RESUMO
INTRODUCTION: Over the past few years, the hepatic abscess appears as a privileged septic localisation in the case of diabetes mellitus, particularly in the elderly. OBSERVATIONS: Two, 75 year-old and 82 year-old, diabetic patients were hospitalised for non-ketonic decompensation of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Examination revealed a sub-febrile state, the absence of clinical hepatic signs and a biological infectious syndrome The abscesses were discovered during the systematic hepatic sonography. Liver puncture was only possible in one patient and revealed Klebsiella oxytoca. The progression with antibiotics alone in one patient, and associated with surgical draining in the other, was positive. The origin appeared to be bilary in one patient and arterial on the other. COMMENTS: These case reports underline the interest of the systematic evocation of an abscessed hepatic localisation in cases of imbalance in diabetes, particularly when associated with an unexplained infectious syndrome.
Assuntos
Diabetes Mellitus Tipo 2/complicações , Abscesso Hepático/etiologia , Idoso , Antibacterianos/uso terapêutico , Progressão da Doença , Humanos , Abscesso Hepático/tratamento farmacológico , Abscesso Hepático/patologia , MasculinoRESUMO
Craniopharyngioma, an intra- and suprasellar tumor generally observed in pediatric patients, can also occur in adults. We report three cases of histologically confirmed craniopharyngioma in three men aged 34 to 53 Years. Clinical manifestations were headache with visual and gonadic disorders associating impotence, infertiligy, and gynecomastia. Computed tomographic and magnetic resonance imaging revealed an intra- and suprasellar tumor with solid, hydric, and calcified components. Third ventricle compression was observed in two patients. Hormone test revealed gonadotrope insufficiency in two patients, associated with hyperprolactinemia in one of them, and pituitary insufficiency in the third patient. None of the patients had diabetes insipidus. The frontopterional approach was used for surgery. One patient died and the two others experienced persistent visual impairment with worsening pituitary insufficiency. Our observations suggest that these craniopharyngiomas were probably clinically latent congienital forms since endocrine features were lacking during childhood. Early diagnosis is required to achieve good outcome.