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1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37622105

RESUMO

Background: Most asthma-related deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries, and South Africa (SA) is ranked fifth in global asthma mortality. Little is known about the characteristics and outcome of asthma patients requiring intensive care unit (ICU) admission in SA. Objectives: To identify and characterise patients with acute severe asthma admitted to the respiratory ICU at Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town, SA, in order to evaluate outcomes and identify predictors of poor outcomes in those admitted. Methods: We performed a retrospective descriptive study of patients with severe asthma admitted to the respiratory ICU at Groote Schuur Hospital between 1 January 2014 and 31 December 2019. Results: One hundred and three patients (110 admission episodes) were identified with an acute asthma exacerbation requiring ICU admission; all were mechanically ventilated. There was a female preponderance (53.6%; n=59/110), with a median (range) age overall of 33 (13 - 84) years. Of all admissions, 40 (36.4%) were current tobacco smokers and 16 (14.5%) patients with a history of substance abuse. Two thirds (60.0%; n=66/110) of the patients were using an inhaled corticosteroid (ICS). No predictors of mortality were evident in multivariate modelling, although those who died were older, and had higher Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE II) scores and longer duration of admission. Only 59 of the surviving 96 individual patients (61.5%) attended a specialist pulmonology clinic after discharge. Conclusion: Among patients admitted to the respiratory ICU at Groote Schuur Hospital for asthma exacerbations, there was a high prevalence of smokers and poor coverage with inhaled ICSs. Although mortality was low compared with general ICU mortality, more needs to be done to prevent acute severe asthma exacerbations. Study synopsis: What the study adds. Intensive care unit (ICU) admission represents the most severe form of exacerbation of asthma. South Africa (SA) has a very high rate of asthma deaths, and this study demonstrates that admission to an ICU with a very severe asthma exacerbation frequently results in a good outcome. However, many of the patients admitted to the ICU were not adequately treated with background asthma medications prior to their admission. Implications of the findings. Death from asthma should be avoidable, and admission to an ICU is not associated with high mortality. Patients are therefore likely to be dying at home or out of hospital. Better education and access to medication and early access to health services rather than improved in-hospital care would potentially alter SA's high asthma mortality.

2.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34430869

RESUMO

Fibrosing mediastinitis is rare in settings where histoplasmosis is not endemic. An idiopathic form of the disease may present with indistinguishable features and requires methodical exclusion of competing differential diagnoses. We report the case of a 30-year old female patient who presented with intermittent haemoptysis for the past 2 years with no constitutional symptoms. Computed tomography of the chest revealed a prominent right bronchial arterial circulation with a mass-like lesion, which encased and attenuated the right pulmonary trunk and adjacent structures. Endobronchial ultrasonography with transbronchial fine-needle aspiration showed a paucicellular aspirate with no evidence of malignancy or granulomas. Fungal infection, tuberculosis, sarcoidosis, IgG4-disease, and connective tissue disease were ruled out by appropriate serological, molecular, and microbiological tests. A diagnosis of idiopathic fibrosing mediastinitis was therefore made by exclusion and the patient was successfully treated with oral corticosteroids.

3.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34286249

RESUMO

Lung transplantation is an important therapy for end-stage respiratory failure in patients who have exhausted other therapeutic options. The lung is unique among solid-organ transplants in that it is exposed to the outside environment, and undergoes continuous stimulation from infectious and non-infectious agents, which may play a part in upregulating the immune response to the allograft. Despite induction immunosuppression and the use of aggressive maintenance regimens, acute allograft rejection is still a major problem, especially in the first year after transplant, with important diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. As well as being responsible for early graft failure and death, acute rejection also initiates alloimmune responses that predispose patients to chronic lung allograft dysfunction, in particular bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome. Cellular responses to human leukocyte antigens (HLAs) on the allograft have traditionally been considered the main mechanism of acute rejection, although the influence of humoral immunity is increasingly recognised. Here, we present two cases of acute cellular rejection (ACR) in the early post-transplant period and review the pathophysiology, diagnosis, clinical presentation and treatment of ACR.

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