November 27, 1943 in Brooklyn, New York, and died unexpectedly on January 25, 2018 in Hershey, Pennsylvania. A daughter of the late Charles W. Sr., and Dorothy (McWilliams) Schuller, Diane resided in Danville, Virginia since 1974.

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Editorial Board



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Information for Authors



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Table of Contents



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Information for Readers



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New diagnostic criteria for eosinophilic esophagitis

It has been quite a journey for the entity known as proton pump inhibitor-responsive esophageal eosinophilia (PPI-REE). The new international consensus diagnostic criteria for eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), recently published by Dellon et al1 and summarized by Spergel et al2 in this issue, currently state that the diagnosis of EoE can be made if esophageal symptoms and esophageal eosinophilia are present after ruling out other causes of esophageal eosinophilia. An 8- to 12-week trial with a high dose of PPI to rule out PPI-REE, as stated in the 2011 consensus recommendations,3 is no longer considered a requirement to confirm the diagnosis of EoE but rather a therapeutic option for EoE.

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Provider Education and Vaporizer Labeling Lead to Reduced Anesthetic Agent Purchasing With Cost Savings and Reduced Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Anesthetic agents are known greenhouse gases with hundreds to thousands of times the global warming impact compared with carbon dioxide. We sought to mitigate the negative environmental and financial impacts of our practice in the perioperative setting through multidisciplinary staff engagement and provider education on flow rate reduction and volatile agent choice. These efforts led to a 64% per case reduction in carbon dioxide equivalent emissions (163 kg in Fiscal Year 2012, compared with 58 kg in Fiscal Year 2015), as well as a cost savings estimate of $25,000 per month. Accepted for publication August 1, 2018. Funding: K.L.Z. receives nonclinical time for her role as Medical Director of Sustainability for UW Health. The authors declare no conflicts of interest. Supplemental digital content is available for this article. Direct URL citations appear in the printed text and are provided in the HTML and PDF versions of this article on the journal's website (https://ift.tt/KegmMq). Reprints will not be available from the authors. Address correspondence to Karin L. Zuegge, MD, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, 600 Highland Ave, Madison, WI 53792. Address e-mail to zuegge@wisc.edu. © 2018 International Anesthesia Research Society

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The Perioperative Management of Ascending Aortic Dissection

Acute aortic syndromes are a distinct group of pathologies involving the wall of the aorta that present acutely and can be potentially fatal unless treated in a timely fashion. The syndrome is dominated by aortic dissections, which comprise ≥95% of all such presentations. Those involving the ascending aorta are particularly lethal and require specific and early surgical treatment compared to dissections involving other parts of the aorta. The surgical repair of an ascending aortic dissection presents multiple challenges to the anesthesiologist. Thoughtful management throughout the perioperative period is critical for minimizing the significant morbidity and mortality associated with this condition. In this narrative review, we provide an overview of the perioperative management of patients presenting for the surgical repair of an ascending aortic dissection. Preoperative discussion focuses on assessment, hemodynamic management, and risk stratification. The intraoperative section includes an overview of anesthetic management, transesophageal echocardiographic assessment, and coagulopathy, as well as surgical considerations that may influence anesthetic management. Accepted for publication July 17, 2018. Funding: None. The authors declare no conflicts of interest. Reprints will not be available from the authors. Address correspondence to Madhav Swaminathan, MD, MMCi, FASE, FAHA, Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University Medical Center, Box 3094 DUMC/5691F HAFS, Durham, NC 27710. Address e-mail to madhav.swaminathan@duke.edu. © 2018 International Anesthesia Research Society

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In Response

No abstract available

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Trainability of Application of the Correct Cricoid Force: Time to Rely on Devices?

No abstract available

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Short and long-term impact of remifentanil on thermal detection and pain thresholds after cardiac surgery: A randomised controlled trial

BACKGROUND The clinical relevance of the suggested hyperalgesic effects of remifentanil is still unclear, especially in the long term. OBJECTIVE The current study evaluated the impact of remifentanil on thermal thresholds 3 days and 12 months after surgery, measured with Quantitative Sensory Testing. DESIGN A prospective, single-blind, randomised controlled trial. SETTING A tertiary care teaching hospital in The Netherlands, from 2014 to 2016. PATIENTS A total of 126 patients aged between 18 and 85 years, undergoing cardiothoracic surgery via sternotomy (coronary artery bypass grafts and/or valve replacement) were included. Exclusion criteria were BMI above 35 kg m−2, history of cardiac surgery, chronic pain conditions, neurological conditions, allergy to opioids or paracetamol, language barrier and pregnancy. INTERVENTIONS Patients were allocated randomly to receive intra-operatively either a continuous remifentanil infusion or intermittent intra-operative fentanyl as needed in addition to standardised anaesthesia with propofol and intermittent intravenous fentanyl at predetermined time points. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Warm and cold detection and pain thresholds 3 days and 12 months after surgery. In addition the use of remifentanil, presence of postoperative chronic pain, age, opioid consumption and pre-operative quality of life were tested as a predictor for altered pain sensitivity 12 months after surgery. RESULTS Both warm and cold detection, and pain thresholds, were not significantly different between the remifentanil and fentanyl groups 3 days and 12 months after surgery (P > 0.05). No significant predictors for altered pain sensitivity were identified. CONCLUSION Earlier reports of increased pain sensitivity 1 year after the use of remifentanil could not be confirmed in this randomised study using Quantitative Sensory Testing. This indicates that remifentanil plays a minor role in the development of chronic thoracic pain. Still, the relatively high incidence of chronic thoracic pain and its accompanying impact on quality of life remain challenging problems. TRIAL REGISTRY REGISTRATION ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT02031016. TRIAL REGISTRATION The study was registered at EudraCT (ref: 2013-000201-23) and ClinicalTrials.gov (https://ift.tt/2Mq69Sn). This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives License 4.0 (CCBY-NC-ND), where it is permissible to download and share the work provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially without permission from the journal. https://ift.tt/OBJ4xP Correspondence to Catherijne A.J. Knibbe, Department of Clinical Pharmacy, St. Antonius Hospital, Koekoekslaan 1, 3435 CM Nieuwegein, The Netherlands Tel: +31 30 609 26 12; e-mail: c.knibbe@antoniusziekenhuis.nl Supplemental digital content is available for this article. Direct URL citations appear in the printed text and are provided in the HTML and PDF versions of this article on the journal's Website (https://ift.tt/2ylyqmW). © 2018 European Society of Anaesthesiology

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Polymorphic Erythematous Macules and Plaques With Dysesthesia

A woman in her 50s presented with a 2-year history of disseminated dermatosis involving the trunk and limbs; the dermatosis was characterized by polymorphic erythematous macules and plaques with elevated and indurated borders without evanescence to pressure. What is your diagnosis?

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RCM and En Face Histopathologic Correlation of the Dermoscopic “Circle Within a Circle” in LM

This case report describes a process by which the dermoscopic "circle within a circle" feature can be correlated with findings of reflectance confocal microscopic (RCM) and en face histopathologic findings from a lentigo maligna lesion.

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Prescription to OTC Switch of Metronidazole and Azelaic Acid for Rosacea

This Viewpoint considers the advantages and disadvantages of topical treatments for rosacea, specifically metronidazole and azelaic acid, undergoing review to switch from prescription to over-the-counter availability.

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Association of Low SES With Hidradenitis Suppurativa

This cohort analysis evaluates the association of low socioeconomic status with hidradenitis suppurativa among patients in the United States.

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Scabies—An Ancient Disease With Unanswered Questions in Modern Times

This Viewpoint discusses the global disease burden of scabies, as well as its diagnosis and treatment.

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September 2018 Issue Highlights



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Sunscreen Use and Melanoma Risk Among Young Australian Adults

This population-based, case-control family study of data collected for the Australian Melanoma Family Study assesses the association of sunscreen use in childhood and early adulthood with the risk of cutaneous melanoma before age 40 years.

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Necrotizing Anogenital Ulcer in a Healthy 8-Month-Old Male

A healthy 8-month-old male infant was admitted for management of a rapidly progressive, painful anogenital ulcer; the lesion had developed acutely over 48 hours and had an associated symptom, but no fevers, chills, or other systemic symptoms. What is your diagnosis?

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Evaluation of a Brief Dermatologist-Delivered Intervention vs Usual Care on Sun Protection Behavior

This longitudinal controlled cohort study examines the association of a brief dermatologist-delivered intervention with patient satisfaction and sun protection behavior among adults receiving dermatology care.

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A Comparison of Tanning Habits Among Gym Tanners and Other Tanners

This survey study evaluates the incidence of tanning in adults who use indoor gyms.

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Association Between Mediterranean Anti-inflammatory Dietary Profile and Severity of Psoriasis

This cohort study uses a self-completed questionnaire by respondents in the French NutriNet-Santé study to evaluate the association between a Mediterranean anti-inflammatory dietary profile and the severity of psoriasis.

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Topical Crisaborole—A Potential Treatment for Recalcitrant Palmoplantar Psoriasis

This case report describes the use of topical crisaborole to treat previously treatment-refractory palmoplantar psoriasis

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Economic Analysis of a Noninvasive Molecular Pathologic Assay for Pigmented Skin Lesions

This economic analysis assesses the costs of use of the pigmented lesion assay vs visual and histopathologic assessment in model inputs of patients with primary pigmented lesions suggestive of melanoma.

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Characteristics and Skin Cancer Risk Behaviors of US Adult Sunless Tanners

This secondary analysis of a cross-sectional study using data from the 2015 National Health Interview Survey assesses the demographic characteristics and skin cancer risk behaviors of US adults who are sunless tanners.

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Incidence of Endemic Human Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in the United States

This observational study reviews cases of endemic human leishmaniasis occurring in the United States, mostly in Texas, over a 10-year period.

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Linear Keratotic Lesions in a Young Woman

A woman in her 20s presented with linear hyperkeratotic papules on her right arm in a Blaschkoid pattern. What is your diagnosis?

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Dermatology Procedures Billed by Advanced Practice Professionals, 2012-2015

This longitudinal study uses Medicare data from 2012 through 2015 to review the trends in scope and volume of dermatology procedures performed by advanced practice professionals such as nurse practitioners and physician assistants.

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Facial-Aging App Availability in Waiting Rooms as a Potential Opportunity for Skin Cancer Prevention

This survey study explores whether a single exposure of adult patients in a waiting room to an app that approximates facial UV damage may lead to altered UV protection behavior.

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Effect of Stress Ball Use or Hand-holding on Anxiety During Skin Cancer Excision

This randomized clinical trial examines the effects of hand-holding vs stress ball use compared with usual care on anxiety in patients undergoing excisional removal of nonmelanoma skin cancer of the head or neck with local anesthesia.

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A critical evaluation of health risk assessment of modified mycotoxins with a special focus on zearalenone

Abstract

A comprehensive definition introducing the term "modified mycotoxins" to encompass all possible forms in which mycotoxins and their modifications can occur was recently proposed and has rapidly gained wide acceptance within the scientific community. It is becoming increasingly evident that exposure to such modified mycotoxins due to their presence in food and feed has the potential to pose a substantial additional risk to human and animal health. Zearalenone (ZEN) is a well-characterized Fusarium toxin. Considering the diversity of modified forms of ZEN occurring in food and feed, the toxicologically relevant endocrine activity of many of these metabolites, and the fact that modified forms add to a dietary exposure which approaches the tolerable daily intake by free ZEN alone, modified forms of ZEN present an ideal case study for critical evaluation of modified mycotoxins in food safety. Following a summary of recent scientific opinions of EFSA dealing with health risk assessment of ZEN alone or in combination with its modified forms, uncertainties and data gaps are highlighted. Issues essential for evaluation and prioritization of modified mycotoxins in health risk assessment are identified and discussed, including opportunities to improve exposure assessment using biomonitoring data. Further issues such as future consideration of combinatory effects of the parent toxin with its modified forms and also other compounds co-occurring in food and feed are addressed. With a particular focus on ZEN, the most pressing challenges associated with health risk assessment of modified mycotoxins are identified and recommendations for further research to fill data gaps and reduce uncertainties are made.



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Association of Lichen Planopilaris With Dyslipidemia

This cohort study evaluates the association between lichen planopilaris, hyperlipidemia, and metabolic syndrome.

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RUSSCO-RSP comparative study of immunohistochemistry diagnostic assays for PD-L1 expression in urothelial bladder cancer

Abstract

In this collaborative study by the Russian Society of Clinical Oncology and the Russian Society of Pathology, we assessed the concordance among three validated, commercially available PD-L1 immunohistochemistry assays for patients with urothelial cancer. Tumors from 100 urothelial cancer patients were stained with the antibody clones 22C3 (Agilent), SP142 (Ventana Medical Systems), and SP263 (Ventana Medical Systems), which are used in clinical trials of second-line therapy with checkpoint inhibitors. Four trained pathologists independently evaluated the percentages of tumor cells (TC) and tumor-infiltrating immune cells (IC) that were stained at any intensity by each of the antibodies. The test-specific cutoffs for the proportions of stained cells in a positive sample were pre-specified as TC + IC ≥ 10% or TC ≥ 10% for 22C3, IC ≥ 5% for SP142, and TC ≥ 25% or IC ≥ 25% for SP263. Three hundred immunohistochemistry slides were scored. The percentages of PD-L1 staining in the three assays without using any cutoff were higher in the IC than in the TC (55% versus 24% for 22C3, 45% versus 8% for SP142, and 72% versus 27% for SP263, respectively). The Pearson correlation coefficients for anti-PD-L1 staining in the IC were 0.5, 0.69, and 0.85 with 22C3/SP142, 22C3/SP263, and SP142/SP263, respectively. The Pearson correlation coefficients for PD-L1 staining in the TC were 0.93, 0.99, and 0.91 for the same pairs. Among the patients who were negative for PD-L1 staining by one test, 91–100% were also negative by the other tests. Among the patients who were positive by one test, 43–100% were also positive by the other tests. Our data indicate that repeated testing can be avoided as a patient with urothelial cancer who is classified as negative for PD-L1 expression by one of the three single tests using the corresponding cutoff rule is highly likely (91–100%) to be classified as negative by either of the other tests.



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Assessment and Retrieval of Aspirated Tracheoesophageal Prosthesis in the Ambulatory Setting

Tracheoesophageal prosthesis (TEP) is the most common voice restoration method following total laryngectomy. Prosthesis extrusion and aspiration occurs in 3.9% to 6.7% and causes dyspnea. Emergency centers are unfamiliar with management of the aspirated TEP. Prior studies report removal of aspirated TEP prostheses under general anesthesia. Laryngectomees commonly have poor pulmonary function, posing increased risks for complications of general anesthesia. We present a straightforward approach to three cases of aspirated TEP prosthesis removed in the ambulatory setting. In each case, aspirated TEP was diagnosed with flexible bronchoscopy under local anesthesia at the time of consultation, and all prostheses were retrieved atraumatically using a biopsy grasper forceps inserted via the side channel of the bronchoscope. The aspirated TEP prosthesis can be safely and efficiently removed via bedside bronchoscopy.

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Just Beneath the Surface

In this Journal feature, information about a real patient is presented in stages (boldface type) to an expert clinician, who responds to the information by sharing relevant background and reasoning with the reader (regular type). The authors' commentary follows. A 55-year-old man was evaluated in…

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The Use of Donation After Cardiac Death Organs for Simultaneous Liver-Kidney Transplant: To DCD or Not to DCD?

Background Due to challenges with organ scarcity, many centers performing simultaneous liver-kidney transplant are opting to accept donation after cardiac death (DCD) organs as a means of facilitating earlier transplant and reducing death rates on the waitlist. It has been suggested however, that DCD organs may have inferior graft and patient survival posttransplant compared with donation after neurologic death (DND) organs. Methods We created a Markov model to compare the overall outcomes of accepting a DCD SLKT now versus waiting for a DND SLKT in patients waitlisted for SLKT, stratified by base MELD score (≤ 20, 21-30, >30). Results Waiting for DND SLKT was the preferred treatment strategy for patients with a MELD score of ≤ 30 (incremental value of 0.54 and 0.36 QALYs for MELD ≤ 20 and MELD 21-30 with DND versus DCD SLKT, respectively). The option to accept a DCD SLKT became the preferred choice for those with a MELD score > 30 (incremental value of 0.31 QALYs for DCD versus DND SLKT). This finding was confirmed in a probabilistic sensitivity analysis and persisted when analyzing total life years obtained for accept DCD versus do not accept DCD. Conclusions There is a benefit to accepting DCD SLKT for patients with MELD > 30. Although not accepting DCD SLKT and waiting for DND SLKT is the preferred option for patients with MELD ≤ 30, the incremental value is small. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives License 4.0 (CCBY-NC-ND), where it is permissible to download and share the work provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially without permission from the journal. Corresponding Author: Amanda J Vinson, MD, 5082 Dickson Building, QEII Health Sciences Centre-VG site, 5820 University Avenue, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3H 1V9, 902-473-2675, 902-473-2749. Email: Amanda.vinson@nshealth.ca Authorship Page Authorship: All authors participated in research design. AV and BK did the initial data analysis and KT and BK provided feedback and suggestions to make the analysis more robust. AV wrote the initial manuscript and BK, BGL and KT provided feedback and helped with constructing the figures. Disclosures: The authors declare no conflicts of interest. Funding: There was no funding for this study. Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Blood Pressure in De novo Heart Transplant Recipients Treated with Everolimus Compared with a Cyclosporine-Based Regimen: Results from the Randomized SCHEDULE Trial

Background Systemic hypertension is prevalent in heart transplant recipients, and has been partially attributed to treatment with calcineurin inhibitors (CNIs). The SCHEDULE trial was the first randomized trial to study early withdrawal of CNIs in de novo heart transplant recipients, comparing an everolimus-based immunosuppressive regimen with conventional CNI-based treatment. As a prespecified secondary endpoint, blood pressure was repeatedly compared across treatment arms. Methods SCHEDULE was a prospective, multicenter, randomized, controlled, parallel-group, open-label trial in de novo adult heart transplant recipients, undertaken at transplant centers in Scandinavia. Blood pressure was assessed with 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring up to 3 years after HTx in 83 patients. Results Overall, systolic blood pressure fell with time, from 138 ± 15 mmHg 2 weeks after HTx to 134 ± 11 mmHg after 12 months and 132 ± 14 mmHg after 36 months (p = 0.003). Diastolic blood pressure did not change over time. After 12 months, there was a numerically larger fall in systolic blood pressure in the everolimus arm (between-group difference 8 mmHg; p = 0.053), and after 36 months, there was a significant between group difference of 13 mmHg (p = 0.02) in favor of everolimus. Conclusions In this first, randomized trial with early CNI avoidance in de novo HTx recipients, we observed a modest fall in systolic blood pressure over the first 1 – 3 years after transplantation. The fall in systolic blood pressure was more pronounced in patients allocated to everolimus. Clinical trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01266148) at https://ift.tt/KkipBP Address for correspondence: Arne K. Andreassen, Department of Cardiology, Oslo University Hospital Rikshospitalet, PO Box 4950 Nydalen, 0424 Oslo, Norway. Phone +47230700. aandreas@ous-hf.no Authorship statement AK Andreassen participated in research design, performance of the research, writing of the manuscript, and critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content K Broch participated in writing of the manuscript, performance of the research, data analysis, and critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content H Eiskjær participated in research design, performance of the research, and critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content K Karason participated in research design, performance of the research, and critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content E Gude participated in research design, performance of the research, and critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content D Mølbak participated in performance of the research, and critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content W Stueflotten participated in performance of the research, and critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content L Gullestad participated in research design, performance of the research, and critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content Disclosure: The authors declare no conflicts of interest. Funding: The SCHEDULE trial was funded by Novartis Scandinavia. The funding source had no role in the design of the study, in the analyses of the results, or in the decision to publish. Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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IL-17A is critical for CD8+ T effector response in airway epithelial injury after transplantation

Background Airway epithelium is the primary target of trachea and lung transplant rejection, the degree of epithelial injury is closely correlated with obliterative bronchiolitis development. In this study, we investigated the cellular and molecular mechanisms of IL-17A-mediated airway epithelial injury after transplantation. Methods Murine orthotopic allogeneic trachea or lung transplants were implemented in wild type or RORγt-/- mice. Recipients received anti-IL-17A or anti-IFNγ for cytokine neutralization, anti-CD8 for CD8+ T cell depletion, or STAT3-inhibitor to suppress Th17/Tc17 development. Airway injury and graft inflammatory cell infiltration were examined by histopathology and immunohistochemistry. Gene expression of IL-17A, IFNγ, perforin, granzyme B and chemokines in grafts was quantitated by real-time RT-PCR. Results IL-17A and IFNγ were rapidly expressed and associated with epithelial injury and CD8+ T cell accumulation after allotransplantation. Depletion of CD8+ T cells prevented airway epithelial injury. Neutralization of IL-17A or devoid of IL-17A production by RORγt deficiency improved airway epithelial integrity of the trachea allografts. Anti-IL-17A reduced the expression of CXCL9, CXCL10, CXCL11 and CCL20, and abolished CD8+ T cell accumulation in the trachea allografts. Inhibition of STAT3 activation significantly reduced IL-17A expression in both trachea and lung allografts; however it increased IFNγ expression and cytotoxic activities, which resulted in the failure of airway protection. Conclusions Our data reveal the critical role of IL-17A in mediating CD8+ T effector response that causes airway epithelial injury and lung allograft rejection, and indicate that inhibition of STAT3 signals could drive CD8+ T cells from Tc17 toward Tc1 development. Correspondence: Jiangnan Xu, MD, Department of Immunology, Capital Medical University, No.10 Xi Tou Tiao, You An Men Wai, Beijing 100069, China. Phone: +8610-83911826; Fax: +8610-83911439; E-mail addresses: xujn@ccmu.edu.cn. Authorship Y.D. and J.X. participated in the research design. R.Z. performed the experiments, analyzed the data and prepared the figures. H.F. and R.C. helped with some experiments and data analysis. R.Z. and Y.D. wrote the manuscript. J.C.O. and J.X. provided critical revision of the article. All authors approved the final version of article. Disclosures The authors declare no conflicts of interest. Funding This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grants 81370188 and 81770092). Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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NKG2C natural killer cells in bronchoalveolar lavage are associated with cytomegalovirus viremia and poor outcomes in lung allograft recipients

Background Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is a risk factor for chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD), which limits survival in lung allograft recipients. Natural killer (NK) cells that express the NKG2C receptor mediate CMV-specific immune responses. We hypothesized that NKG2C+ NK cells responding to CMV in the lung allograft would reduce CMV-related inflammation and would improve CLAD-free survival. Methods We prospectively followed 130 subjects who underwent lung transplantation from 2012 to 2016. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) NK cells were immunophenotyped for NKG2C, maturation, and proliferation markers. CMV viral load, serologies, serial spirometry, and mortality were recorded from medical records. NK cell subset association with CMV endpoints were made using generalized estimating equation-adjusted linear models. BAL NKG2C+ NK cell association with CLAD-free survival was assessed by Cox proportional hazards modeling. Results NKG2C+ NK cells were more mature and proliferative than NKG2C- NK cells and represented a median of 7.8% of BAL NK cells. The NKG2C+ NK cell proportion increased prior to the first detection of viremia and was nearly tripled in subjects with high level viremia (>1000 copies/ml) compared with no detected viremia. Subjects with increased BAL NKG2C+ NK cells, relative to the median, had a significantly increased risk for CLAD or death (HR 4.2, 95% CI 1.2 – 13.3). Conclusions The BAL NKG2C+ NK cell proportion may be a relevant biomarker for assessing risk of CMV viremia and quantifying potential CMV-related graft injury that can lead to CLAD or death. Correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. John R. Greenland, San Francisco VA Medical Center, 4150 Clement St, San Francisco, CA 94121, USA; 415-221-4810x22962, john.greenland@ucsf.edu ORCIDS: DRC 0000-0002-0596-3434, JPS 0000-0003-0224-7472, JRG 0000-0003-1422-8367 FUNDING Project funding came from award number IK2CX001034 from the Clinical Sciences Research & Development Service of the VA Office of Research and Development, the UCSF Nina Ireland Program for Lung Health (NIPLH), and a NHLBI award number R01 HL134851 DISCLOSURES The authors of this manuscript have no conflicts of interest to disclose. AUTHORSHIP CONTRIBUTIONS DRC and JRG participated in research design, manuscript writing, performance of research, and data analysis. JAG, JK, SRH, LLL, QT, and JPS participated in research design, interpretation of the results, and manuscript editing. TC, AW, and MG participated in performance of research. Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Patient Navigators in Transplantation – where do we go from here?

No abstract available

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Kidney Transplant in the Era of Modern Therapy for Multiple Myeloma

Chronic kidney disease is common in patients with multiple myeloma. Historically individuals with end stage renal disease and multiple myeloma did poorly with renal transplantation due to higher mortality rates from the malignancy itself or associated comorbidities. However, over the past 2 decades there have been significant advances in the treatment of multiple myeloma with the advent of new therapeutic agents resulting in an improvement of long term survival. As a result, more individuals with multiple myeloma are being referred for kidney transplantation, especially those with good functional capacity and minimal comorbidities. Recent literature has suggested that certain patients with multiple myeloma can successfully undergo renal transplantation after stem transplantation with consideration for maintenance therapy, although caution should be used with immunomodulating drugs due to the anecdotally reported risk of acute rejection. Therefore, having a multi-disciplinary approach with the transplant team and hematology both before and after transplant is crucial in maximizing the chance of success for these individuals. This review summarizes the literature on renal transplantation in patients with multiple myeloma as well as the therapeutic advancements that have occurred which may allow certain patients to undergo successful transplantation. Corresponding Author: Raymond L. Heilman, MD, 5777 East Mayo Boulevard, Phoenix, Arizona 85054, Heilman.Raymond@mayo.edu Authorship Page Janna L. Huskey – Participated in the writing of this paper Raymond L. Heilman - Participated in the writing of this paper Hasan Khamash - Participated in the writing of this paper Rafael Fonseca - Participated in the writing of this paper Rafael Fonseca Consulting: Amgen, BMS, Celgene, Takeda, Bayer, Janssen, Novartis, Pharmacyclics, Sanofi, Merck, Juno, Kite, Aduro, AbbVie. Scientific Advisory Board Adaptive Biotechnologies. Mayo Clinic and Rafael Fonseca hold a patent for the prognostication of myeloma using FISH. Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Open Randomized Multicenter Study to Evaluate Safety and Efficacy of Low Molecular Weight Sulfated Dextran in Islet Transplantation

Background When transplanted human pancreatic islets are exposed to blood during intraportal infusion, an innate immune response is triggered. This instant blood-mediated inflammatory reaction (IBMIR) activates the coagulation and complement cascades and leads to the destruction of 25% of all transplanted islets within minutes, contributing to the need, in most patients, for islets from more than 1 donor. Low molecular dextran sulfate (LMW-DS) has been shown in experimental settings to inhibit IBMIR. Methods The CIT-01 study was a phase II, multicenter, open label, active control, randomized study. Twenty-four subjects were randomized to peritransplant intraportal and systemic treatment with either LMW-DS or heparin, targeting an APTT of 150±10 and 50±5 seconds respectively. C-peptide response was measured with a mixed meal tolerance test at 75 and 365 days after transplant. Results LMW-DS was safe and well tolerated with similar observed adverse events (mostly attributed to immunosuppression) as in the heparin arm. There was no difference in the primary endpoint (stimulated C-peptide 75±5 days after the first transplant) between the 2 arms (1.33±1.10 versus 1.56±1.36 ng/mL, p=0.66). Insulin requirement, metabolic parameters, Clarke and HYPO score, quality of life and safety were similar between the 2 treatments groups. Conclusions Even with low dosing, LMW-DS showed similar efficacy in preventing IBMIR to promote islet engraftment when compared to "state-of-the art" treatment with heparin. Furthermore, no substantial differences in the efficacy and safety endpoints were detected, providing important information for future studies with more optimal dosing of LMW-DS for the prevention of IBMIR in islet transplantation. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CCBY), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Corresponding author: Bengt von Zur-Mühlen, Department of Transplantation surgery, University hospital in Uppsala, S-751 85 Uppsala, Sweden, Phone: + 476 18 611 31 70; E-mail: bengt.muhlen@medsci.uu.se ClinicalTrials.gov ID: NCT00789308 Authorship page Authorship: B.Z-M. and T.L. contributed equally B.Z-M. contributed to the design of the study, analysed the data, performed pre and posttransplant care of the patients and wrote the article T.L. designed the study, analysed the data, performed pre and posttransplant care of the patients and wrote the article L.B. executed analysis plan, coordinated DCC protocol, managed data and statistical analysis, assisted writing final study report and edited the article C.B. designed the study and edited the article N.D.B. designed the study, provided safety oversight as the NIAID Medical Monitor and edited the article W.C. designed the study, managed data and statistical analysis T.E. designed the study and coordinated the study with the Clinical Islet Transplantation Consortium, NIDDK and the DSMB A.F. contributed to the design of the study, performed pre and posttransplant care of the patients and edited the article J.G. designed the study and cleared regulatory pathways T.J. contributed to the design of the study, performed pre and posttransplant care of the patients and edited the article C.J. contributed to the design of the study, performed pre and posttransplant care of the patients and edited the article Y.M. contributed to the design of the study, coordinated study and funding M.R. contributed to the design of the study and edited the article T.S. executed analysis plan, coordinated DCC protocol, managed data and statistical analysis, assisted writing final study report and edited the article G.T. contributed to the design of the study, performed pre and posttransplant care of the patients and edited the study B.N. designed the study, performed experiments, analysed the data and wrote the article O.K. conceived, designed and directed the study, performed islet isolation, analysed the data and wrote the article Conflicts of interest: The authors have no financial disclosures to report. Funding: The study was funded by grants from: The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease of the National Institutes of Health (2U01AI065192-06) The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) as the funding agency for the DCC at University of Iowa (U01DK070431) Swedish Medical Research Council (K2015-54X-12219-19-4 and K2013-64X-08268-26-3) Swedish national strategic research initiative EXODIAB (Excellence Of Diabetes Research in Sweden) Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Liraglutide, a Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor Agonist, Attenuates Development of Cardiac Allograft Vasculopathy in a Murine Heart Transplant Model

Background Advances in immunosuppressive therapy have significantly improved short-term but not long-term survival of cardiac transplant recipients; this is largely due to severe cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV). Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R)-based therapy exerts physiological effects on the cardiovascular system in addition to its traditional role in controlling glucose. We have investigated the effects of liraglutide, a GLP-1R agonist, on the development of CAV in a murine heart transplant model. Methods Heterotopic murine cardiac transplantation was performed with a major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II)-mismatched model. Recipient mice were subcutaneously administered vehicle (0.9% saline solution) or liraglutide (300 μg-1kg-112 h-1) from the day of transplantation. Allografts were harvested at 2 or 8 weeks and histologically analyzed. Inflammatory infiltrates were measured by immunohistochemistry, and immunofluorescence and western blotting analyzes were used to evaluate GLP-1R expression and markers of endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EndMT) in cardiac allografts and human coronary artery endothelial cells (HCAECs) challenged with transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-β1). Results GLP-1R was predominantly localized to vascular endothelial cells and was up-regulated in cardiac allografts after liraglutide treatment. Liraglutide ameliorated CAV and cardiac fibrosis with reduced inflammatory cell infiltration and down-regulated expression of adhesion molecules. Liraglutide inhibited EndMT in allografts and attenuated EndMT by inhibiting Smad3 activation in TGF-β1-treated HCAECs. Conclusions Administration of liraglutide from the time of transplantation up-regulated GLP-1R in the transplanted heart and reduced cardiac fibrosis, inflammation, and CAV development. Therefore, liraglutide may be a novel therapy for CAV. Corresponding author: Yan-wen Shu, PhD, Department of Cardiology, Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, 1277 JieFang Avenue, Wuhan 430022, China. (shuyanwen@yahoo.com). Corresponding author: Jun Yang, PhD, Institute of Organ Transplantation, Tongji Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Jiefang Road No.1095, Wuhan 430030, Hubei Province, China. (jy@tjh.tjmu.edu.cn). Authorship J.Y, Z.-M.W., and Y.-W.S. conceived and designed the experiments. Z.-M.W., X.-F.H, Y.-K.L., D.-X.M., G.-Y.Z., M.-J.W., and Y.-N.X. performed the experiments. J.Y., Z.-M.W. and X.-F.H. analyzed the data. J.Y. and Z.-M.W. wrote the paper. Disclosure The authors declare no conflicts of interest. Funding The study was supported by the National Nature Science Foundation of China (No. 81373169 to JY). Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

https://ift.tt/2NIwlMy

Proven Immunologically-Mediated Drug Hypersensitivity in Children with A History of Multiple Drug Intolerances

Children may be referred to pediatric allergy clinics for reactions to multiple drugs. Multiple drug hypersensitivity (MDH) is defined as immunologically-mediated hypersensitivity to two or more chemically different drugs.

https://ift.tt/2COY8Xs

Influence of preoperative voice assessment on treatment plan prior to airway surgery

The Laryngoscope, EarlyView.


https://ift.tt/2xa3qqz

Trajectories of Nevus Development From Age 3 to 16 Years in the Colorado Kids Sun Care Program Cohort

This longitudinal cohort study describes nevus acquisition from the ages of 3 to 16 years among white youths and evaluates variation by sex, Hispanic ethnicity, and body sites that are chronically vs intermittently exposed to the sun.

https://ift.tt/2MpSvyy

Management of Flat Pigmented Spitz and Reed Nevi in Children

This database study evaluated the efficacy of monitoring flat symmetric pigmented spitzoid-looking lesions in prepubertal children.

https://ift.tt/2x7LduJ

Glycolic Acid Plus Lovastatin-Cholesterol Combination Cream to Treat Congenital Ichthyoses

This case series evaluates the use of topical glycolic acid plus a lovastatin-cholesterol combination cream to treat autosomal recessive congenital ichthyoses.

https://ift.tt/2MpSj2i

Picosecond Laser Treatment for Acquired Bilateral Nevus of Ota–like Macules

This report of cases describes the use of picosecond laser to treat acquired bilateral nevus of Ota–like macules.

https://ift.tt/2x8aBQK

Use of propofol for prevention of post-delivery nausea during cesarean section: a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial

Abstract

Purpose

Nausea and vomiting are common, undesirable symptoms during cesarean section. We conducted this study to assess the antiemetic properties of propofol for the prevention and immediate treatment of post-delivery nausea and vomiting during cesarean section under combined spinal–epidural anesthesia.

Methods

Eighty women undergoing elective cesarean delivery under combined spinal–epidural anesthesia were randomized to receive either propofol at a plasma concentration of 1000 ng/mL or normal saline immediately after clamping of the umbilical cord. The incidence of post-delivery nausea and vomiting, patients requiring rescue antiemetic, bispectral index, sedation score, and the incidence of hypotension were assessed intraoperatively. Satisfaction and neonatal behavioral neurological assessments were evaluated postoperatively.

Results

The incidence of nausea was significantly lower in the propofol group compared to the placebo group (25% versus 60%, P < 0.001). The incidence of retching and vomiting showed no significant difference between the two groups. Propofol 20 mg as a rescue antiemetic was significantly effective in both the groups. Satisfaction level of patients and obstetricians in the propofol group was higher than in the placebo group. There was no statistical difference in the incidence of hypotension between the two groups both pre- and post-delivery. There was no difference in postoperative neonatal behavioral neurological assessment between groups.

Conclusion

Propofol at a plasma concentration of 1000 ng/mL significantly reduced the incidence of post-delivery nausea compared to placebo, but had no effect on reducing retching or vomiting episodes during cesarean section.



https://ift.tt/2MonUBq

Oncological outcomes of early glottic carcinoma treated with transoral robotic surgery

Publication date: Available online 11 September 2018

Source: Auris Nasus Larynx

Author(s): Fatma Tulin Kayhan, Arzu Karaman Koc, Ibrahim Erdim

Abstract
Objective

Although glottic level is an off-label use of da Vinci system, the feasibility and early-term outcomes of transoral robotic surgery (TORS) for the treatment of early-stage (Tis, T1, T2) glottic carcinoma have been documented. But little is known about the oncological outcomes. We investigated the oncological outcomes of TORS in patients followed at least three years and mean follow-up time was over five years.

Methods

We retrospectively investigated patients with early glottic carcinoma (Tis, T1, T2) who underwent TORS cordectomy in a tertiary hospital between January 2010 and June 2018.

Results

Forty-eight patients were enrolled in the study. Mean follow-up time was 65.6 ± 16.6 months. Only one patient died and overall survival rate was found 97.9%. Local recurrence occurred in five patients and disease free survival rate was found 89.6%. Anterior commissure involvement was occurred in 6 (12.5%) patients and local recurrence was seen two of them (33.3%). Synechia complication was occurred in 8 (16.7%) patients and local recurrence was seen three of them (36.7%). Although local recurrence rate was high in both anterior commissure involvement and synechia, only synechia reached to statistical significance for local recurrence (p: 0.027). The recurrences of four patients were treated with radiation therapy (RT) and the remaining one patient underwent total laryngectomy. Laryngeal preservation rate was found 97.9%.

Conclusion

Our investigation of the oncological outcomes of TORS on early-stage glottic carcinoma revealed that TORS has similar results when compared with transoral laser microsurgery and RT in terms of recurrence, laryngeal preservation and survival rates. Synechia is also a cautionary complication for recurrence and must be followed closely. We expect that TORS usage will be wider if robotic technology works on innovative developments oriented to glottic area.



https://ift.tt/2CL2eQx

Calu-3 epithelial cells exhibit different immune and epithelial barrier responses from freshly isolated primary nasal epithelial cells in vitro

Epithelial cell lines are often used to evaluate the effect of exogenous/endogenous stimuli on epithelial barrier function and innate immune responses in allergic airway diseases, without clear view on differe...

https://ift.tt/2CPA7zB

Extracellular vesicles in cancer immune responses: roles of purinergic receptors

Abstract

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are nano- to micro-scale membrane-enclosed vesicles that are released from presumably all cell types. Tumor cells and immune cells are prodigious generators of EVs often with competing phenotypes in terms of immune suppression versus immune stimulation. Purinergic receptors, proteins that bind diverse purine nucleotides and nucleosides (ATP, ADP, AMP, adenosine), are widely expressed across tissues and cell types, and are prominent players in immune and tumor cell nucleotide metabolism. The effects of purinergic receptor stimulation or agonism tend to produce inflammatory responses that may aid immune stimulation but may also provoke various immune suppression mechanisms, particularly in the tumor microenvironment. EVs released by cells following receptor stimulation are frequently pro-inflammatory, but often also pro-thrombolytic; these EVs may generate an environment that favors tumor progression at the cost of an effective immune response. Purinergic signaling pathways are becoming more recognized as valuable targets in various therapeutic scenarios, including cancer. It is possible that some of those clinically relevant compounds might also impact EV secretion and/or phenotype, which would hopefully capitalize on the immune stimulatory properties of purinergic signaling while minimizing the immune suppressive consequences. This review covers a relatively understudied area in EV biology, but even so, focuses almost exclusively on the purinergic receptors in a very limited capacity. There is much more to evaluate and incorporate into our understanding of extracellular nucleotides in EV biology, and we hope this work prompts further discovery.



https://ift.tt/2OeXGTA

Picket-fences in the plasma membrane: functions in immune cells and phagocytosis

Abstract

Recent studies of molecular mobility in the plasma membrane have revealed that diffusion is restricted by cytoskeletal networks or fences. Transmembrane protein "pickets" that reversibly associate with the membrane-associated skeleton and with the pericellular coat impede the movement of unattached bystander molecules. While membrane picket-fences were originally described as barriers to free diffusion in more passive cell types such as fibroblasts, they have particularly important functions in the more dynamic immune cells. In phagocytes, such fences curtail spontaneous activation and their disassembly facilitates stimulation by target particles, fostering receptor clustering and the exclusion of phosphatases from the phagocytic cup. In this review, we describe the nature of the cellular cytoskeleton and of the exoskeleton created by the pericellular coat, their association with transmembrane pickets, and the modulation of molecular mobility during phagocytosis.



https://ift.tt/2N62q1n

Atypical case of mucous membrane pemphigoid in a 26-year-old man

A 26-year-old Caucasian man with no previous history of chemical injury presenting with an inability to open his right eye was investigated for mucous membrane pemphigoid and treated. Examination was notable for symblepharon of the right eye and impetigo-like lesions on the face and neck. A biopsy with immunohistochemical analysis was significant for linear deposits of C3 and immunoglobulin G at the level of the epithelial basement membrane, confirming the diagnosis of mucous membrane pemphigoid. Although mucous membrane pemphigoid classically presents bilaterally in women in the sixth and seventh decades of life, our patient was a young man with unilateral cicatrising conjunctivitis who may have been easily misdiagnosed without a high index of suspicion. A biopsy is required in cases of cicatrising conjunctivitis so that even atypical cases such as the one presented herein can be appropriately managed.



https://ift.tt/2MoAgtw

Hit by the wave: a case of painful Horners and intramural haematoma of the carotid

Carotid artery dissection from rupture of the vasa vasorum is under-recognised. We report the case of a 60-year-old woman presenting to our hospital with a 2-week history of right-sided headache, neck pain, unequal pupils and ptosis after being hit by a wave on the beach. She was diagnosed with painful Horner's syndrome. MR angiogram revealed dissection of the right internal carotid artery with an intramural haematoma without an intimal flap. A diagnosis of carotid artery dissection from rupture of the vasa vasorum was made. Initial antithrombotic (aspirin and clexane) were stopped as she was deemed a low stroke risk with no signs of ischaemia on MR brain. Her clinical course was uneventful with resolution of the intramural haematoma seen on repeat MR angiogram.



https://ift.tt/2p0J0g7

Acute gastric volvulus presenting as a pseudo cardiac tamponade

Description 

Gastric volvulus is defined as rotation of the stomach or part of the stomach by more than 180°, creating a closed loop obstruction. Typically, its clinical presentation includes abdominal pain, distension, nausea and vomiting. Diagnosis requires a high suspicion index as it can be easily misdiagnosed with other abdominal problems such as stomach distension or subocclusive syndrome. CT scan has proven to be both highly sensitive and specific when differentiating these processes.1

A woman in their early 80s with no relevant medical background presented at out hospital with nausea and progressive dyspnoea for 3 days. She did not mention chest pain, cough, fever or other symptoms. Physical examination revealed tachycardia (122 bpm), tachypnoea (35 bpm), low arterial pressure (90/67 mm Hg), diminished heart sounds, jugular ingurgitation and basal left hypophonesis. Chest radiography (figure 1) showed massive hiatal hernia and urgent tomography (figure 2) confirmed...



https://ift.tt/2MlQl2R

Enterolithiasis in posterior urethral diverticulum: an uncommon complication following surgery for anorectal malformation

Description 

A posterior urethral diverticulum (PUD) may be formed when a part of the terminal rectal stump is left attached to the posterior urethra during fistula ligation in surgery for anorectal malformation (ARM).

A 13-year-old boy presented with the complaints of burning micturition, postvoid dribbling and vague pain in the left lower abdomen for the last 4 months. The child had high ARM and underwent all three stages of surgery (colostomy, transabdominal pull-through procedure and colostomy closure) elsewhere. On evaluation, the plain X-ray pelvis showed huge, multiple radio-opaque shadows in the region of the bladder (figure 1A). On an ultrasound, these acoustic shadows caused by the stones appeared to be posterior to the bladder and could not be appreciated well in full bladder state. A CT scan further confirmed these radio-opaque shadows to be posterior, but not within the urinary bladder and anterior to the rectum (figure...



https://ift.tt/2p0sWuL

Anaplastic large cell lymphoma in a pregnant Filipino woman successfully treated with prepartum and postpartum chemotherapy

Diagnosis of a malignancy during pregnancy presents a dilemma regarding the work-up and treatment of the patient. This report presents a 42-year-old woman on her 23rd week of pregnancy with multiple enlarging fungating violaceous skin masses. Biopsy of the dominant mass revealed anaplastic large cell lymphoma. Due to the progressive enlargement and increase in number of the masses, the patient was given two cycles of chemotherapy (doxorubicin, vincristine, cyclophosphamide and prednisone) before delivering a live baby boy via spontaneous vaginal delivery, Apgar 9.9, at 37 4/7 weeks. After delivery, she completed four more cycles of treatment. A full-body positron emission tomography scan done 2 months after the last chemotherapy showed no evidence of disease. The patient is doing well with no evidence of disease 9 months after treatment. Her baby is thriving and has no gross deformities and no developmental delays.



https://ift.tt/2MpImBQ

Bladder calculi causing irreducible urogenital prolapse

Over 200 000 surgeries for vaginal prolapse are done annually, and these are rarely urgent. However, when the rare event of bladder stones causes incarcerated procidentia, surgical intervention should not be delayed, due to unrelenting pain and end-organs effects. We present such a case below. A 71-year-old woman presents to our department with massive uterovaginal and rectal procidentia. This massive prolapse was found to be irreducible due to numerous dahllite stones in the bladder, and was causing obstructive uropathy with left-sided hydronephrosis. A multidisciplinary approach was necessary to surgically correct the prolapse and implement complete removal of all the stones. The simultaneous occurrence of uterovaginal prolapse, rectal prolapse and urolithiasis is uncommon. Stone formation is a result of chronically infected urine presenting a nidus for stone formation. This presentation has occurred very rarely over the last 70 years of the world's literature. Surgical cures can be achieved by either the vaginal or abdominal routes but should be treated emergently to alleviate pain, prevent renal impairment from obstructive uropathy and decrease infectious morbidity.



https://ift.tt/2oZu7dQ

Invasive mediastinal aspergillosis presenting as superior vena cava syndrome in an immunocompetent patient

Invasive aspergillosis (IA) is a disease of the immunocompromised with a predilection for the lungs, although dissemination to all organs is possible. Its diagnosis remains a challenge due to the absence of specific clinical manifestations and laboratory findings. In most cases, diagnosis is eventually made via invasive methods. It carries with it a high mortality due to late diagnosis and delayed treatment. Here, we report a fascinating case of a young, otherwise healthy, immunocompetent patient that presented to us with superior vena cava syndrome and a mediastinal mass. It was anticipated that a malignancy would be found on further workup but, in fact, what was eventually discovered was a case of IA. Our report accentuates the significance of including IA as a differential while diagnosing a mediastinal mass in an immunocompetent host as patient outcome is determined by timely diagnosis and treatment.



https://ift.tt/2MpIcKK

Emphysematous pyelonephritis: outcomes of conservative management and literature review

Emphysematous pyelonephritis (EPN) is a rare, necrotising infection of the renal parenchyma, predominantly associated with Escherichia coli infection and unless promptly recognised and dealt with, it carries a poor prognosis. The current treatment is one of antimicrobial therapies together with nephrectomy in a majority of patients. We report an elderly man with multiple comorbidities with a diagnosis of EPN whose condition improved with antimicrobial and supportive therapy, and no surgical intervention was required.



https://ift.tt/2p4nczX

Severe subcutaneous emphysema in a term neonate

Description 

The baby was born by elective caesarean section because of breech presentation, at 38+6 weeks of gestation with an Apgar score of 9 at 1 min, 9 at 5 min and a birth weight of 4.02 kg. She was noted to be grunting at 20 min of age and had O2 saturations of 55% in air and therefore commenced on O2 by face mask initially, followed by continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) at a pressure of 5 cm as O2 requirements remained high (up to 60%). CPAP pressure did not need to be increased further as the O2 requirement came down to 40% and remained between 30% and 40% for the subsequent 24 hours. Initial capillary blood gas at 2 hours of age (on CPAP 5 cm, FiO2 0.35) showed: pH 7.28; pCO2 7.05; pO2 7.15 and BE –2. Repeat capillary blood gas at 4 hours (on CPAP 5 cm, FiO2 0.35) showed: pH 7.30; pCO2 6.95; pO2...



https://ift.tt/2MlPxel

When duality of renal duplexity and duplicity coexists

Description 

A 25-year-old male patient presented with complaints of right flank pain and recurrent episodes of urinary tract infections (UTIs) since childhood.

He had no history of fever, haematuria, urinary incontinence or voiding lower urinary tract symptoms. Per abdominal examination was unremarkable, and there was no renal tenderness.

His complete blood haemogram and renal function tests were normal. On evaluation with ultrasound Kidney Ureter Bladder (KUB) and CT urography, there was presence of bilateral duplex kidneys with bilateral duplication of ureter with poorly functioning upper pole moiety of right duplex kidney with gross hydronephrosis and thinned out renal cortex with normal lower pole as shown in figure 1.

Figure 1

Three-dimensional reconstructed CT urography film showing bilateral duplex kidney with duplicated ureters with poorly functioning upper pole of right kidney.

Tc99m-diethylenetriaminepentacetate scan was done which confirmed non-functioning upper pole moiety of right...



https://ift.tt/2p0Z3KL

Severe disease due to CCDC40 gene variants and the perils of late diagnosis in primary ciliary dyskinesia

Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) can manifest in the neonatal period with severe respiratory distress. We describe a child with PCD who presented at term with severe neonatal respiratory distress, persistent right upper lobe collapse and failure to thrive who underwent lobectomy prior to the diagnosis of PCD at the age of 3 years. This case report illustrates the severe spectrum of lung disease associated with coiled-coil domain containing protein 40 (CCDC40) gene variants in patients with PCD.



https://ift.tt/2MlPgYR

Status dystonicus: a diagnosis delayed

Status dystonicus, also known as the dystonic storm or dystonic crisis, is rare but may prove fatal due to respiratory and bulbar complications. In adults, the condition is rare and possibly under-reported. The lack of awareness of this condition among emergency and acute physicians may lead to an incorrect or delayed diagnosis, which should be avoided. We report a case of a 23-year-old man with athetoid cerebral palsy who presented to a district general hospital with uncontrolled dystonic movements, which were diagnosed as status dystonicus. This was successfully treated with intravenous clonidine, with full recovery returning to baseline functional state.



https://ift.tt/2CN4JSr

Acute Invasive Fungal Rhinosinusitis: Frozen Section Histomorphology and Diagnosis with PAS Stain

Abstract

Acute invasive fungal rhinosinusitis (AIFRS) is a fulminant infection in immunocompromised patients requiring rapid diagnosis (DX), frequently made on frozen section (FS) of sinonasal biopsies, followed by prompt surgical debridement. However, FS interpretation is often difficult and DX sometimes not possible. In this study we sought to characterize reasons for misinterpretation and methods to improve diagnostic accuracy. The FS slides from 271 biopsies of suspected AIFRS in a 16-year period were reviewed and the morphologic features evaluated for their utility in DX. Recurring specific patterns of necrosis were identified, which to our knowledge have not been described in the literature. Although they provide strong evidence for AIFRS, identifying fungus consistently in necrotic tissue is essential for DX. Clues to identifying fungus and pitfalls in misidentification were identified, but even with expert knowledge of these, a gap in accurate DX remained. The key to FS DX of AIFRS is to improve fungus identification in necrotic tissues. Methods had been sought in the past to stain fungus at FS without consistent success. The Periodic Acid Schiff's Reaction for Fungi was modified by our histopathology department for use on frozen tissue (PASF-fs) resulting in effective staining of the fungus. It stained fungus on all 62 positive slides when applied retrospectively over hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained FSs and used prospectively at FS for DX. Although knowledge of histologic morphology on FS is important, the crucial value of this study is the novel use of PASF-fs to identify fungus in the DX of AIFRS.



https://ift.tt/2Og1TGZ

Acute Invasive Fungal Rhinosinusitis: Frozen Section Histomorphology and Diagnosis with PAS Stain

Abstract

Acute invasive fungal rhinosinusitis (AIFRS) is a fulminant infection in immunocompromised patients requiring rapid diagnosis (DX), frequently made on frozen section (FS) of sinonasal biopsies, followed by prompt surgical debridement. However, FS interpretation is often difficult and DX sometimes not possible. In this study we sought to characterize reasons for misinterpretation and methods to improve diagnostic accuracy. The FS slides from 271 biopsies of suspected AIFRS in a 16-year period were reviewed and the morphologic features evaluated for their utility in DX. Recurring specific patterns of necrosis were identified, which to our knowledge have not been described in the literature. Although they provide strong evidence for AIFRS, identifying fungus consistently in necrotic tissue is essential for DX. Clues to identifying fungus and pitfalls in misidentification were identified, but even with expert knowledge of these, a gap in accurate DX remained. The key to FS DX of AIFRS is to improve fungus identification in necrotic tissues. Methods had been sought in the past to stain fungus at FS without consistent success. The Periodic Acid Schiff's Reaction for Fungi was modified by our histopathology department for use on frozen tissue (PASF-fs) resulting in effective staining of the fungus. It stained fungus on all 62 positive slides when applied retrospectively over hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained FSs and used prospectively at FS for DX. Although knowledge of histologic morphology on FS is important, the crucial value of this study is the novel use of PASF-fs to identify fungus in the DX of AIFRS.



https://ift.tt/2Og1TGZ

Mentalizing and depression

Luyten, P; Lemma, A; Target, M; (2019) Mentalizing and depression. In: Bateman, A and Fonagy, P, (eds.) Handbook of mentalizing in mental health practice. American Psychiatric Association Publishing: Washington DC, USA. (In press).

https://ift.tt/2MrnY3k

Unravelling the stratigraphy and sedimentation history of the uppermost Cretaceous to Eocene sediments of the Kuching Zone in West Sarawak (Malaysia), Borneo

Breitfeld, HT; Hall, R; Galin, T; BouDagher-Fadel, MK; (2018) Unravelling the stratigraphy and sedimentation history of the uppermost Cretaceous to Eocene sediments of the Kuching Zone in West Sarawak (Malaysia), Borneo. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences , 160 pp. 200-223. 10.1016/j.jseaes.2018.04.029 .

https://ift.tt/2p8cWqN

Reduced Cancer Incidence in Huntington's Disease: Analysis in the Registry Study

McNulty, P; Pilcher, R; Ramesh, R; Necuiniate, R; Hughes, A; Farewell, D; Holmans, P; ... Hyppönen, H; + view all McNulty, P; Pilcher, R; Ramesh, R; Necuiniate, R; Hughes, A; Farewell, D; Holmans, P; Jones, L; Bonelli, RM; Hecht, K; Herranhof, B; Holl, A; Kapfhammer, HP; Koppitz, M; Lilek, S; Magnet, M; Müller, N; Otti, D; Painold, A; Reisinger, K; Scheibl, M; Schöggl, H; Ullah, J; Braunwarth, EM; Brugger, F; Buratti, L; Hametner, EM; Hepperger, C; Holas, C; Hotter, A; Hussl, A; Larcher, B; Mahlknecht, P; Müller, C; Pinter, B; Poewe, W; Reiter, EM; Seppi, K; Sprenger, F; Wenning, G; Ladurner, G; Lilek, S; Sinadinosa, D; Staffen, W; Walleczek, AM; Constant, E; Gillardin, AF; Léonard, MC; Verellen-Dumoulin, C; Van De Wyngaerde, F; Dupuis, M; Minet, C; Ribaï, P; Van Paemel, D; Boogaerts, A; Vandenberghe, W; Van Reijen, D; Kaiserova, M; Šenkárová, Z; Klempíř, J; Majerová, V; Roth, J; Madsen, LH; Møller, AT; Hjermind, L; Jacobsen, O; Lindquist, S; Nielsen, J; Regeur, L; Stockholm, J; Larsen, IU; Vangsted-Hansen, C; Vinther-Jensen, T; Lolk, A; Lundsgaard, M; Wermuth, L; Andersson, C; Nyberg, C; Sundblom, J; Peippo, M; Sipponen, M; Hartikainen, P; Ollokainen, M; Åman, J; Ignatius, J; Kärppä, M; Mustonen, A; Kajula, O; Jääskalainen, O; Moilanen, J; Santala, M; Eklund, P; Hiivola, H; Hyppönen, H; - view fewer (2018) Reduced Cancer Incidence in Huntington's Disease: Analysis in the Registry Study. Journal of Huntington's Disease , 7 (3) pp. 209-222. 10.3233/JHD-170263 . Green open access

https://ift.tt/2MoijuM

Mentalizing and trauma

Luyten, P; Fonagy, P; (2019) Mentalizing and trauma. In: Bateman, A and Fonagy, P, (eds.) Handbook of mentalizing in mental health practice. American Psychiatric Association Publishing: Washington DC, USA. (In press).

https://ift.tt/2p16TnC

How Robust Are Cross‐Country Comparisons of PISA Scores to the Scaling Model Used?

Jerrim, J; Parker, P; Choi, A; Chmielewski, AK; Sälzer, Ch; Shure, N; (2018) How Robust Are Cross‐Country Comparisons of PISA Scores to the Scaling Model Used? Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice 10.1111/emip.12211 . (In press).

https://ift.tt/2MnosYh

A Phase I dose-escalation study of ATR inhibitor monotherapy with AZD6738 in advanced solid tumors (PATRIOT Part A)

Dillon, MT; Espinasse, A; Ellis, S; Mohammed, K; Grove, LG; McLellan, L; Smith, SA; ... Harrington, KJ; + view all Dillon, MT; Espinasse, A; Ellis, S; Mohammed, K; Grove, LG; McLellan, L; Smith, SA; Ross, G; Adeleke, S; Woo, K; Josephides, E; Spicer, JF; Forster, MD; Harrington, KJ; - view fewer (2017) A Phase I dose-escalation study of ATR inhibitor monotherapy with AZD6738 in advanced solid tumors (PATRIOT Part A). Presented at: Annual Meeting of the American-Association-for-Cancer-Research (AACR), Washington, DC. Green open access

https://ift.tt/2oYO2tr

Mentalization-based creative arts therapies

Havsteen-Franklin, D; (2019) Mentalization-based creative arts therapies. In: Bateman, A and Fonagy, P, (eds.) Handbook of mentalizing in mental health practice. American Psychiatric Association Publishing: Washington DC, USA. (In press).

https://ift.tt/2MqKWb7

Functional Mapping of Quantitative Trait Loci (QTLs) Associated With Plant Performance in a Wheat MAGIC Mapping Population

Camargo, AV; Mackay, I; Mott, R; Han, J; Doonan, JH; Askew, K; Corke, F; ... Bentley, AR; + view all Camargo, AV; Mackay, I; Mott, R; Han, J; Doonan, JH; Askew, K; Corke, F; Williams, K; Bentley, AR; - view fewer (2018) Functional Mapping of Quantitative Trait Loci (QTLs) Associated With Plant Performance in a Wheat MAGIC Mapping Population. Frontiers in Plant Science , 9 , Article 887. 10.3389/fpls.2018.00887 . Green open access

https://ift.tt/2oYNXG9

The Phoenix Stream: A Cold Stream in the Southern Hemisphere

Balbinot, E; Yanny, B; Li, TS; Santiago, B; Marshall, JL; Finley, DA; Pieres, A; ... Walker, AR; + view all Balbinot, E; Yanny, B; Li, TS; Santiago, B; Marshall, JL; Finley, DA; Pieres, A; Abbott, TMC; Abdalla, FB; Allam, S; Benoit-Levy, A; Bernstein, GM; Bertin, E; Brooks, D; Burke, DL; Rosell, AC; Kind, MC; Carretero, J; Cunha, CE; Da Costa, LN; DePoy, DL; Desai, S; Diehl, HT; Doel, P; Estrada, J; Flaugher, B; Frieman, J; Gerdes, DW; Gruen, D; Gruendl, RA; Honscheid, K; James, DJ; Kuehn, K; Kuropatkin, N; Lahav, O; March, M; Martini, P; Miquel, R; Nichol, RC; Ogando, R; Romer, AK; Sanchez, E; Schubnell, M; Sevilla-Noarbe, I; Smith, RC; Soares-Santos, M; Sobreira, F; Suchyta, E; Tarle, G; Thomas, D; Tucker, D; Walker, AR; - view fewer (2016) The Phoenix Stream: A Cold Stream in the Southern Hemisphere. The Astrophysical Journal , 820 (1) , Article 58. 10.3847/0004-637X/820/1/58 . Green open access

https://ift.tt/2MrnASq

RanBP1 Couples Nuclear Export and Golgi Regulation through LKB1 to Promote Cortical Neuron Polarity

Mencarelli, C; Nitarska, J; Kroecher, T; Ferraro, F; Massey, K; Riccio, A; Pichaud, F; (2018) RanBP1 Couples Nuclear Export and Golgi Regulation through LKB1 to Promote Cortical Neuron Polarity. Cell Reports , 24 (10) 2529-2539.e4. 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.07.107 . Green open access

https://ift.tt/2p36LE0

Mentalizing and therapeutic models

Fonagy, P; Campbell, C; Allison, E; (2019) Mentalizing and therapeutic models. In: Bateman, A and Fonagy, P, (eds.) Handbook of mentalizing in mental health practice. American Psychiatric Association Publishing: Washington DC, USA. (In press).

https://ift.tt/2Mp2Smh

A Comparison of Heritability Estimates by Classical Twin Modeling and Based on Genome-Wide Genetic Relatedness for Cardiac Conduction Traits

Nolte, IM; Jansweijer, JA; Riese, H; Asselbergs, FW; van der Harst, P; Spector, TD; Pinto, YM; ... Jamshidi, Y; + view all Nolte, IM; Jansweijer, JA; Riese, H; Asselbergs, FW; van der Harst, P; Spector, TD; Pinto, YM; Snieder, H; Jamshidi, Y; - view fewer (2017) A Comparison of Heritability Estimates by Classical Twin Modeling and Based on Genome-Wide Genetic Relatedness for Cardiac Conduction Traits. Twin Research and Human Genetics , 20 (6) pp. 489-498. 10.1017/thg.2017.55 . Green open access

https://ift.tt/2p1eTF7

Curvature variation controls particle aggregation on fluid vesicles

Vahid, A; Saric, A; Idema, T; (2017) Curvature variation controls particle aggregation on fluid vesicles. Soft Matter , 13 (28) pp. 4924-4930. 10.1039/c7sm00433h . Green open access

https://ift.tt/2MkkUpO

Recovery of lipids from spent coffee grounds for use as a biofuel

Efthymiopoulos, Ioannis; (2018) Recovery of lipids from spent coffee grounds for use as a biofuel. Doctoral thesis (Ph.D), UCL (University College London). Green open access

https://ift.tt/2p2GWUW

Introduction

Fonagy, P; Bateman, A; (2019) Introduction. In: Bateman, A and Fonagy, P, (eds.) Handbook of mentalizing in mental health practice. American Psychiatric Association Publishing: Washington DC, USA. (In press).

https://ift.tt/2MrnqKO

Galaxies in X-ray Selected Clusters and Groups in Dark Energy Survey Data. I. Stellar Mass Growth of Bright Central Galaxies Since z ~ 1.2

Zhang, Y; Miller, C; McKay, T; Rooney, P; Evrard, AE; Romer, AK; Perfecto, R; ... da Costa, LN; + view all Zhang, Y; Miller, C; McKay, T; Rooney, P; Evrard, AE; Romer, AK; Perfecto, R; Song, J; Desai, S; Mohr, J; Wilcox, H; Bermeo-Hernandez, A; Jeltema, T; Hollowood, D; Bacon, D; Capozzi, D; Collins, C; Das, R; Gerdes, D; Hennig, C; Hilton, M; Hoyle, B; Kay, S; Liddle, A; Mann, RG; Mehrtens, N; Nichol, RC; Papovich, C; Sahlen, M; Soares-Santos, M; Stott, J; Viana, PT; Abbott, T; Abdalla, FB; Banerji, M; Bauer, AH; Benoit-Levy, A; Bertin, E; Brooks, D; Buckley-Geer, E; Burke, DL; Rosell, AC; Castander, FJ; Diehl, HT; Doel, P; Cunha, CE; Eifler, TF; Fausti Neto, A; Fernandez, E; Flaugher, B; Fosalba, P; Frieman, J; Gaztanaga, E; Gruen, D; Gruendl, RA; Honscheid, K; James, D; Kuehn, K; Kuropatkin, N; Lahav, O; Maia, MAG; Makler, M; Marshall, JL; Martini, P; Miquel, R; Ogando, R; Plazas, AA; Roodman, A; Rykoff, ES; Sako, M; Sanchez, E; Scarpine, V; Schubnell, M; Sevilla, I; Smith, RC; Sobreira, F; Suchyta, E; Swanson, MEC; Tarle, G; Thaler, J; Tucker, D; Vikram, V; da Costa, LN; - view fewer (2016) Galaxies in X-ray Selected Clusters and Groups in Dark Energy Survey Data. I. Stellar Mass Growth of Bright Central Galaxies Since z ~ 1.2. The Astrophysical Journal , 816 (2) , Article 98. 10.3847/0004-637X/816/2/98 . Green open access

https://ift.tt/2p1eQJr

Cooperation and pragmatic inferences

Dulcinati, Giulio; (2018) Cooperation and pragmatic inferences. Doctoral thesis (Ph.D), UCL (University College London). Green open access

https://ift.tt/2Mrn8DI

Importance of Surface Sediments for Reliable 210Pb Dating

Yang, H; Lencioni, L; Patmore, I; (2018) Importance of Surface Sediments for Reliable 210Pb Dating. Revista Internacional de Contaminacion Ambiental , 34 (In press).

https://ift.tt/2p3efXW

Validation of experimental approaches in Forensic Science: a case study of the tissue fragments created during an explosive event

DuBois, Erin Kathleen; (2018) Validation of experimental approaches in Forensic Science: a case study of the tissue fragments created during an explosive event. Doctoral thesis (Ph.D), UCL (University College London). Green open access

https://ift.tt/2MrmTIO

Mentalizing, resilience, and epistemic trust

Fonagy, P; Allison, E; Campbell, C; (2019) Mentalizing, resilience, and epistemic trust. In: Bateman, A and Fonagy, P, (eds.) Handbook of mentalizing in mental health practice. American Psychiatric Association Publishing: Washington DC, USA. (In press).

https://ift.tt/2p1rWql

Factors determining parenting stress in mothers of children with atopic dermatitis

Publication date: Available online 11 September 2018

Source: Allergology International

Author(s): Chikae Yamaguchi, Takeshi Ebara, Rikuya Hosokawa, Masaki Futamura, Yukihiro Ohya, Midori Asano

Abstract
Background

Atopic dermatitis (AD) influences a child's emotional and social well-being, as well as his or her physical health. The influence of AD on the daily lives of parents and caregivers has also been documented. This study examined how parenting stress is affected by demographic background, characteristics of children's AD, and their family systems.

Methods

The participants were mothers of children, aged 2–6 years old, who had been diagnosed with AD. The predictive power of a model of parenting stress was examined using multiple regression analysis (stepwise), with parenting stress (PSI-SF) as the dependent variable, and children's demographics, including characteristics of AD; parents' demographics; QoL of families of children with AD (JCMV-CADIS); and family functioning (FAI) as independent variables. We handled missing values using a multiple imputation method.

Results

The pooled coefficients obtained from the multiple regression analysis after multiple imputation indicated that "family cohesion," "family system flexibility," "emotions related to social factors" and "occupation of mother" determined parenting stress. Lower family cohesion and family system flexibility predicted higher parenting stress. The high impact of "emotions related to social factors" on families' QoL predicted higher parenting stress. Full-time work by mothers predicted lower parenting stress.

Conclusions

The current results reveal that "family cohesion," "family system flexibility," "emotions related to social factors" and "full-time work by mothers" predicted parenting stress of mothers who had children with AD.



https://ift.tt/2CLFtf6

An unusual case of intestinal obstruction due to internal herniation from adhesions between two appendices epiploicae

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Abstract
Internal hernia of the small bowel is a rare finding especially in previously non-operated abdomen. Such a hernia occurring due to involvement of appendices epiploicae is an even rare instance with less than five reported cases in the literature. We encountered a 75-year-old male who had internal herniation of small bowel through an aperture created by adhesion between two appendices epiploicae in a previously virgin abdomen. Laparotomy and division of adhesion was performed to manage him successfully. Even in a virgin abdomen, a high index of suspicion along with early intervention is the key to reduction in mortality and morbidity in cases intestinal obstruction.

https://ift.tt/2OemZFE

Cecal volvulus caused by internal herniation after roux-en-y gastric bypass surgery

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Abstract
Cecal volvulus is the rotation of a mobile cecum resulting in a large bowel obstruction. We present the case of a 55-year-old female who underwent a roux-en-y gastric bypass in 2003 and presented to the emergency department with worsening abdominal pain, distention and obstipation. Roentgenogram demonstrated a 14 cm colon suggestive of sigmoid volvulus, but CT scan showed rectal contrast abruptly ending in the distal transverse colon, mesenteric swirling and a distended cecum, consistent with cecal, rather than sigmoid, volvulus. Upon surgical exploration the majority of the small bowel, cecum and ascending colon had herniated through the transverse mesocolon defect created during her prior gastric bypass. The bowel was reduced through the mesenteric defect, and an ileocecectomy was performed. This is, to our knowledge, the first reported case of cecal volvulus caused by an internal hernia through a mesocolon defect created during a prior roux-en-y gastric bypass operation.

https://ift.tt/2p0FQsD

A challenging abdomino-scrotal hydrocele—successful resolution with the help of interventional radiology guided sclerosis

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Abstract
Abdomino-scrotal hydrocele is a rare condition that presents in male infants. There is no consensus in the literature over treatment. We present the case of a 4-year-old boy with what was thought to be a straight forward congenital hydrocele that persisted despite ligation of a patent processus vaginalis and a Jaboulay procedure. A subsequent Magnetic Resonance Imaging scan identified a large intra-abdominal component connecting to the scrotum. Laparoscopic excision of the intra-abdominal component was performed successfully, but the hydrocele persisted. The hydrocele resolved without complication following two episodes of image intensifier guided sclerotherapy carried out by the interventional radiology team.

https://ift.tt/2OfHHoj

Reference method for digital surface measurement of target lesions in vitiligo: a comparative analysis

British Journal of Dermatology, Volume 0, Issue ja, -Not available-.


https://ift.tt/2Qu1jqy

Diagnostic Accuracy of Content Based Dermatoscopic Image Retrieval with Deep Classification Features

British Journal of Dermatology, Volume 0, Issue ja, -Not available-.


https://ift.tt/2Mpmuqf

Acute Invasive Fungal Rhinosinusitis: Frozen Section Histomorphology and Diagnosis with PAS Stain

Abstract

Acute invasive fungal rhinosinusitis (AIFRS) is a fulminant infection in immunocompromised patients requiring rapid diagnosis (DX), frequently made on frozen section (FS) of sinonasal biopsies, followed by prompt surgical debridement. However, FS interpretation is often difficult and DX sometimes not possible. In this study we sought to characterize reasons for misinterpretation and methods to improve diagnostic accuracy. The FS slides from 271 biopsies of suspected AIFRS in a 16-year period were reviewed and the morphologic features evaluated for their utility in DX. Recurring specific patterns of necrosis were identified, which to our knowledge have not been described in the literature. Although they provide strong evidence for AIFRS, identifying fungus consistently in necrotic tissue is essential for DX. Clues to identifying fungus and pitfalls in misidentification were identified, but even with expert knowledge of these, a gap in accurate DX remained. The key to FS DX of AIFRS is to improve fungus identification in necrotic tissues. Methods had been sought in the past to stain fungus at FS without consistent success. The Periodic Acid Schiff's Reaction for Fungi was modified by our histopathology department for use on frozen tissue (PASF-fs) resulting in effective staining of the fungus. It stained fungus on all 62 positive slides when applied retrospectively over hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained FSs and used prospectively at FS for DX. Although knowledge of histologic morphology on FS is important, the crucial value of this study is the novel use of PASF-fs to identify fungus in the DX of AIFRS.



https://ift.tt/2Og1TGZ

Cabozantinib in Combination With Cetuximab in Patients With Recurrent or Metastatic Head and Neck Squamous Cell Cancer

Conditions:   Head and Neck Squamous Cell Cancer;   Recurrent Head and Neck Squamous Cell Cancer;   Metastatic Head and Neck Squamous Cell Cancer
Interventions:   Drug: Cabozantinib;   Drug: Cetuximab
Sponsor:   Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Recruiting

https://ift.tt/2NIGPvL

S-1 Combined With IMRT Concurrent Chemoradiotherapy in Locally Advanced Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma

Condition:   Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma
Intervention:   Drug: S-1
Sponsor:   Fudan University
Recruiting

https://ift.tt/2x8YCBN

Xenotransplantation of Primary Cancer Samples in Zebrafish Embryos

Conditions:   Liver Cancer;   Pancreatic Cancer;   Gastric Cancer;   Esophageal Cancer;   Colo-rectal Cancer;   Gall Bladder Cancer;   Biliary Tract Cancer
Interventions:   Drug: Fluorouracil;   Drug: Lederfolin;   Drug: Oxaliplatin;   Drug: Irinotecan;   Drug: Docetaxel;   Drug: Cisplatin;   Drug: Epirubicin;   Drug: Gemcitabine;   Drug: Nab paclitaxel
Sponsors:   University of Pisa;   Azienda Ospedaliero, Universitaria Pisana
Recruiting

https://ift.tt/2NIGGIJ

Exercise and Pain Neuroscience Education for Patients With Neck Pain: Impact on Pain and Disability

Condition:   Neck Pain
Interventions:   Other: Pain neuroscience education (PNE) and traditional exercise;   Other: Pain neuroscience education (PNE) and suspension exercise
Sponsor:   Aveiro University
Not yet recruiting

https://ift.tt/2xaUsZY

Improved exposure of the hypoglossal branches during hypoglossal nerve stimulator implantation: clinical outcomes of twenty‐patients at a single institution

Clinical Otolaryngology, Volume 0, Issue ja, -Not available-.


https://ift.tt/2OeBpVY

Arytenoid asymmetry in opera singers

Publication date: Available online 11 September 2018

Source: European Annals of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Diseases

Author(s): P. Clarós, A. Clarós-Pujol, A. Clarós

Abstract
Introduction

Otolaryngologists commonly observe asymmetrical movements of the arytenoid cartilages, but few authors have described the clinical implications of this asymmetry, especially in singers.

Objectives

The aim of this study was to determine the epidemiological and clinical characteristics of arytenoid asymmetry in adduction in a group of healthy opera singers and to evaluate the impact of this asymmetry on the voice.

Patients and methods

The medical charts and laryngeal video recordings of 245 healthy opera singers were retrospectively reviewed. Arytenoid asymmetry was defined in relation to the position of the corniculate cartilages, cuneiform cartilages and aryepiglottic angle.

Results

The subjects had a mean age of 38.54 years (range: 18 to 85 years) and presented a male-to-female sex ratio of 1.02. About 5% of subjects had a history of smoking. The most common vocal symptoms were occasional dysphonia (4%), followed by vocal fatigue (2%) and pharyngeal dryness (2%). Arytenoid asymmetry was slightly more common in males (50.6%) and predominantly affected the right side (64.5%). The most common form of asymmetry was cuneiform asymmetry (37.5%), followed by aryepiglottic angle asymmetry in 33.1% of cases and corniculate asymmetry in 29.4% of cases. Mild asymmetry was observed in the majority of cases. No correlation was observed between arytenoid asymmetry and vocal symptoms.

Conclusion

Almost one out of two singers was likely to present arytenoid asymmetry in adduction. The presence of this asymmetry does not appear to be correlated with any vocal symptoms.



https://ift.tt/2OjIyEs

Proven Immunologically-Mediated Drug Hypersensitivity in Children with A History of Multiple Drug Intolerances

Publication date: Available online 12 September 2018

Source: Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology

Author(s): H. Guvenir, E. Dibek Misirlioglu, M. Toyran, E. Civelek, B. Buyuktiryaki, T. Ginis, C.N. Kocabas

Abstract
Background

Children may be referred to pediatric allergy clinics for reactions to multiple drugs. Multiple drug hypersensitivity (MDH) is defined as immunologically-mediated hypersensitivity to two or more chemically different drugs.

Objective

The aim of this study is to report the allergy work-up results of children who had a history of potential hypersensitivity reactions to two or more unrelated drugs.

Methods

This study was conducted in the Pediatric Allergy and Immunology department of our hospital. Children who described hypersensitivity reactions to two or more drugs were included and were evaluated by allergy work-up (skin and/or provocation tests) between January 2011 and July 2016.

Results

During the study period, 886 children were evaluated for a history of drug intolerance. Of these children, 73 (8.2%) had a history of drug reactions to two or more chemically different drugs. The median age of the children who had a history of reactions to two or more drugs was 7.8 (min-max: 2.5-16.4) years, and 59% (n=43) were male. Among the suspected drugs, antibiotics (65.9%) ranked first and non-steroid antiinflammatory drugs (34.1%) were the second. All 73 children were evaluated with skin and/or provocation tests with the suspected drugs, and MDH was confirmed in only two (2.7%) children.

Conclusion

Multiple drug hypersensitivity is uncommon in children. The incidence and prevalence of MDH may vary with the specific population studied. Evaluating children with a history of MDH, by performing drug hypersensitivity testing, will help avoid the morbidity associated with unnecessary drug avoidance.



https://ift.tt/2x4J7vo

Fatty Acids in Pregnancy and Risk of Allergic Sensitization and Respiratory Outcomes in Childhood

Publication date: Available online 12 September 2018

Source: Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology

Author(s): Ekaterina Maslova, Sheryl L. Rifas-Shiman, Emily Oken, Thomas AE Platts-Mills, Diane R. Gold



https://ift.tt/2x6UOAR

Granulomes cutanés à corps étrangers après embolisation artérielle de la sphère cervico-faciale : trois cas

Publication date: Available online 11 September 2018

Source: Annales de Dermatologie et de Vénéréologie

Author(s): M. Gillard, E. Archier, O. Monnet, A. Souteyrand, F. Turner, R. Gras, N. Quiles-Tsimaratos

Résumé
Introduction

La survenue de granulomes à corps étrangers au niveau facial est classiquement rapportée dans la littérature dans les suites d'injections sous-cutanées à visée esthétique. Nous décrivons pour la première fois trois cas de réactions faciales granulomateuses par migration sous-cutanée de microbilles injectées pour embolisation dans le réseau artériel cervico-facial.

Observations

Une procédure d'embolisation des artères faciales par microbilles Embogold® était réalisée chez trois patients dans le cadre d'épistaxis ou d'hémostase tumorale. Dix à 45 jours plus tard apparaissaient des nodules douloureux de l'hémiface homolatérale. Les prélèvements histologiques montraient une réaction inflammatoire avec cellules géantes et la présence de microbilles dans le tissu cutané. L'évolution était favorable spontanément dans un cas et sous colchicine dans un autre ; le troisième cas était perdu de vue.

Discussion

Nous avons observé une destruction inflammatoire des parois des vaisseaux embolisés, puis une migration des microbilles dans le tissu sous-cutané facial, entraînant une réaction granulomateuse. La survenue simultanée des trois cas, avec plusieurs opérateurs et lots de produits, est étonnante pour un produit employé depuis 10 ans sans incident antérieur. Il n'existait pas de comorbidité commune aux trois cas, et l'étude des lots de produits s'est avérée sans particularité. La coloration à l'or colloïdal de ces microparticules semble jouer un rôle pro-inflammatoire important.

Conclusion

Ces trois cas rares illustrent l'intérêt d'évoquer une réaction granulomateuse à corps étrangers devant l'apparition de lésions nodulaires de la face dans les suites d'une embolisation artérielle cervico-faciale. La colchicine paraît être une alternative thérapeutique intéressante.

Summary
Background

Foreign body granuloma is an inflammatory tissue reaction to exogenous material. Classically it appears on the face after aesthetic procedures. Herein we report for the first time three cases of facial granulomatous reactions to microbeads after arterial cervico-facial embolization.

Patients and methods

Three patients underwent embolization of the facial arteries using Embogold® microbeads in a setting of epistaxis or tumoral hemostasis. Within 10 to 45 days painful, inflammatory, subcutaneous nodules appeared on the homolateral side of the face. Histological samples showed an inflammatory response with giant cells as well as the presence of microbeads in the skin. A favorable outcome was achieved with colchicine in one patient and with surgery in another; the third patient was lost to follow-up.

Discussion

The embolizing microspheres produced a local inflammatory reaction, with destruction of the vascular wall and bead migration to facial tissue leading to a granulomatous reaction. The occurrence of three cases within a period of few weeks, with several different operators and batches of products, is surprising considering the long-standing use of the product. There was no common comorbidity in the patients and no suggestion of trauma. Retrospective analysis of the product batches was normal. Gold staining could play a role in severe inflammatory response to Embogold® particles.

Conclusion

These three cases illustrate the value of discussing potential foreign body granulomatous reaction in cases of facial nodules following cervico-facial embolization. Colchicine may offer a valuable therapeutic alternative.



https://ift.tt/2NzV2em

Cytopénies sous imiquimod topique chez deux patients traités par hydroxyurée

Publication date: Available online 11 September 2018

Source: Annales de Dermatologie et de Vénéréologie

Author(s): C. Joachim, V. Gras-Champel, J.-P. Marolleau, G. Chaby, M. Dairi, E. Carmi

Résumé
Introduction

L'imiquimod topique (Aldara®) est un traitement immunomodulateur local. Les risques de passage systémique sont minimes, des effets indésirables généraux sont rarement décrits.

Observations

Cas 1. De l'imiquimod était prescrit à raison de cinq sachets par semaine pour une maladie de Bowen de l'avant-bras chez un patient suivi pour une thrombocytémie essentielle traitée par hydroxyurée (Hydrea®). L'hémogramme était normal (230 000 plaquettes/mm3, 6000 leucocytes/mm3, dont 2200 neutrophiles). Quinze sachets par semaine étaient délivrés par la pharmacie. Deux semaines plus tard apparaissait une bicytopénie (3000 leucocytes/mm3 dont 1400 neutrophiles/, 119 000 plaquettes/mm3). L'hydroxyurée et l'imiquimod étaient suspendus, permettant une normalisation de l'hémogramme. L'hydroxyurée était repris ensuite, sans récidive de cytopénie. Il existait un antécédent d'épisode identique sous imiquimod. Cas 2. De l'imiquimod était prescrit à raison de cinq sachets par semaine pour des kératoses actiniques du vertex chez un patient suivi pour une maladie de Vaquez sous hydroxyurée. L'hémogramme était normal en dehors d'une anémie (Hb 11,5 g/dL, 160 000 plaquettes/mm3, 1100 lymphocytes/mm3). Douze sachets d'imiquimod par semaine étaient délivrés par la pharmacie. Dix jours plus tard, on observait une aggravation de l'anémie (Hb 10 g/dL), une lymphopénie (800/mm3) et une thrombopénie (115 000/mm3). L'imiquimod était suspendu, permettant un retour aux valeurs antérieures.

Discussion

La littérature rapporte des cas de lymphopénie dose-dépendante sous imiquimod per os, mais aucun pour l'Aldara®. La Base nationale de pharmacovigilance recense dix cas d'affections hématologiques où l'imiquimod serait suspect. L'hydroxyurée est pourvoyeur de cytopénies, son imputabilité seule n'est pas retenue ici, mais son rôle favorisant est vraisemblable chez ces patients atteints d'hémopathies. Nos observations mettent en évidence, au cours d'un mésusage, un possible risque hématologique de l'imiquimod, chez des patients traités par hydroxyurée, une association médicamenteuse fréquente.

Summary
Background

Aldara® is a topical immunomodulatory treatment. The risks of systemic passage are minimal. There have been rare reports of systemic adverse effects.

Patients and methods

Case 1. Five sachets weekly of imiquimod were prescribed for Bowen's disease on the forearm in a patient known to have essential thrombocytosis under Hydrea®. His CBC was normal (6000 leukocytes/mm3, 2200 PMN/mm, 230,000 platelets/mm3). Imiquimod was given in 15 sachets weekly. Fifteen day later, the patient presented bicytopenia (3000 leukocytes/mm3, 1400 PMN/mm3, 119,000 platelets/mm3). Hydroxyurea and imiquimod were suspended until normalization of CBC. Hydroxyurea was resumed without recurrence of the bicytopenia. The patient's history included an identical episode following application of imiquimod. Case 2. Five sachets weekly of imiquimod were prescribed for actinic keratosis on the scalp in a patient known to have primary polycythemia under hydroxyurea. Her CBC was normal except for anemia (Hb 11.5 g/L, 160,000 platelets/mm3, 1100 lymphocytes/mm3). Imiquimod was given in 12 sachets weekly. Ten days later, anemia increased (Hb 10 g/dL) with lymphopenia (800/mm3) and thrombocytopenia (115,000/mm3). Suspension of imiquimod resulted in normalization of the previous CBC values.

Discussion

. The literature review identified reports of dose-dependent lymphopenia under oral imiquimod but not under Aldara®. The National Pharmacovigilance Database listed 10 cases of hematological disorders most likely caused by Aldara®. Hydroxyurea may induce cytopenia, and while it was not considered the sole causative agent in this case, it is likely to have had a triggering role in these patients with blood dyscrasias. Our findings show that misuse of imiquimod carries a potential risk of hematologic abnormality in patients receiving concomitant hydroxyurea, a commonly combined drug.



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Macules hypochromiques ou achromiques multiples de l’enfant et risque de sclérose tubéreuse de Bourneville

Publication date: Available online 11 September 2018

Source: Annales de Dermatologie et de Vénéréologie

Author(s): M. Battini, E. Casassa, A. Maza, I. Dreyfus, J. Mazereeuw-Hautier

Résumé
But

Décrire dans une large cohorte pédiatrique les caractéristiques des macules hypopigmentées ou complètement dépigmentées (hypo- ou achromiques) qui n'ont pas de diagnostic évident, mais pourraient faire suspecter une sclérose tubéreuse de Bourneville (STB).

Méthodes

Il s'agit d'une étude rétrospective monocentrique réalisée entre 2010 et 2017 dans un centre de référence des maladies rares de la peau, incluant tout enfant consultant pour des macules hypo- ou achromiques multiples. Une analyse descriptive des caractéristiques des macules sans diagnostic évident était conduite, permettant de les répartir secondairement en trois groupes : STB certaine, STB infirmée, STB incertaine.

Résultats

Parmi les 3300 enfants vus pendant ces 7 années, 265 consultaient pour des macules hypo- ou achromiques, dont 18 ne présentaient pas de diagnostic évident : 7 filles et 11 garçons, d'âge médian 7,21 ans (de 4 mois à 16 ans et 7 mois). Les lésions étaient congénitales chez 7 d'entre eux. Leur nombre était variable, jusqu'à plus de 20. La forme majoritaire était celle « en feuille de sorbier », suivie de la forme ovalaire. Deux enfants étaient diagnostiqués dès l'examen clinique, 16 avaient des examens complémentaires, permettant de retenir le diagnostic de STB certaine chez 6 d'entre eux. Aucune caractéristique particulière des macules ne semblait orienter à l'examen clinique vers une STB ou des lésions isolées. Les taches café-au-lait étaient plus fréquentes dans le groupe avec STB infirmée que dans les deux autres groupes : 67 % versus 33 % et 33 %. L'atteinte neurologique était plus fréquente chez les enfants avec STB certaine ou incertaine que chez ceux avec STB infirmée (83 % et 67 % versus 11 %).

Conclusion

Aucune caractéristique des taches n'a été identifiée comme permettant à l'examen clinique d'affirmer ou infirmer une sclérose tubéreuse. La recherche d'autre signes cutanés de STB est primordiale. Les examens complémentaires augmentent l'acuité diagnostique.

Summary
Aim

To describe in a large paediatric cohort the characteristics of hypopigmented and depigmented (hypochromatic and achromic) macules with no clear diagnosis but potentially evocative of tuberous sclerosis (TS).

Patients and methods

This was a retrospective multicentre study performed between 2010 and 2017 at a reference centre for rare skin diseases; it included all children consulting for hypochromic and achromic macules. A descriptive analysis was made of the characteristics of macules with no clear diagnosis, enabling them to be classified in three secondary groups: TS certain, TS ruled out, TS uncertain.

Results

Of the 3300 children seen during this 7-year period 7,265 were consulting for hypochromic or achromic macules, with no clear diagnosis in 18 cases: 7 girls and 11 boys of median age at 7.21 years (range: 4 months to 16 years and 7 months). The lesions were congenital in 7 cases. The number of macules varied, with over 20 in some cases. The majority were in the form of ash-leaf spots, followed by the oval form. Two children were diagnosed at clinical examination, and 16 underwent it is not examinations, resulting in a diagnosis of certain ST in 6 of these cases. No particular characteristics of the macules appeared to guide the clinical examination towards ST or isolated lesions. Café-au-lait spots were more frequent in the group in which ST was ruled out than in the other two groups: 67% vs. 33% and 33%. Neurologic involvement was more common in children with certain or uncertain ST than in children in whom ST was ruled out (83% and 67% vs. 11%).

Conclusion

No identified characteristics of stains enabled the clinical examination to confirm or rule out tuberous sclerosis. Screening for acute any signs of ST is essential. Diagnostic efficacy is enhanced by additional exams.



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