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1.
Recenti Prog Med ; 85(11): 537-9, 1994 Nov.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7855387

ABSTRACT

A case of acute alcoholic myopathy in a subject with a 20 year history of alcohol abuse is described. The condition emerged during an episode of delirium tremens and had a quickly deadly outcome. The rapid evolution of the clinical situation accompanied by variation in the biohumoral indices (CPK, LDH, myoglobin) is stressed and although this prevented from obtaining anatomopathological samples of the rhabdomyolisis, the specific diagnosis was made with reasonable certainty. The onset of the condition was not foreseeable because of the absence of an accurate history of the subject's alcohol abuse on his admission and of significant biohumoral data indicating the existence of an alcohol correlated pathology.


Subject(s)
Alcohol Withdrawal Delirium/complications , Alcoholism/complications , Ethanol/adverse effects , Muscular Diseases/etiology , Acute Disease , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
2.
G Ital Med Lav ; 15(1-4): 67-70, 1993.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7720967

ABSTRACT

A large part of the general population is potentially exposed to excessive concentrations of carbon monoxide (CO), both in the domestic and work environment. Beside acute, often fatal poisoning, the possibility of occult intoxication should be considered; this condition can affect people who are often unaware of the existence of a toxic exposure in their homes or work places. We describe two non-smoking patients, husband and wife, 53 and 57 years old, respectively, who suffered cephalea, nausea and neurobehavioural disturbances during a period of approximately one year; these symptoms were reported to improve or disappear on several occasions during the patients' absence from home. Careful anamnesis suggested a protracted exposure to nonlethal concentrations of CO contaminating the patients' bed-chamber from the misfunctioning flue of the heating system. It was not possible to measure carboxyhaemoglobinemia until approximately 24 hours since the last presumptive exposure. The levels found were therefore relatively low (4-5%), yet higher than the reference values for normal non-smoking subjects. Carboxyhaemoglobin concentrations almost returned into the normal range during the period of hospitalization. These two cases exemplify how low level CO exposure may cause aspecific pathological manifestations that are often misdiagnosed or overlooked.


Subject(s)
Air Pollution, Indoor/adverse effects , Carbon Monoxide Poisoning/diagnosis , Carbon Monoxide Poisoning/etiology , Chronic Disease , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
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