Schouochoa5892
Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans (DFSP) is a rare soft tissue sarcoma. Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is a neurocutaneous syndrome that affects multiple organ systems. We present the case of a 47-year-old African American male with a two-year history of a slowly enlarging right lower back lesion. Upon workup, the 3 × 2 cm mass was biopsied confirming a diagnosis of DFSP. Selleck Polyethylenimine This was identified in concert with axillary freckling, café-au-lait spots, and pedunculated plaques evaluated with biopsy. The findings were consistent with neurofibromas, leading to a new diagnosis of NF1. The patient was definitively treated with wide local excision of the DFSP lesion without tumor recurrence over six years. DFSP has a favorable prognosis when treated with wide local excision and negative surgical margins. However, lesions may recur with inadequate margins. Although deferred in our patient, treatment with imatinib mesylate, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, may be employed in the setting of advanced disease, metastasis, positive surgical margins, or irresectable locations. Imatinib has also been used to treat NF1. Hence, we posit that the concomitant presentation of these two disease entities in our patient highlights a potentially unique treatment with imatinib mesylate. To our knowledge, this is the second reported case of both entities in the same patient.Pernio, also known as chilblains, presents as erythematous macules at sites of cold exposure, mainly in women. It is a diagnosis that is often overlooked, and when suspecting a patient with pernio, other conditions such as lupus nephritis and Raynaud's must be ruled out. A 46-year-old lady presented to the clinic with skin findings suggestive of pernio. She had erythematous macules on the dorsum of her hands, which appeared during cold weather and lasted for three weeks. She had been suffering with this condition for over 18 years and nothing has helped her condition, other than preventing cold exposure. There are limited treatment options for pernio, and current management includes using steroids, calcium-channel blockers and cold avoidance. Current research has suggested that pernio could also be linked to the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2.At baseline, solid organ transplant recipients are at an increased risk for infectious complications due to the complex immunosuppressive regimens. The available data in renal transplant patients who contract coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) demonstrates dangerously high mortality rates (33%) in those who require hospitalization and/or ICU level care. Interestingly, the data for transplant patients who do not require hospitalization shows significantly lower mortality (3%) despite being on an immunosuppressive regimen. We present the case of a young male patient with a history of renal transplant who tested positive for COVID-19; he was mildly symptomatic with cough, sinusitis, and headache, was worked up as an outpatient, and treated as an outpatient with bamlanivimab monotherapy with no adjustment to his immunosuppressive regimen. This case aims to highlight the possibility of safely managing mild cases of COVID-19 in solid organ transplant patients receiving immunosuppression as an outpatient with monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapy.Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is one of the common etiologies of acute right ventricular dysfunction (RVD) with or without right heart failure (RHF). We present a case of a 40-year-old patient who developed severe ARDS due to massive aspiration of gastric content, secondary to predisposing anatomy of his post-surgical upper gastrointestinal tract. He subsequently developed right ventricular failure. He was treated with a right ventricular mechanical device. Despite all heroic measures, the young patient lost the battle of his life.Background Cardiovascular diseases were responsible for 17% of the 460236 natural deaths in South Africa in 2015. Previous studies have reported a disproportionately higher incidence of ischemic heart disease (IHD) and its risk factors among individuals of Indian descent residing in South Africa. The aim of this study was to explore the clinical profile of patients presenting with a diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and to compare the characteristics of patients of Indian descent to those of non-Indian descent. Methods Retrospective data were derived from the medical charts of 160 consecutive patients presenting to the Ladysmith Provincial Hospital over a 44-month period with a diagnosis of ACS. Findings were described and compared. Results The mean (SD) age of study patients was 55.8 (±12.8) years. The majority of subjects were male (n=90, 56.3%) and unemployed (n=98, 62.3%). The racial distribution of the study sample comprised 103 (64.4%) Indian, 36 (22.5%) Black, and 21 (13.1%) White subjects. Compared to non-Indian subjects, a significantly higher proportion (p less then 0.05) of Indian subjects were male (64.7% vs 41.4%), cigarette smokers (52.0% vs 32.8%), had a previous history of ACS (37.3% vs 10.3%), were diabetic (33.3% vs 17.2%), and were hypertensive (58.8% vs 29.3%). Conclusion The disproportionately high frequency of ACS among the minority Indian population of Ladysmith is concerning. There is a need for rigorous public health interventions to create local awareness, encourage lifestyle modification, and thereby improve control of cardiovascular risk factors, especially among high-risk population groups.Diabetes mellitus (DM) is associated with dreadful changes in the cardiovascular and renal systems, causing increased morbidity and mortality. Sodium-glucose cotransport-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors belong to the oral hypoglycemic group of drugs believed to reduce these events by various mechanisms in DM. We performed a systematic review to determine the effectiveness of SGLT2 inhibitors in reducing cardiovascular and renal complications and address safety concerns in participants with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). We explored PubMed, PubMed Central, Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online (MEDLINE), Cochrane library, and ResearchGate for randomized controlled trials and observational studies done on the advantages of SGLT2 inhibitors in the prevention or reduction of worsening cardiovascular and renal changes in T2DM. Studies were screened for the quality assessment using the Cochrane risk-of-bias assessment tool and Newcastle-Ottawa scale. We screened 5615 articles, out of which 22 articles with d urinary tract infections but no evidence of diabetic ketoacidosis, fractures, and amputations. According to the available data, SGLT2 inhibitors can significantly prevent or reduce cardiovascular diseases and kidney abnormalities in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus with tolerable safety outcomes.A variety of skin measurements are routinely made in various clinical and research settings to evaluate the skin's biophysical properties for diagnostic and research purposes. Such measurements include transepidermal water loss (TEWL), skin pH, sebum, skin blood flow (SBF), and tissue dielectric constant (TDC) as a measure of skin water. Given the various reported circadian, diurnal, and possible ultradian and other temporal variations in skin physiological processes, it is of value to have clarity as to possible temporal variations in skin's biophysical properties associated with such processes. It was thus the purpose of this investigation to review and detail key elements of what is currently known regarding such variations and to provide a characterization that will permit informed judgments as to the sensitivity of the timing of measurements to optimize measurement reproducibility. Understanding these variations and their possible oscillatory effects on skin biophysical properties may aid physicians in pion.Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (PMR) was subordinate to different specialties. Currently, it is recognized as essential to improving healthcare. How did it originate and which events impacted it? Different events have impacted the development of PMR including war, epidemic, sport, natural disasters, and the demographic and sociocultural characteristics of each country. At present, PMR is experiencing some difficulties throughout the world; we present proposals to improve its position to bring the specialty up to the specialty podium. Accidentology, sports events, and natural disasters enrich medicine in general and PRM in particular. Indeed, all these events create disability through a participatory and integrative strategy of the patients; PMR always takes up the challenge.Respiratory viral illnesses can lead to a wide variety of neurological complications. However, only a few cases of acute transverse myelitis (ATM) following severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection have been reported in the literature. Here, we report a case of ATM following SARS-CoV-2 infection in a 57-year-old male patient. The patient presented to the emergency room with lower abdominal pain, urinary retention, bilateral lower limbs weakness, and allodynia for the last four days. One week earlier, he had experienced fever, cough, and shortness of breath. On physical examination, he was vitally stable with sensory loss from the nipples down to the lower limbs bilaterally. His nasopharyngeal polymerase chain reaction for SARS-CoV-2 was positive. MRI of the spine showed an abnormal cord signal extending from the level of the D2 vertebra down to the conus medullaris. The main differential diagnosis was transverse myelitis, and the patient was started on pulse steroids for seven days. After the therapy, the condition of the patient improved with the restoration of power and sensory sensation in his lower limbs. A new MRI of the whole spine one month later showed normal morphology and signal intensity without any abnormal enhancement. The patient was discharged home with almost complete resolution of his symptoms for later follow-up in the clinic.Acute chest syndrome (ACS) is defined as the radiological appearance of pulmonary infiltrates with fever or respiratory symptoms like chest pain, breathlessness, and cough in a patient with sickle cell disease (SCD). It is also a very common cause of mortality in sickle cell patients, if not identified in early stages and treated aggressively. Radiological image is similar to bacterial pneumonia, so sickle cell disease with a radiological picture similar to pneumonia and associated respiratory symptoms is known as acute chest syndrome. Pneumonia and infarction have been implicated in pathogenesis. The reason for the appearance of acute chest syndrome in patients with SCD is not established but some triggers like sepsis, presence of vaso-occlusive crises have been noted. When there is a block in the blood supply to the bone, patients with sickle cell disease may also develop avascular necrosis of the neck of the femur causing narrowing of joint and collapse of the bone. Patients with sickle cell disease have a baseline hypercoagulable state thereby predisposing the patient to develop deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. Here, we present a case of a 25-year-old SCD patient with a fairly stable course of the disease. He had no history of prior admissions and he had his first-ever episode of sickle cell crisis lading in with acute chest syndrome, avascular necrosis of femur, and pulmonary embolism all at once. After an extensive review of the literature, we found this to be the first case report in the world where all these three complications of sickle cell disease developed simultaneously in a patient.