Cases reported "Critical Illness"

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1/18. A case of Capgras delusion following critical illness.

    hallucinations and paranoid delusions are recognised complications of critical illness. However, the occurrence of capgras syndrome, in response to critical illness, where patients are convinced that doubles have replaced close family has not been described in the literature. There have been isolated case histories in the literature in response to medical procedures or illness but mostly in patients suffering from schizophrenia. A 42 year old woman was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) with pneumonia, following extensive surgery for a squamous cell carcinoma, secondary to Crohns disease. She had no history of previous head injury, cerebro-vascular problems or psychiatric disorder. She reported having memories of all her family, with the exception of her mother, being replaced by aliens while she was on the ICU. The delusion was only diagnosed once it had resolved and the patient was able to talk, and this highlights the difficulty of diagnosing delusions while patients are still intubated and unable to verbalise their concerns. It has been suggested that a defect in the ability to recognise the emotional significance of the face lies at the root of capgras syndrome.
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keywords = pneumonia
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2/18. acinetobacter calcoaceticus pneumonia and the formation of pneumatoceles.

    Pneumatoceles are cystic lesions of the lungs often seen in children with staphylococcal pneumonia and positive-pressure ventilation. acinetobacter calcoaceticus is an aerobic, short immobile gram-negative rod, or coccobacillus, which is an omnipresent saprophyte. The variant anitratus is the most clinically significant pathogen in this family, usually presenting as a lower respiratory tract infection. Acinetobacter has been demonstrated to be one of the most common organisms found in the ICU. We present three critically ill surgery patients with Acinetobacter pneumonia, high inspiratory pressures, and the subsequent development of pneumatoceles. One of these patients died from a ruptured pneumatocele, resulting in tension pneumothorax. Treatment of pneumatoceles should center on appropriate intravenous antimicrobial therapy. This should be culture directed but is most often accomplished with imipenem. Percutaneous, computed tomographic-guided catheter placement or direct tube thoracostomy decompression of the pneumatocele may prevent subsequent rupture and potentially lethal tension pneumothorax.
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keywords = pneumonia
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3/18. Lethal late onset cblB methylmalonic aciduria.

    OBJECTIVE: To alert the physicians to the possibility of a late-onset inborn error of metabolism in an apparently previously healthy patient with acute clinical presentation. DESIGN: Case report. SETTING: Pediatric unit and general intensive care unit. PATIENT: An apparently previously healthy 12-yr-old female presented acutely with vomiting, fever, bronchopneumonia, and progressive loss of consciousness associated with ketoacidosis, hyperglycemia, and hyperammonemia. She died 3 days later with a diagnosis of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. INTERVENTIONS: Intravenous hydration, glucose and insulin, mechanical ventilation. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Organic acid analysis on a postmortem sample of aqueous humor revealed high levels of methylmalonic acid. Enzymatic studies on cultured fibroblasts were consistent with the diagnosis of cblB methylmalonic aciduria. CONCLUSIONS: The diagnosis of cblB methylmalonic aciduria was made in a postmortem patient who died with a misdiagnosis of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Unclear biochemical findings and positive family history should strongly lead to suspicion of an inborn error of metabolism in an apparently previously healthy critically ill patient.
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keywords = pneumonia
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4/18. Acquired tracheoesophageal fistula in critically ill patients.

    Acquired benign tracheoesophageal fistula (TEF) is an infrequent complication of prolonged intubation and tracheostomy. Not infrequently, it is associated with severe circumferential malacia of the trachea and a need for concomitant correction of both. Controversy exists as to whether this should be performed in a single-stage or a 2-stage procedure. Four patients with acquired TEF underwent operation in a tertiary referral medical center between 1995 and 1997. The operations were performed through either an anterior (3) or a lateral (1) neck approach. Three patients underwent closure of the fistula with tracheal resection and anastomosis in a single stage and are doing well. One patient with complete subglottic stenosis underwent closure of the TEF and was planned for tracheal reconstruction in a second stage. This patient died in the early postoperative period. The complications included aspiration of blood leading to pneumonia (2), spontaneously resolving pneumomediastinum (1), subcutaneous emphysema (2), and cardiac arrhythmia ( 1). Residual fistula, noted in 1 patient, was treated conservatively and resolved spontaneously within several weeks. We conclude that acquired TEF is amenable to repair through a cervical approach. A single-stage correction of the TEF with reconstruction of the trachea is suitable and successful in most patients. Several stages seem justified when concurrent laryngotracheal reconstruction is needed.
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keywords = pneumonia
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5/18. critical illness onychomadesis.

    OBJECTIVE: To present our observation of the development of a rare nail deformity in the prolonged course of disease of a critically ill patient with a pulmonary abscess. DESIGN: Case report. SETTING: Tertiary referral, 16-bed, level I surgical ICU in an academic hospital. PATIENT: A 48-year-old Caucasian male was treated with penicillin for a pneumococcal meningitis and pneumonia. He developed a large pulmonary abscess of the right upper lobe and needed prolonged mechanical ventilation. Extensive surgical treatment was successful eventually. A remarkable feature concerned the occurrence of onycholysis of all finger nails and toe nails resulting in complete shedding of the nails (onychomadesis). This phenomenon can be regarded as an extreme manifestation of Beau's lines precipitated by a severe systemic insult. CONCLUSION: We observed the development of onychomadesis in a critically ill patient with a large pulmonary abscess. This association has not been described before.
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ranking = 1
keywords = pneumonia
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6/18. Open-label, multicentre, emergency-use study of clinafloxacin (CI-960) in the treatment of patients with serious life-threatening infections.

    In an open-label emergency-use study, 23 patients with bacterial infections caused by multiply drug resistant pathogens were treated with clinafloxacin. Efficacy and safety were evaluated by tabulating investigators' assessments at the end of treatment, treatment discontinuations and adverse event data. Most of the patients were seriously ill and had multi-organ infections, primarily respiratory tract infections such as nosocomial pneumonia and gastrointestinal infections. Eleven patients were successfully treated, two had treatment failure and 10 were not evaluable because the patients died of their underlying disease. Considering that most of the patients had several infections caused by multiply resistant pathogens, clinafloxacin may be useful for the treatment of such life-threatening episodes.
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ranking = 1
keywords = pneumonia
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7/18. life threatening acute epiglottitis in acute leukemia.

    We report an 8-year-old boy who developed a life-threatening acute epiglottitis during induction chemotherapy for acute promyelocytic leukemia. He survived the infection with emergency tracheostomy, treatment with broad spectrum antibiotics and amphotericin, and the use of granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor. No organism was identified. A literature review identified 18 cases of acute epiglottitis in cancer patients. Sixteen of them were suffering from hematologic malignancies and three patients had received bone marrow transplantation. Unlike the usual case of epiglottitis, the majority (15 out of 18) of affected patients were adults and none of the infections was associated with haemophilus influenzae. streptococcus pneumoniae and candida albicans were the most frequently identified pathogens. Early recognition and aggressive supportive care are required for successful management.
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ranking = 1
keywords = pneumonia
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8/18. The critically ill liver patient: the variceal bleeder.

    Esophageal varices develop in patients with cirrhosis once portal pressure, measured by hepatic venous pressure gradient, and exceeds 10 mm Hg. At a portal pressure of 12 mm Hg, variceal bleeding may develop that is associated with a mortality of 30% to 50% per episode. In addition to an elevated portal pressure, other risk factors for the development of variceal hemorrhage include: variceal size, endoscopic features on the variceal wall (i.e., red wales), and child-Pugh class. In patients with suspected variceal hemorrhage, the treatment of the acute episode includes intravascular volume expansion, hemostasis through the use of pharmacological agents and endoscopy, and the prevention and treatment of potential complications associated with variceal hemorrhage such as aspiration pneumonia, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and hepatic encephalopathy. Given a high rate of rebleeding, long-term prevention through secondary prophylaxis should be instituted in all patients who have survived an episode of variceal bleeding. Current prophylactic options include: non-selective beta-blockers alone (first line) or in combination with long-acting nitrates (isosorbide mononitrate) and/or endoscopic variceal obliteration achieved through sclerotherapy or preferably, band ligation.
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ranking = 1
keywords = pneumonia
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9/18. An unusual varicella zoster infection complicated by purpura fulminans and multiorgan failure in a healthy infant.

    The case is reported of a 2-y-old boy who developed purpura fulminans, meningoencephalitis, pneumonia complicated by adult respiratory distress syndrome and acute renal failure after varicella. These complications of varicella are extremely rare in a healthy infant.
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ranking = 1
keywords = pneumonia
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10/18. Spontaneous empyema and overwhelming septic shock due to pasteurella multocida.

    Invasive pasteurella multocida infection, although uncommon, has been recognized to occur more frequently among patients with hepatic cirrhosis. This study reports a fatal case of bacteremic P. multocida empyema without pneumonia associated with refractory septic shock in a patient with both cirrhosis and asplenia.
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ranking = 1
keywords = pneumonia
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