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1.
BMJ Case Rep ; 12(6)2019 Jun 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31248897

ABSTRACT

A 78-year-old woman with no known medical history presented with severe neck pain that began 4 days prior to admission located in the paraspinal cervical region radiating to the shoulders, legs and back. She had associated stiffness of her neck and progression of pain to her jaw and throat with progression to generalised body spasms with lower extremity stiffness and weakness that limited her ability to walk. She quickly developed dysphagia and odynophagia with subsequent generalised spasms and profound hypoxic respiratory failure requiring nasotracheal intubation. The presumptive diagnosis of tetanus was made and she was given tetanus toxoid immune globulin and Tdap vaccine. She was managed in the intensive care unit and after a week of admission, required a tracheostomy and gastrostomy tube placement. She required a prolonged hospitalisation stay of 21 days before being transferred to a long-term vent facility.


Subject(s)
Tetanus Antitoxin/therapeutic use , Tetanus Toxoid/therapeutic use , Tetanus/complications , Tetanus/drug therapy , Aged , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Deglutition Disorders/etiology , Female , Gastrostomy , Humans , Metronidazole/therapeutic use , Respiratory Insufficiency/etiology , Tracheostomy
3.
J Infect Dev Ctries ; 12(3): 150-155, 2018 Mar 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31829989

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Leptospirosis is a zoonotic spirochetal disease with global importance, which continues to have a major impact on public health in developing countries. The prevalence of the disease is much higher in males. The objectives of this study were: to give some data and to share our experience with human leptospirosis in Albania; to describe the prevalence regarding to the role of gender in the prevalence of human leptospirosis; to make a gender specific analysis of the clinical manifestations in patients diagnosed and treated for leptospirosis in our service and to make a review of literature related to this hypothesis. METHODOLOGY: We reviewed the epidemiologic data, risk factors and differences in clinical presentation between males and females' patients with leptospirosis. These data are analysed from hospitalized patients. Diagnosis of leptospirosis was established based on clinical presentation, epidemiological data and subsequently confirmed serologically by Anti-Leptospira IgM antibodies through ELISA test. RESULTS: Between 2005-2016, 233 cases of confirmed leptospirosis were analysed. Males were 208 (89.27%) and 25 of patients (10.72%) were females in ratio 9:1 p < 0.001. The highest prevalence was observed in the 45-64 age groups. Overall mortality was found to be 8.58%, 19 were males and one female p < 0.001. CONCLUSIONS: There is a much higher prevalence of leptospirosis in middle aged men. Mortality rate seems to be similar in males and females. While the difference in prevalence may be related to exposure to risk factors, further investigation is necessary to study gender-based genetic and immunological predisposition.

4.
J Infect Dev Ctries ; 11(4): 361-363, 2017 Apr 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28459229

ABSTRACT

Encephalitis is an acute inflammation of the brain matter, very often associated with viral infections, but it can also be caused by non-viral pathogens such as leptospirosis. Leptospirosis is a systemic disease caused by bacteria of the Leptospira genus. Leptospiral infection has a broad spectrum of clinical manifestations ranging from subclinical or mild illness to a fulminant life-threatening illness. In this case report we describe a young patient from Southern Albania with isolated encephalitis caused by Leptospira, where acute encephalitis was the initial presentation of the disease.


Subject(s)
Encephalitis/etiology , Encephalitis/pathology , Leptospira/isolation & purification , Leptospirosis/diagnosis , Leptospirosis/pathology , Albania , Humans
5.
Travel Med Infect Dis ; 14(2): 143-7, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26732289

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Albania is an attractive tourism destination with an increasing volume of travel. As a Mediterranean country some tropical infectious diseases are present in certain areas of Albania, including leptospirosis, which is a zoonotic infectious disease prevalent around the world. The goal of this retrospective study is to describe the ocular and cutaneous manifestations of leptospirosis in Albanian patients and raise awareness to travelers travelling in and out of the country. METHODS: We retrospectively studied 107 cases of leptospirosis, treated at "Mother Teresa" University Hospital Center, in Tirana, Albania between January 2009 and December 2014. All cases included in the analysis had a clinical and epidemiological presentation suggestive of leptospirosis, confirmed with ELISA (enzyme linked immunoassay) positive for IgM antibodies against Leptospira. RESULTS: There were 89.7% males (n = 96) and 10.2% females (n = 11). Mean age at the time of diagnoses was 43.7 ± 17.8 years old (range 17-78). All patients were native and residents of Albania. Conjunctival suffusion was present in 81.3% of the cases, whereas subconjunctival hemorrhage was seen in 12 patients (11.2%). Uveitis was seen in 38.3% of the cases and all patients with uveitis presented a severe systemic disease. A cutaneous rash was present in 58.8% of patients. Other cutaneous manifestations include jaundice in 62.6% and intense pruritus in 5.6% of cases. CONCLUSIONS: Ocular and cutaneous involvement happens more frequently in patients with Leptospirosis, than it was thought to be. Therefore the clinician should be more careful in his systemic evaluation of the disease.


Subject(s)
Eye Diseases/etiology , Leptospirosis/complications , Leptospirosis/pathology , Skin Diseases, Bacterial/etiology , Travel Medicine , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Albania/epidemiology , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Eye Diseases/pathology , Female , Humans , Immunoglobulin M/blood , Leptospirosis/diagnosis , Leptospirosis/epidemiology , Male , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Skin Diseases, Bacterial/pathology , Young Adult
6.
J Virus Erad ; 1(4): 264-268, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26855971

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Limited data exist comparing viral quasispecies between cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and plasma compartments during primary HIV infection. Deep sequencing is a new method to examine the HIV plasma and CSF quasispecies. METHODS: In this pilot study, deep sequencing of protease (PR) and reverse transcriptase (RT) was performed in plasma and CSF from participants during primary HIV infection. Estimated mutational load was calculated by mutant variant frequency multiplied by HIV-RNA level. RESULTS: Paired plasma and CSF samples were studied from five antiretroviral therapy-naïve male participants with median 109 days post estimated transmission, age 32 years, CD4 cell count 580 cells/µL, HIV-RNA 5.18 log10 copies/mL in plasma and 3.67 log10 copies/mL in CSF. Plasma samples averaged 7,124 reads of PR and 2,448 reads of RT, whereas CSF samples averaged 7,082 and 2,792 reads, respectively. A distinct drug-resistance pattern with linked mutations present at significant levels (5-10%) was detected in one participant in CSF. Other low abundance variants (>0.2%) were detected in plasma and CSF of four out of five participants. CONCLUSIONS: Deep sequencing of CSF HIV is technically possible with sufficient HIV-RNA levels. Differences between the quasispecies in the two compartments detected in one participant, which were present with a high mutational load in CSF at an estimated 3.6 months after HIV infection, suggest that early CNS compartmentalisation may be revealed by sensitive deep-sequencing methods. The presence of distinct low abundance (<1%) resistance variants in plasma and CSF of three other subjects may be significant, but further investigation is needed.

7.
Ann Thorac Surg ; 84(3): 759-66; discussion 766-7, 2007 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17720372

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The three methods of brain preservation for aortic arch surgery--straight deep hypothermic circulatory arrest (DHCA) without perfusion adjuncts, retrograde cerebral perfusion, and antegrade cerebral perfusion--remain controversial. Patients in this report underwent surgery solely with DHCA. METHODS: Straight DHCA at 19 degrees C was used in 394 patients (267 males, 127 females) during a 10-year period. Mean age was 61.3 years (range, 15 to 88 years). Eighty-seven cases (22.1%) were urgent or emergencies. Thirty-eight (9.6%) were performed for descending or thoracoabdominal pathology and the rest for ascending/arch (102 hemiarch, 49 total arch). Ninety-one patients (23.1%) had dissections. The head was packed in ice. No barbiturate coma was used. RESULTS: DHCA lasted a mean of 31.0 minutes (range, 10 to 66 minutes). Reexploration for bleeding was required in 4.5% (18/394). Overall mortality was 6.3% (25/394). Mortality was 3.6% (11/307) for elective cases and 16% (14/87) for emergency cases. The stroke rate was 4.8% (19/394). The seizure rate was 3.1% (12/394). Forty-five patients with high professional cognitive demands (MD, PhD, attorney, etc) performed without detriment postoperatively. Among patients with DHCA exceeding 40 minutes, the stroke rate was 13.1% (8/61); a neuroradiologist's review of brain computed tomography scans found 62.5% of these strokes (5/8) to be embolic and 37.5% (3/8) hypoperfusion related. By multivariable logistic regression, emergency operation and descending location increased morbidity and mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Straight DHCA without adjunctive perfusion suffices as a sole means of cerebral protection. Stroke and seizure rates are low. Cognitive function, by clinical assessment, is excellent. Especially for straightforward ascending/arch reconstructions, there is little need for the added complexity of brain perfusion strategies.


Subject(s)
Aorta, Thoracic/surgery , Brain/physiopathology , Heart Arrest, Induced , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracic/mortality , Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracic/surgery , Cerebrovascular Circulation , Cognition , Female , Humans , Logistic Models , Male , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Seizures/epidemiology , Stroke/epidemiology , Time Factors
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