Cases reported "Recurrence"

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1/62. Watermelon stomach--an unusual cause of recurrent upper gastrointestinal bleeding in a uremic patient receiving estrogen-progesterone therapy: case report.

    A 50-year-old woman who had been on maintenance hemodialysis for 5 years developed severe anemia resistant to treatment with iron supplements and erythropoietin 4 months prior to hospital admission. Her stool occult blood test was positive, and an initial panendoscopy revealed evidence of possible antral gastritis. However, repeated administration of sucralfate, H2 blockers and a proton pump inhibitor was not effective in preventing further gastrointestinal tract blood loss and subsequent refractory anemia. She required multiple blood transfusions and hospital admissions during this period. There was no obvious coagulopathy or thrombocytopenia. After her third admission, a second panendoscopy demonstrated the typical picture of watermelon stomach. A trial of hormone therapy with estrogen and progesterone increased the hemoglobin level within a month without further evidence of active gastrointestinal bleeding. From our experience with this case, we found that the diagnosis of antral vascular ectasia (watermelon stomach) with bleeding requires a high degree of clinical alertness and careful endoscopic examination. Estrogen and progesterone therapy may provide a good option for treating the disease in uremic patients without an obvious complication. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report demonstrating the use of maintenance hormone therapy in a female uremic patient to successfully treat watermelon gastric bleeding.
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2/62. pneumothorax due to electrical burn.

    A 25-year-old male developed early as well as delayed (15 days post burn) pneumothorax of right side following high voltage, 1100 KV, electrical burn of the right side of the chest wall. diagnosis was established by clinical examination and chest x-ray. Intercostal tube drainage with underwater seal relieved the patient of pneumothorax.
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3/62. Therapy of prednisone-refractory collagenous colitis with budesonide.

    Collagenous colitis is a rare cause of chronic watery diarrhea. No effective standard treatment has yet been established. Based upon anecdotal reports some anti-inflammatory and symptomatic drugs seem to have some therapeutic efficacy. prednisone is widely believed to be the most effective treatment. Here we describe three female patients with histologically confirmed collagenous colitis refractory to therapy with prednisone. Each had received prednisone with a high starting bolus and lower dose maintenance therapy for their disease. However, definite clinical remission could not be achieved. After the administration of 3 x 3 mg/day controlled ileal release (CIR) capsules of budesonide the symptoms resolved immediately. The mean follow-up after beginning budesonide was 11 months (range 7-18). Two patients are still on budesonide. One had had a quick relapse of diarrhea after stopping her treatment. budesonide therapy was therefore resumed. She has remained symptom-free on a lower daily dose of 2 x 3 mg/day budesonide. One patient has been in remission for more than 1 year after a 3-month course of budesonide. budesonide is a topically acting steroid with rapid absorption, high receptor affinity, and low systemic bioavailability, thus causing almost no side effects. As yet only few case reports have been published on the use of budesonide for collagenous colitis. We present here the first three cases of prednisone refractory collagenous colitis successfully treated with budesonide.
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4/62. Watermelon stomach: a rare cause of upper gastrointestinal bleeding.

    Watermelon stomach is a rare cause of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. We report a middle-aged woman who had been having recurrent bleeding from watermelon stomach. She was treated surgically by gastrectomy and Billroth II anastomosis.
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5/62. Electrophysiologic recovery after vitamin e-deficient neuropathy.

    A case report is presented of an electrophysiologic recovery from vitamin e-deficient neuropathy after treatment with water-soluble vitamin e in a patient with chronic hepatobiliary disease. The patient was a 64-year-old man who had experienced progressive difficulty in ambulation, with ataxia, over the previous 3 years. The symptoms were associated with pain, tingling sensation in the extremities, and reduced fine motor activity. The patient had chronic hepatobiliary disease, with recurrent cholangitis and external drainage of bile acid through a T-tube for more than 20 years. vitamin e level was barely detectable (<0.5 mg/L). Sensory conduction was absent in both sural nerves. Other sensory and motor conduction studies in the upper and lower extremities showed decreased amplitude. The patient was treated with water-soluble vitamin e. After 4 months of therapy, his ambulation function improved, but pain and tingling sensation in both hands remained. Sensory nerve action potentials appeared in both sural nerves, and amplitudes of other sensory nerves were increased. In a second follow-up study after 9 months, all of the evaluated parameters in the nerve conduction studies, as well as the vitamin e level, were normal. The authors conclude that vitamin e-deficient neuropathy is reversible and electrophysiologic recovery can occur with water-soluble vitamin e therapy.
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6/62. Recurrent Aeromonas sepsis in a patient with leukemia.

    A case of recurrent sepsis due to aeromonas hydrophila in a patient with acute myelogenous leukemia is reported. The patient's first infection leading to bacteremia followed contamination of a mosquito bite by stagnant water. After recovery from the first bacteremia, the patient again became septic with a second strain of aeromonas hydrophila, which again responded to antimicrobial therapy. It is hypothesized that contamination of the local water supply may have led to the establishment of a gastrointestinal carrier state that produced the second bout of Aeromonas sepsis when the patient was markedly leukopenic. The importance of the oxidase test to differentiate Aeromonas species from members of the family enterobacteriaceae is re-emphasized.
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7/62. Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt for recurrent hepatic hydrothorax.

    For many years, pleural effusions have been recognized as a complication of cirrhosis, occurring in approximately 5.5% of patients. Recent studies have confirmed that small defects in the diaphragm allow for passage of ascitic fluid into the pleural space. Successful management of these patients is challenging, as many of the treatment options can be associated with increased morbidity. The initial treatment should focus on eliminating and preventing the recurrence of ascites with diuretics and water and salt restriction. For those patients who do not respond medically, more invasive techniques have been used including serial thoracentesis, chest tube placement, chemical pleurodesis, and peritoneovenous shunts. We present a patient with recurrent pleural effusions secondary to hepatic cirrhosis who was unsuccessfully treated medically, and subsequently treated with thoracentesis, chest tube drainage and pleurodesis, with ultimate resolution after transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt placement.
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8/62. Boon's disease: hemorrhagic cystitis in conjunction with massive exfoliation of degenerated urothelial cells (apoptosis?) during intercontinental flights in an otherwise healthy person.

    Hemorrhagic cystitis is a well-defined clinical emergency, usually occurring in the course of treatment with toxic agents such as cyclophosphamide. We present a case of hemorrhagic cystitis in an otherwise completely healthy female. The three documented attacks were severe and started during intercontinental flights. This type of hemorrhagic cystitis as a disease proved to be a boon, treatable by drinking large amounts of water, and was diagnosed by and in Dr. Boon; thus was the appellation Boon's disease coined. Cellular changes in the urine specimen taken after onset of the disease indicated massive exfoliation of degenerated urothelial cells with morphological features suggestive of apoptosis. It seems likely that this process can be initiated by any event which is associated with compromise of vitality of the urinary bladder lining, such as may occur in hypovolemia. This type of hemorrhagic cystitis is most probably not uncommon in susceptible individuals during intercontinental flights.
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9/62. Combined iridocyclectomy and lensectomy surgical technique modified for the removal of an iris cyst in a child.

    The purpose of this report is to describe a modified surgical iridocyclectomy technique and lensectomy for the removal of a recurrent iris cyst and a cataract in a child. A 3-year-old boy underwent uncomplicated standard iridocyclectomy for the removal of an enlarging congenital epidermal iris cyst. In the postoperative period, the cyst recurred. A second surgical intervention was performed using a modified iridocyclectomy technique. Sclerocorneal dissection of the involved quadrant was performed. After a lensectomy, an additional deep lamellar dissection of the peripheral cornea was undertaken prior to iris cyst removal and pupil reconstruction. This modified two-layered iridocyclectomy technique permits an elegant access to the iris lesion and allows the construction of a two-layered watertight wound, reducing the risk of hypotony and wound ectasia. We believe it also allows a better control of astigmatism and is a safe procedure in the pediatric population, particularly during the amblyogenic period.
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10/62. Recurrent sphingomonas paucimobilis -bacteraemia associated with a multi-bacterial water-borne epidemic among neutropenic patients.

    A cluster of septicaemias due to several water-related species occurred in a haematological unit of a university hospital. In recurrent septicaemias of a leukaemic patient caused by sphingomonas paucimobilis, genotyping of the blood isolates by use of random amplified polymorphic dna-analysis verified the presence of two distinct S. paucimobilis strains during two of the separate episodes. A strain of S. paucimobilis identical to one of the patient's was isolated from tap water collected in the haematological unit. Thus S. paucimobilis present in blood cultures was directly linked to bacterial colonization of the hospital water system. Heterogeneous finger-printing patterns among the clinical and environmental isolates indicated the distribution of a variety of S. paucimobilis clones in the hospital environment. This link also explained the multi-microbial nature of the outbreak.
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