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1.
Advances in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery ; 7 (no pagination), 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2287971

ABSTRACT

Ranula is a mucous retention cyst caused by the extravasation of mucus from the sublingual gland. We present a case of sublingual ranula that was successfully treated with micro-marsupialisation under COVID-19 infection. The patient was a 17-year-old Japanese male suffering from a sublingual ranula that did not improve after several rounds of puncture-aspiration therapy. The patient underwent OK-432 injection therapy under hospitalisation. However, the swelling worsened. Thus, micro-marsupialisation was subsequently performed. After micro-marsupialisation, the lesions flattened out, but 14 days after treatment, the patient was found to have asymptomatic COVID-19 infection when he underwent polymerase chain reaction testing as a close contact person. Simultaneously, the lesion re-swelled and became painful, so non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs were prescribed. The next day, the sutures spontaneously detached, viscous saliva and blood overflowed, and the ranula disappeared. Micro-marsupialisation is effective and useful even if the patient has a COVID-19 infection.Copyright © 2022 The Authors

2.
Anaesthesia, Pain and Intensive Care ; 27(1):135-138, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2284684

ABSTRACT

Toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN), is an acute, life-threatening emergent disease involving the skin and mucous membranes with serious systemic complications. It is characterized by widespread epidermal sloughing. Drugs are the most common triggers of TEN, but infection, vaccination, radiation therapy and malignant neoplasms can all induce it in susceptible patients. We report two cases in whom a hair dye and a COVID-19 vaccine (BioNTech, Pfizer) were believed to be the causative agents. These patients have to undergo repeated debridements of the necrotic tissue. In this manuscript the anesthetic management of TEN patients is discussed. Detailed preoperative evaluation, aggressive fluid and electrolyte replacement, avoidance of hypothermia during debridement, minimizing anesthetic agents and limiting traumatic procedures are key points in the management.Copyright © 2023 Faculty of Anaesthesia, Pain and Intensive Care, AFMS. All rights reserved.

3.
Annals of Clinical Psychiatry ; 34(3):10-11, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2030804

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Self-mutilating behavior in the pediatric population is associated with psychiatric and psychosocial factors. Autosarcophagy, or self-cannibalism, is an extremely rare form of self-mutilation and is predominantly seen with psychosis or substance use.1 We report a case of oral autosarcophagy in a pediatric patient in the absence of substance use or psychosis. OBJECTIVE: To learn about autosarcophagy and its treatment in the pediatric population and to explore other neuropsychiatric disorders in which it is a predominant manifestation. METHODS: Review of a case using electronic medical records and relevant literature. Key terms: 'autosarcophagy,' 'body focused repetitive behavior,' 'oral self injury,' 'pediatric self-mutilation' using Medscape and Google Scholar. RESULTS: We present a 14-year-old female with history of seizure disorder in full remission, depression, self-cutting behavior, and suicidal ideation with 2 psychiatric hospitalizations, who presented to the pediatric emergency department with oral bleeding after eating one-third of her tongue over the course of a month. Evaluation was notable for poverty of speech and constricted affect. Patient stated she was 'trying to remove an infection' and alleviate discomfort. She denied that this behavior was an attempt to end her life but endorsed past suicidal ideations and cutting behavior. History revealed emergency room evaluation for aggressive behavior and episodes of volitional enuresis. We diagnosed major depressive disorder, recurrent episode in remission without psychosis. Drug screen, complete blood count, complete metabolic panel, COVID-19, urinalysis, thyroid-stimulating hormone, head computed tomography, and beta-human chorionic gonadotropin were negative. Patient continued home oral medications aripiprazole 10 mg daily, fluoxetine 30 mg daily, and levetiracetam 500 mg twice daily and was discharged the next day. CONCLUSIONS: Self-harm is observed in 17.2% of adolescents, 13.4% of young adults, and 5.5% of older adults.2 Cases of self-mutilation in pediatric patients typically present as cutting, burning, or head banging.3 Our differential diagnoses include borderline personality disorder due to repeated impulsivity and self-harm, and body focused repetitive behavior disorder (obsessive-compulsive disorder-related disorder), which presents with repetitive strain injuries and dental malocclusions. Treatment of self-mutilation involves treating the underlying psychiatric condition with psychotropic medications.4,5 In pediatric patients, dialectical behavioral therapy has been shown to reduce parasuicidal behaviors after 1 year of therapy.6 Our patient, under constant 24-hour observation, was cleared by medical, psychiatric, and dental teams. The patient followed up with outpatient psychotherapy and psychiatry. We are presenting this rare case for clinicians to identify and manage pediatric patients presenting with unique forms of self-harm tendencies.

4.
Indian Journal of Critical Care Medicine ; 26:S51-S52, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2006347

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Macroglossia is defined as an enlargement of the tongue in the resting position, protruding beyond the teeth. Many cases have been reported secondary to patient positioning while under anesthesia, post oro-pharyngeal packing, trauma or surgery, and allergic or non-allergic angioedema. However, acute macroglossia in the ICU is a rare situation. In COVID-19 related severe ARDS, endotracheal intubation and prolonged proning is an important part of management of hypoxemic respiratory failure Prone positioning also has the potential to independently cause macroglossia. Awareness of this complication of proning could help mitigate morbidity in patients. Case report: A 53-year-old diabetic, hypertensive overweight female with OSA presented with progressive shortness of breath and productive cough. She was mechanically ventilated in ICU in view of respiratory distress secondary to COVID-19 pneumonia. Intubation was minimally traumatic with minimal oral bleeding settling over few minutes. Though managed with medications as per COVID-19 management protocol, she progressed to severe ARDS hence proned on hospital day 1 for 16 hours - PaO2/FiO2 ratio improved. She was not proned further. Acute macroglossia (3 inches outside the oral cavity) with lower facial edema was noted 4 days post proning. Saline moistened gauze was loosely wrapped around the tongue every hour. Circumferential ecchymosis was noticed around her neck on the 6th day. On day 8, macroglossia did not show signs of resolution. Hence, the tongue was pushed in manually every 2 hourly and the position was maintained manually for 10 minutes. The swelling decreased gradually with the tongue staying in a retracted position on treatment day 2. On day 3, there was a complete resolution of the swelling. However, she had persistent swallowing difficulty causing difficulty in weaning from tracheostomy. MRI of neck and chest showed large pre-vertebral collection from the upper border of C2 inferiorly across the thoracic inlet to the posterior mediastinum with thin linear extension up to the lower border of T4. Mass effect with airway compression, displacement, and compression of esophagus and neck vessels was seen. Trans-oral exploration revealed mucosal rent and bulge in the posterior pharyngeal wall. The hematoma was evacuated by ENT specialists. She was discharged on tracheostomy and feeding tube. Tracheostomy decannulation was done after 1 month. Discussion: In our practice of proning patients with ARDS for >10 years, this is the first case of macroglossia as a complication of proning that we encountered. Other factors that could have contributed to this patient are obesity and mildly traumatic intubation. Development of macroglossia 4 days after proning and resolution over a short period of time is rare and suggests lymphatic and vascular compression as the cause. Later development of ecchymosis and dysphagia may be due to the posterior pharyngeal injury. Conclusion: Proning, especially in obese patients, can be a challenge. Positioning of the face and avoidance of injury to any of the structures is vital to the care of the proned patient. Medical staff involved in patient care should be aware and vigilant to pick up this condition early to avoid further injury.

5.
British Journal of Dermatology ; 186(6):e249-e250, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-1956717

ABSTRACT

COVID-19 has created a series of clinical conundrums since its emergence. We report a case of severe immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) in a 67-year-old gentleman in April 2020. He presented to hospital with a rapidly evolving rash, 3 weeks following infection with COVID-19. Clinically he had a widespread non palpable petechial rash, haemorrhagic blisters across his oral mucosa and severe epistaxis. His platelet count was 2 × 109 L-1 (150-450 × 109 L-1). Full blood count and clotting studies were otherwise normal. With ITP not yet well reported as a complication of COVID-19, there was a treatment dilemma. ITP is an acquired autoimmune-mediated disorder (often with a viral or vaccine precipitant) and first-line treatment is immunosuppression. However, due to concurrent infection with the novel COVID-19 virus, a thrombopoietin receptor agonist (TPO-RA) (eltrombopag 50 mg once daily) was instead commenced. Persistent epistaxis, oral bleeding and a platelet count < × 109 L-1 required intravenous immunoglobulin (1 g kg-1) to be administered on day 7 of TPO-RA treatment. By day 12 of TPO-RA treatment the platelet count had successfully normalized. The patient remains in remission 18 months on. Since this case, ITP has become a recognized phenomenon of both COVID-19 infection and COVID-19 vaccination (Pishko AM, Bussel JB, Cines DB. COVID-19 vaccination and immune thrombocytopenia. Nat Med 2021;27: 1145-6). Moreover, corticosteroid therapy has become the first evidence-based therapy for severe COVID-19 infection (Horby P, Lim WS, Emberson J et al. Dexamethasone in hospitalized patients with Covid-19. N Engl J Med 2021;384: 693-704), although their use in COVID-19- related ITP remains unclear. This case demonstrates an important cutaneous manifestation of the COVID-19-provoked disrupted haemostasis pathways, which results in significant morbidity and mortality. Additionally, this case describes practical real-life multidisciplinary team decision-making to emerging complications of a uniquely studied virus.

6.
Journal, Indian Academy of Clinical Medicine ; 23(1-2):77-78, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-1913158

ABSTRACT

Insertion of nasogastric tube is one of the commonest clinical procedures. However, very rarely, the tube can coil on itself to form something called a Lariat loop. This is a knot that can cause the tube to get stuck inside the pharynx and can precipitate emergencies like laryngeal obstruction or esophageal rupture. A brief discussion of a case along with the causes and prevention of this complication has been done.

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