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1.
J Surg Case Rep ; 2023(6): rjad204, 2023 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37342521

ABSTRACT

A lady in her 70s presented to hospital with sudden onset nausea and excessive vomiting. She had a constant and worsening abdominal pain that radiated to the back but was focused on her stoma in the left iliac fossa. The patient had bilateral hernias and colostomy following a Hartman's procedure for perforated diverticulosis in 2018 and had presented twice before in the last 6 months with similar symptoms. CT abdomen pelvis showed a large portion of the stomach in the parastomal hernia leading to a narrowing of the stomach at the hernia neck but no ischaemic changes. She was diagnosed with bowel obstruction and successfully treated with fluid resuscitation, proton pump inhibitors, analgesia, antiemetics and decompression of the stomach using large bore nasogastric tube. A total of 2600 ml fluid was aspirated in 24 h and her stoma restarted normal output. After 10 days she was discharged home.

2.
AIDS ; 36(14): 2035-2044, 2022 11 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35983827

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Screening and treatment for latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) are key for TB control. In the UK, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and the British HIV Association (BHIVA) give conflicting guidance on which groups of people with HIV (PWH) should be screened, and previous national analysis demonstrated heterogeneity in how guidance is applied. There is an urgent need for a firmer clinical effectiveness evidence base on which to build screening policy. METHODS: We conducted a systematic, programmatic LTBI-screening intervention for all PWH receiving care in Leicester, UK. We compared yields (percentage IGRA positive) and number of tests required when applying the NICE and BHIVA testing strategies, as well as strategies targeting screening by TB incidence in patients' countries of birth. RESULTS: Of 1053 PWH tested, 118 were IGRA-positive (11.2%). Positivity was associated with higher TB incidence in country-of-birth [adjusted odds ratio, 50-149 cases compared with <50 cases/100 000: 11.6; 95% confidence interval (CI) 4.79-28.10)]. There was high testing uptake (1053/1069, 98.5%). Appropriate chemoprophylaxis was commenced in 100 of 117 (85.5%) patients diagnosed with LTBI, of whom 96 of 100 (96.0%) completed treatment. Delivering targeted testing to PWH from countries with TB incidence greater than 150 per 100 000 population or any sub-Saharan African country, would have correctly identified 89.8% of all LTBI cases while cutting tests required by 46.1% compared with NICE guidance, performing as well as BHIVA 2018 guidance. CONCLUSION: Targeting screening to higher risk PWH increases yield and reduces the number requiring testing. Our proposed 'PWH-LTBI streamlined guidance' offers a simplified approach, with the potential to improve national LTBI-screening implementation.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections , Latent Tuberculosis , Humans , Latent Tuberculosis/diagnosis , Latent Tuberculosis/epidemiology , HIV Infections/complications , Mass Screening , Communicable Disease Control , Incidence
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