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Study objective We determine whether an ondansetron prescription for pediatric patients with vomiting or gastroenteritis is associated with decreased return visits to the emergency department (ED), and whether alternate diagnoses are more frequent on return visits in patients prescribed ondansetron. Methods This is a retrospective cohort study of patients 6 months to 18 years of age, presenting to a pediatric ED or its affiliated urgent care centers between 2012 and 2017 with an International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision or International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 10th Revision diagnosis of gastroenteritis, gastritis, vomiting, or vomiting with diarrhea. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to measure the association between an ondansetron prescription and the odds of 72-hour return visits. Rates of alternate diagnoses on return visits (appendicitis, intussusception, intracranial mass, meningitis, and diabetic ketoacidosis) were compared between patients who were prescribed ondansetron for home use and those who were not. Results A total of 82,139 patients were studied, with a median age of 4 years. An ondansetron prescription was given to 13.4% of patients on discharge. The 72-hour return visit rate was 4.7%. find more Patients receiving an ondansetron prescription had decreased odds of 72-hour return visits (adjusted odds ratio 0.84; 95% confidence interval 0.75 to 0.93). The subgroup of patients specifically receiving a diagnosis of gastroenteritis had decreased odds of 72-hour return visits (adjusted odds ratio 0.82; 95% confidence interval 0.72 to 0.95). There was no significant difference between groups in the diagnosis of appendicitis on return visit (odds ratio 0.97; 95% confidence interval 0.37 to 2.18). Conclusion An ondansetron prescription is associated with reduced 72-hour ED return visit rates for children with vomiting or acute gastroenteritis and is not associated with masking alternate diagnoses.Objective The FIGO 2019 update on cervical cancer staging removed horizontal tumor extent (HZTE) as a staging variable. Evidence is needed to substantiate this change. The prognostic significance of HZTE and a related variable, circumferential tumor extent (%CTE), is similarly unknown. We aimed to investigate the association of HZTE and %CTE with survival outcomes in cervical cancer patients. Methods We identified patients treated with primary surgery for stage I cervical cancer in a single institution during a 9-year period. HZTE and, when available, %CTE were obtained from pathology records. Cases were staged using 2019 FIGO staging. Correlations between HZTE, %CTE and FIGO stage with recurrence-free (RFS) and disease-specific survival (DSS) were determined using univariable and multivariable analyses. Results 285 patients were included with a median follow-up of 48 (range 7-123) months. HZTE was statistically associated with RFS and DSS on univariate and multivariate analysis. None of the 168 stage IA patients in our series had tumor recurrence or death during follow-up, including 42 with HZTE ≥7 mm. None of the patients with a tumor horizontal extent less then 7 mm experienced recurrence or death. %CTE correlated only with RFS on univariate analysis. 2019 FIGO stage did not independently correlate with RFS or DSS in our sample. Conclusions HZTE is an independent predictor of survival in cervical carcinoma. In stage IA tumors, however, HZTE does not offer superior prognostic value, supporting the 2019 FIGO recommendations to remove this variable from staging in these cases. HZTE may be useful in larger tumors in which staging depends on maximum tumor size. %CTE is not an independent prognostic variable in cervical cancer, and we advise against its use.Zymomonas mobilis have characteristics that classify it as probiotic. Thus, this study aimed to evaluate the effect of regular consumption of fermented broth of this strain on the intestinal function of individuals with changes in intestinal transit. This is a randomized, descriptive and quantitative clinical trial, a sample composed of undergraduate students from a university center in Caruaru. After screening for individuals with constipation according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria, only 13 agreed to participate in the study. They were divided into groups group 1 received Zymomonas mobilis fermented broth once a day; group 2 also received the fermented broth in the same concentration cells being twice a day; group 3 received cell-free fermented broth once daily; and group 4, placebo, received saline once daily, all groups drank for fifteen days, and laboratory tests were performed to check lipid profile before and after that period. Observed an increase in evacuation days in all groups averaged in media 7.0-10.5 days. Groups 1 and 2 showed an increase in total cholesterol (0.5% and 5.0%, respectively), HDL cholesterol (4.1% and 24.1%), LDL cholesterol (4.9% and 8.4%), VLDL cholesterol (17.9% and 11.2%) and triglycerides (19.1% and 27.9%). In group 3, there was a reduction of total cholesterol (-2.4%), LDL cholesterol (-11.2%), VLDL cholesterol (-15.9%), triglycerides (-27.7%) and increase in HDL cholesterol (25.7%). Thus, the broth fermented with Zymomonas mobilis regulated the intestinal transit, but did not improve the lipid profile, while the without cells broth showed a better lipid profile.Donnai-Barrow syndrome (DBS) is an autosomal-recessive disorder characterized by multiple pathologies including malformation of forebrain and eyes, as well as resorption defects of the kidney proximal tubule. The underlying cause of DBS are mutations in LRP2, encoding the multifunctional endocytic receptor megalin. Here, we identified a unique missense mutation R3192Q of LRP2 in an affected family that may provide novel insights into the molecular causes of receptor dysfunction in the kidney proximal tubule and other tissues affected in DBS. Using patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cell lines we generated neuroepithelial and kidney cell types as models of the disease. Using these cell models, we documented the inability of megalin R3192Q to properly discharge ligand and ligand-induced receptor decay in lysosomes. Thus, mutant receptors are aberrantly targeted to lysosomes for catabolism, essentially depleting megalin in the presence of ligand in this affected family.

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