ABSTRACT
Hiccups, or singultus, are the result of spontaneous and repetitive contractions of the diaphragm. In most cases, episodes of singultus are benign and self-limited. However, prolonged attacks can result in significant discomfort, morbidity, and even death. Although the etiology of hiccups is theoretical at best, a wide array of treatments has been proposed with varying efficacy. Both pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic treatments target different components of the hiccup reflex, which includes the vagus and phrenic nerves, the respiratory center in the upper medulla, and the motor neurons in the diaphragm, glottis, and external intercostal muscles. In this case report, we describe the successful cessation of hiccups in a 9-year-old boy with a treatment called suboccipital release. With this approach, gentle traction and pressure is applied to the posterior neck, stretching the suboccipital muscles and fascia. The manual decompression of the vagus, and possibly phrenic, nerves interrupts the hiccup reflex and allows for normal autonomic function to be reestablished. We propose that the suboccipital release, noninvasive, simple, and with virtually no side effects, is an ideal initial treatment of singultus.
Subject(s)
Hiccup/therapy , Traction , Child , Humans , Male , Occipital BoneABSTRACT
Homicides exclusively due to genital trauma have not been widely reported, and anorectal trauma in sexual assaults is uncommon. We describe a case of a 45-year-old white woman who sustained devastating homicidal colorectal trauma that served as a primary cause of death in the setting of rape. Our patient sustained a 15-cm laceration of the anterior rectal wall and ultimately died of peritonitis and sepsis. Death from rectal perforation and sepsis in the setting of sexual assault is rare and has only been documented in 3 other cases, 2 pediatric patients and 1 elderly debilitated patient. Other representative and unique methods of perforation are reviewed along with a brief discussion of the development of peritonitis after perforating colorectal trauma.
Subject(s)
Anal Canal/injuries , Colon, Sigmoid/injuries , Rape , Rectum/injuries , Anal Canal/pathology , Anastomosis, Roux-en-Y , Bronchopneumonia/etiology , Colon, Sigmoid/pathology , Female , Forensic Pathology , Gastrectomy , Homicide , Humans , Middle Aged , Peritonitis/etiology , Rectum/pathology , Shock, Septic/etiologyABSTRACT
Duloxetine, a dual acting norepinephrine serotonin reuptake inhibitor, is a relatively new pharmacologic agent utilized in the treatment of depression, as well as diabetic neuropathic pain, fibromyalgia, and female stress urinary incontinence. This expanding scope of usage will inevitably lead to its eventual appearance during routine post-mortem toxicologic assays. Currently there is a paucity of post-mortem toxicologic data concerning duloxetine. The current report provides six additional case reports of post-mortem duloxetine levels, along with a review of duloxetine's pharmacokinetics, and the toxicologic manifestations which have been reported in the literature. The post-mortem levels reported, including the highest level recorded to date, are integrated with previously published reports to generate a foundation for a nascent guide to the interpretation of post-mortem duloxetine levels that could be encountered during routine post-mortem toxicologic analyses, and establish a basis upon which the establishment of toxic and lethal thresholds for this compound can be further elucidated with greater clarity.