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Frontiers in Veterinary Science 2024A 10-year-old male Shar-Pei was referred for lethargy and proprioceptive deficits of the left thoracic limb. An magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examination of the...
A 10-year-old male Shar-Pei was referred for lethargy and proprioceptive deficits of the left thoracic limb. An magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examination of the cervical spinal column and the brain was performed. The MRI examination of the brain was normal. A left-sided C3-C4 intervertebral disc extrusion with spinal cord compression was diagnosed. Medical treatment was elected. Within a week after the MRI examination, the dog presented with deep partial-thickness skin burn wounds in both axillae. Since the specific absorption rate had not exceeded the safety limits during any of the scans and no other procedures or circumstances were identified that could possibly have resulted in burn injuries, the thermal burn injuries were diagnosed as radiofrequency (RF) burns. The wounds healed by secondary intent over the next month. RF burns are the most reported complication in humans undergoing MRI but have not been reported in veterinary patients. Clinicians and technicians should consider the potential risk for RF burns in veterinary patients and take precautions regarding positioning of the patient and take notice of any signs of burn injury when performing follow-up examinations.
PubMed: 38807939
DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2024.1364635 -
Cureus Apr 2024Meningitis is the inflammation of meninges either septic or aseptic depending on the source of infection. Typical signs and symptoms of meningitis in children...
Meningitis is the inflammation of meninges either septic or aseptic depending on the source of infection. Typical signs and symptoms of meningitis in children include fever, headache, neck stiffness, nuchal rigidity represented by positive Kernig and Brudzinski signs, photophobia, nausea, vomiting, confusion, lethargy, and irritability. Bacterial meningitis is commonly caused by in children over the age of three months. Although there has been a decline in infections due to the introduction of the pneumococcal conjugate and pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccines, there are still reported cases of invasive pneumococcal infections mostly with non-vaccine serotypes. We report a fully immunized six-year-old male patient with a presentation of classic meningitis signs and symptoms who developed rapid progression of disease including sudden and dramatic change in physical exam and subsequent respiratory depression within 12 hours of admission. Our patient had a history of extensive traumatic facial bone fractures six months prior. Our case demonstrates a unique presentation of rapidly progressing pneumococcal meningitis due to a suspected complication of septic thrombophlebitis and subsequent brain herniation in a fully immunized patient six months after a severe traumatic facial injury.
PubMed: 38807822
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.59204 -
Veterinary Clinical Pathology Jun 2024A 13-year-old male domestic short-hair cat presented for evaluation of labored breathing, hyporexia, and lethargy. Pertinent initial diagnostics yielded leukocytosis,...
A 13-year-old male domestic short-hair cat presented for evaluation of labored breathing, hyporexia, and lethargy. Pertinent initial diagnostics yielded leukocytosis, characterized by neutrophilia and monocytosis. Numerous small, round, magenta granules were observed within all neutrophils in Wright-Giemsa-stained blood films on the day of presentation and the day thereafter. No other neutrophil morphologic abnormalities were present, making cytoplasmic toxicity highly unlikely. Hyperadrenocorticism was diagnosed based on the lack of suppression in a low-dose dexamethasone suppression test, and without other diagnostics, the cat was discharged on trilostane therapy. Neutrophil granules did not stain with Alcian blue pH 1.0, periodic acid-Schiff (PAS), PAS and Alcian blue pH 2.5, and toluidine blue. Electron microscopy identified no differences in the morphology of the secretory granules or other neutrophil features. Metabolic screening tests of the cat's urine did not identify a genetic metabolic disorder. However, serum α- and β -hexosaminidase (HexA and HexB) activities were 4.3% and 0% of normal controls, respectively, which is supportive of GM2-gangliosidosis, that is, Sandhoff disorder. However, the historical, clinical, and electron microscopy findings did not provide evidence to confirm this genetic defect. To the author's knowledge, this is the first case of magenta-staining granules within neutrophils in a breed other than a Birman, Siamese, or Himalayan.
Topics: Animals; Cats; Male; Neutrophils; Cat Diseases; Cytoplasmic Granules
PubMed: 38797715
DOI: 10.1111/vcp.13356 -
Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland) May 2024West Nile virus (WNV) neuroinvasive disease (WNND) occurs in approximately 1 percent of WNV-infected patients and typically presents as encephalitis, meningitis, or...
West Nile virus (WNV) neuroinvasive disease (WNND) occurs in approximately 1 percent of WNV-infected patients and typically presents as encephalitis, meningitis, or acute flaccid paralysis (AFP). WNND remains a difficult inpatient diagnosis, creating significant challenges for prognostication and therapy selection. We characterized the clinical and diagnostic features of WNND cases at two major academic medical centers in New York City in routine clinical practice. We retrospectively reviewed the charts of thirty-six patients with WNND, including twenty-six encephalitis, four meningitis, and six AFP cases. The most common presenting symptoms were fever (86.1%) and gastrointestinal symptoms (38.9%) in addition to altered mental status (72.2%), lethargy (63.9%), gait disturbances (46.2%), and headache (44.4%). Fourteen (48.3%) patients displayed acute magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings, particularly T2 hyperintensities in the bilateral thalami, brainstem, and deep white matter. New York State Department of Health WNV CSF IgM testing was utilized for diagnosis in 58.3% of patients; however, just 38.1% had the result by discharge, compared to 85.6% of those who underwent serum IgM testing. The median length of stay was 13.5 days, 38.9% were intubated, and three patients (8.9%) died during acute hospitalization. Our findings underscore the morbidity, mortality, and diagnostic challenges of WNND, suggesting the potential utility of serum IgM testing in combination with confirmatory CSF testing to expedite diagnosis in the acute setting.
PubMed: 38787234
DOI: 10.3390/pathogens13050382 -
Current Oncology (Toronto, Ont.) Apr 2024Therapeutic management of patients with leptomeningeal carcinomatosis (LC) may require treatment of concomitant hydrocephalus (HC) in addition to intrathecal...
Therapeutic management of patients with leptomeningeal carcinomatosis (LC) may require treatment of concomitant hydrocephalus (HC) in addition to intrathecal chemotherapy (ITC). Ventriculoperitoneal shunts (VPS) equipped with a valve for manual deactivation of shunt function and a concomitant reservoir for application of ITC pose an elegant solution to both problems. The present study evaluates indication, feasibility, and safety of such a modified shunt/reservoir design (mS/R). All patients with LC aged ≥ 18 years who had undergone mS/R implantation between 2013 and 2020 at the authors' institution were further analyzed. ITC was indicated following the recommendation of the neuro-oncological tumor board and performed according to a standardized protocol. Sixteen patients with LC underwent mS/R implantation for subsequent ITC and concomitant treatment of HC. Regarding HC-related clinical symptoms, 69% of patients preoperatively exhibited lethargy, 38% cognitive impairment, and 38% (additional) visual disturbances. Postoperatively, 86% of patients achieved subjective improvement of HC-related symptoms. Overall, postoperative complications occurred in three patients (19%). No patient encountered cancer treatment-related complications. The present study describes a combination procedure consisting of a standard VPS-system and a standard reservoir for patients suffering from LC and HC. No cancer treatment-related complications occurred, indicating straightforward handling and thus safety.
Topics: Humans; Ventriculoperitoneal Shunt; Meningeal Carcinomatosis; Female; Male; Middle Aged; Hydrocephalus; Injections, Spinal; Adult; Aged; Feasibility Studies
PubMed: 38785461
DOI: 10.3390/curroncol31050180 -
BMJ Case Reports May 2024Non-ketotic hyperglycinaemia (NKH) is an inborn error of glycine metabolism with autosomal recessive inheritance. A female infant presented to our emergency department...
Non-ketotic hyperglycinaemia (NKH) is an inborn error of glycine metabolism with autosomal recessive inheritance. A female infant presented to our emergency department with intractable seizures, lethargy and hypotonia, 2 weeks after her routine vaccination. Detailed infective and metabolic workup revealed normal blood sugar, ketone, lactate ammonia, and a high level of glycine in serum and cerebrospinal fluid suggesting NKH. Diagnosis of NKH was further confirmed on genetic analysis for gene mutation. The child showed clinical improvement with oral sodium benzoate. Here, we report the inheritance, pathophysiology, diagnostic approach, genetic confirmation, management and prognosis of a child with NKH.
Topics: Humans; Hyperglycinemia, Nonketotic; Female; Infant; Diagnosis, Differential; Muscle Hypotonia; Sodium Benzoate; Vaccination; Seizures; Lethargy
PubMed: 38782422
DOI: 10.1136/bcr-2023-257093 -
Praxis Apr 2024We present a case of a 58-year-old man with a history of laryngo-pharyngectomy including bilateral thyroidectomy due to hypopharyngeal cancer presenting with lethargy,...
We present a case of a 58-year-old man with a history of laryngo-pharyngectomy including bilateral thyroidectomy due to hypopharyngeal cancer presenting with lethargy, acute kidney failure, and hypercalcemia. Milk alkali syndrome was diagnosed given the history of high-dose calcium / vitamin D supplementation after ruling out other causes of hypercalcemia. After initial treatment with normal saline, furosemide and denosumab, the patient developed severe symptomatic hypocalcemia as a rare adverse effect of denosumab.
Topics: Humans; Hypercalcemia; Male; Middle Aged; Acute Kidney Injury; Lethargy; Diagnosis, Differential; Hypocalcemia; Denosumab
PubMed: 38779795
DOI: 10.23785/PRAXIS.2024.04.005 -
Veterinary Parasitology, Regional... Jun 2024Spirometra mansoni is a diphyllobothroid cestode and one of the causing agents of sparganosis, a zoonotic foodborne and waterborne infection in humans. This parasite has...
Spirometra mansoni is a diphyllobothroid cestode and one of the causing agents of sparganosis, a zoonotic foodborne and waterborne infection in humans. This parasite has an indirect life cycle with domestic and wild canids or felids as definitive hosts. The last report of S. mansoni in Costa Rica was done in 2004 by morphological assessment of worms, whereas molecular evidence of this species was obtained recently in the Americas. Herein, we present seven cases of spirometrosis in four dogs, three cats and a coyote from different regions of Costa Rica occurring in a time span of a year. Dog cases presented vomiting, hyporexia, lethargy and diarrhea, whereas cats were mostly asymptomatic. Moreover, the coyote was found with Spirometra sp. proglottids incidentally. Cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 (cox1) sequences of eggs or proglottids derived from all cases were analyzed with a Bayesian Inference phylogenetic tree and a haplotype network. These analyses showed the clustering of S. mansoni from Costa Rica with other sequences derived from Asia and America. Moreover, cox1 sequences clustered in two separate haplotypes, suggesting the high genetic diversity of the species. The present cases represent the first molecular evidence of the parasite in Central America; thus, extending its known range in the American continent.
Topics: Animals; Cats; Dogs; Female; Male; Animals, Wild; Cat Diseases; Cestode Infections; Costa Rica; Coyotes; Dog Diseases; Electron Transport Complex IV; Phylogeny; Spirometra
PubMed: 38772646
DOI: 10.1016/j.vprsr.2024.101030 -
Clinical and Experimental Pediatrics Jun 2024Iron deficiency (ID) tends to be overlooked compared with anemia. However, its prevalence is estimated to be twice as high as that of ID anemia, and ID without anemia...
Iron deficiency (ID) tends to be overlooked compared with anemia. However, its prevalence is estimated to be twice as high as that of ID anemia, and ID without anemia can be accompanied by clinical and functional impairments. The symptoms of ID are nonspecific, such as fatigue and lethargy, but can lead to neurodevelopmental disorders in children, restless legs syndrome, and recurrent infections due to immune system dysregulation. In particular, the risk of ID is high in the context of chronic inflammatory diseases (CIDs) due to the reaction of various cytokines and the resulting increase in hepcidin levels; ID further exacerbates these diseases and increases mortality. Therefore, the diagnosis of ID should not be overlooked through ID screening especially in high-risk groups. Ferritin and transferrin saturation levels are the primary laboratory parameters used to diagnose ID. However, as ferritin levels respond to inflammation, the diagnostic criteria differ among guidelines. Therefore, new tools and criteria for accurately diagnosing ID should be developed. Treatment can be initiated only with an accurate diagnosis. Oral iron is typically the first-line treatment for ID; however, the efficacy and safety of intravenous iron have recently been recognized. Symptoms improve quickly after treatment, and the prognosis of accompanying diseases can also be improved. This review highlights the need to improve global awareness of ID diagnosis and treatment, even in the absence of anemia, to improve the quality of life of affected children, especially those with CIDs.
PubMed: 38772411
DOI: 10.3345/cep.2023.00521