Warnercole5863
Background Aortic stenosis is a common disease of the elderly. Valve replacement with open surgery is the preferred therapy for many patients with low surgical risk. Bioprosthetic valve failure occurs in up to 66% of patients and has a worse prognosis when the mechanism of failure is stenosis compared to regurgitation. Case Report An 80-year-old female with a medical history of surgical aortic valve replacement, diabetes, chronic back pain, coronary artery disease, and hypertension was referred to the interventional cardiology clinic for heart failure symptoms. A bioprosthetic valve placement that was small for the patient's size (effective orifice area/body surface area 0.75 cm2/m2) resulted in symptomatic improvement that lasted for 7 years. The patient underwent an aortic valve-in-valve transcatheter valve replacement with excellent outcomes. Preoperative planning involved a patient-specific 3-dimensional printed patient model. Conclusion In patients at high surgical risk, transcatheter aortic valve replacement is a fundamental pillar of treatment. However, valve-in-valve procedures have specific anatomic challenges, such as the risk of coronary artery obstruction and the limitation of valve expansion inside a rigid bioprosthetic valve frame. In those difficult cases, interventional cardiologists must make precise decisions regarding the approach. Three-dimensional models can be printed with the patient's specific measurements. This approach represents truly personalized medicine and can serve as a tool for procedural planning, education of the health personnel involved in the case, and patient and family engagement.Background Snakebite is one of the major causes of morbidity and mortality in India, particularly in rural regions. Of the 57 known venomous species of snakes in India, the 4 most dangerous snakes are the cobra, the common krait, the Russell viper, and the saw-scaled viper. Of these, the snakes commonly implicated with neurotoxicity are the cobra and the common krait-both elapidae. Acute neuromuscular weakness with respiratory system involvement is the most lethal neurotoxic effect. Case Report A 24-year-old female was brought to the emergency department in an unresponsive state with a history of snakebite on the left foot. The patient was intubated, mechanically ventilated, and promptly started on snake antivenom and anticholinesterase agents. The patient improved significantly and was extubated. On day 6, she developed blurred vision and slurred speech. She was diagnosed with bilateral optic neuropathy and treated with repeat snake antivenom and steroids. She improved significantly and was discharged on day 14. read more Conclusion When a person is bitten by a venomous snake, antivenom is the mainstay of treatment, but clinicians must also consider possible reactions and complications. Optic neuritis following a snakebite is rare but does occur. The prognosis is generally good if clinical suspicion for such a complication is strong, the snake is identified, and the patient receives timely treatment with steroids.Background Nontuberculous mycobacteria are an uncommon pathogen for musculoskeletal infection and are difficult to treat because of delays in diagnosis, prolonged treatment requiring both antimycobacterial therapy and surgical debridement, and high rates of resistance to antimycobacterial therapy. Case Report We report the case of an 88-year-old male with recurrent Mycobacterium avium complex tenosynovitis despite receiving multiple courses of pharmacologic therapy and surgical debridement. Conclusion Nontuberculous mycobacterial musculoskeletal infections can be difficult to diagnose and equally difficult to treat. A combination of antimycobacterial therapy and surgical debridement is often required; however, the rate of treatment failure remains high, particularly with rapidly growing mycobacteria such as Mycobacterium avium.Background The concept of informed consent has evolved significantly with regard to both the practice of medicine and research conducted with human volunteers. Yet the process of informed consent used in clinical research and the lengthy consent documents that are difficult to comprehend have been criticized. Methods We review the history of informed consent as a legal and regulatory concept and the intended impact of the new key information section, a requirement that was introduced in the 2017 revisions to the Common Rule. Results The key information section is intended to be a concise and focused presentation at the beginning of the informed consent document that facilitates potential participants' comprehension of the research. However, the lack of regulatory guidance regarding content and length has been problematic. To avoid the risk of noncompliance, many institutions have sought safe harbor by following the limited format guidelines included in the preamble to the revisions to the Common Rule. Conclusion Research examining formats for the key information section and aids to increasing potential participants' understanding of a research project should be conducted to ensure that the new regulations achieve the original intent rather than simply lengthening an already lengthy paper document. In addition, the human research protections community should evaluate whether the key information section increases research participants' understanding of what they will be undertaking in a particular study.Background Malaria remains endemic in Solomon Islands, but data on malaria in the provinces of Solomon Islands are limited. This study from Makira-Ulawa Province aimed to identify the most prevalent strain of malaria and assess if the available rapid diagnostic test (RDT) was effective in Kirakira Hospital. Methods Forty-five patients who presented to Kirakira Hospital with symptoms of fever had a positive malaria parasite smear during a 4-week period in 2017. The parasite count for each smear was calculated. Simultaneous testing using the CareStart Malaria HRP2/pLDH (Pf/pan) Combo RDT was conducted. The data for all malaria parasite smears performed in Makira-Ulawa Province in 2016 were collated for comparison. Results All 45 patients diagnosed with malaria in a 4-week period in 2017 were positive for Plasmodium vivax. The median parasite load was 280 parasites per μL (range, 160 to 640 parasites per μL). None of the 45 CareStart RDTs performed was positive. In 2016, 5,505 of 17,195 patients (32.0%) screened had malaria parasites detected on a malaria parasite smear.