Lynggaardlohmann0726
Tuberculosis (TB) and sarcoidosis have clinical, immunologic, and radiologic similarities and the differential diagnosis is often a challenge. Some cases are described in which patients have both diseases concomitantly. There is a hypothesis that posits TB and sarcoidosis as being along the spectrum of the same disease. This has important implications for treatment decisions, since immunosuppression, which is a treatment for sarcoidosis, is undesirable in TB patients. We are going to describe a clinical case of a TB patient who developed more severe symptoms during the course of TB treatment and, after excluding TB progression or resistance, he was diagnosed as probable sarcoidosis. He was started on immunosuppression, with great improvement, finishing the TB treatment completely asymptomatic.Tuberculosis (TB) is a common post-transplant infection with high prevalence in developing countries due to reactivation. Post-transplant TB involves the respiratory system in 50% of patients, followed by disseminated involvement in 30%. The risk of tuberculosis of renal allograft post-transplantation is determined by disease endemicity in the donor population and the immunosuppressant regimen. TB can cause allograft rejection and graft loss due to delayed diagnosis or reduced immunosuppressant drug efficacy. A 23-year-old lady was seen 40 days after cadaveric unrelated renal transplantation from China. She was on immunosuppression with tacrolimus, mycophenolate, and prednisolone. Examination showed low-grade fever and infected surgical site in the right iliac fossa draining pus. Imaging showed fluid pockets, parenchymal micro-abscesses, and perinephric collections in the right iliac fossa communicating with skin. A diagnosis of renal allograft TB without dissemination was made after TB polymerase chain reaction (PCR) from early morning urine was positive. click here She was started on anti-TB therapy. The sinus tract healed, and renal parameters improved after six months of therapy. Follow-up magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed resolution of the micro-abscesses as well as the surrounding fluid collection. Renal angiogram demonstrated well-perfused, normally functioning, non-obstructed renal transplant. Tuberculosis of renal allograft should be considered in a transplant recipient with pyrexia of unknown origin and persistent discharge from the surgical site, not responding to antimicrobials. Tuberculosis of transplant kidney can cause graft loss due to allograft rejection when there is a delayed diagnosis, or as anti-TB drugs reduce the efficacy of immunosuppressant medications. The index of suspicion should be high when donor status is unknown or if the donor is from an endemic tuberculosis area. Timely diagnosis and treatment helped to save the transplanted kidney of our patient without rejection.Purpose The aim of this study is to investigate the feasibility of prostate stereotactic body radiation therapy treatment with a newly developed Varian HalcyonTM 2.0 machine by comparing radiotherapy plans with previously delivered CyberKnife G4 plans created with the previous version of CyberKnife Treatment Planning System Multiplan 4.6.1. Methods Fifteen previously treated prostate stereotactic body radiation therapy treatment CyberKnife plans were re-planned retrospectively according to the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group 0938 protocol on a HalcyonTM 2.0 machine with a prescription of 3625 cGy in five fractions. Results All re-plans on a HalcyonTM 2.0 were able to meet the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group 0938 protocol goals and constraints. The re-plans decreased the maximum dose to skin and urethra, mean doses to the bladder and rectum, and also improve the conformity index and the Planning Target Volume coverage. However, D1cc to the rectum, D1cc and D10% to the bladder increased with no statistically significant differences (p > 0.05) with the re-plans. Conclusion The HalcyonTM 2.0 can generate stereotactic body radiation therapy treatment prostate plans created based on the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group 0938 protocol by delivering adequate coverage to the target while sparing healthy tissues.Background Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) are autoimmune diseases with chronically elevated inflammatory activity. Treatments typically have been aimed at decreasing inflammation. While RA and SLE are known to have a high incidence of congestive heart failure (HF), the mechanism behind this remains elusive. We sought to assess the outcomes of HF patients with either RA or SLE as opposed to HF patients without RA or SLE. Methods We conducted a retrospective analysis of the Healthcare Utilization Project - National Inpatient Sample Database from 2010 to 2015 (third quarter). Patients with a primary admitting diagnosis of HF were queried, and those with or without a diagnosis of either SLE or RA were separated into two groups. In-hospital mortality, total charges (TOTCHG), and length of stay (LOS) were analyzed with a multivariate regression model adjusted for demographical and comorbidity variables, using generalized linear models with family binomial, gamma, and negative-binomant contributor to HF and implicate a future therapeutic direction.Tetralogy of Fallot (ToF) is considered the most frequent cyanotic congenital heart abnormality with a low adulthood survival rate if kept untreated. The majority of cases are symptomatic during infancy and mandate early treatment. Few instances of survival to asymptomatic middle-age patients have been reported, and they are decreasing due to early detection. We reported a case of a middle-aged man who was asymptomatic during his life and recently diagnosed with ToF. The patient underwent surgical repair with excellent outcomes. The case represents the possibility of diagnosing such cases in a relatively old patient despite medical development and advances.
The main objective of the present study is to investigate the advantages and disadvantages of proximal arteriovenous native fistulas. Hemodialysis is indispensable for patients with end-stage renal disease. For this purpose, arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs) are used. Among the native fistulas, distal radiocephalic AVF is the most preferred. However, brachiocephalic AVF (BCAVF) and brachiobasilic AVF with basilic vein transposition (basilic vein transposition arteriovenous fistula [BVTAVF])can be used for a long time in dialysis patients whose distal vascular bed is depleted.
This is a retrospective study of 117 AVFs (BCAVF and BVTAVF), in patients with end-stage chronic renal disease, that were opened with a surgical technique (2012-2018). The postoperative two-year patency rates, AVF locations, complications, and the advantages and disadvantages of these fistulas are reviewed and recorded in the light of the literature.
The mean age of the patients (52 men and 65 women) was 60.6 ± 13.6 years. The percentages of primary patency rates at 3, 6, 9, 12, and 24months were 96.