Medicina clinica
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A review of the diagnostic and therapeutic management algorithm of the pathogen Clostridioides difficile for daily practice is presented. Its diagnosis, in any unformed stool sample sent to the laboratory, is based on a two-step algorithm, with demonstration of the pathogen by means of its enzyme glutamate dehydrogenase by immunoassay and subsequent PCR (polymerase chain reaction) of its toxin. The mainstay of step therapy, reserved for symptomatic patients, is fidaxomicin, over vancomycin. ⋯ Emerging therapies, such as faecal microbiota transplantation or the antibody bezlotoxumab, are gaining importance in patients with risk factors or relapses. Surgery is indicated in patients with worse prognosis and complications. Prevention is essential, based on vigilance and contact precautions, in addition to the elimination of spores from the environment.
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Sudden cardiac death is the leading cause of death in developed countries and a small but significant number of cases cannot be explained after a thorough autopsy process. Cases of sudden cardiac death in people under 40years of age are mainly due to structural heart disease or cardiomyopathies and arrhythmogenic diseases or channelopathies. In these cases, the search for associated genetic factors through molecular autopsy may help to find the cause of unexplained sudden cardiac death, through genetic diagnosis of previously undiagnosed channelopathies or cardiomyopathies. The finding of genetic variants classified as pathogenic associated with cardiac pathology would conclude the autopsy result and provide the possibility of genetic screening in other family members.
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Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections as an important cause of acute respiratory illness (ARI) and exacerbation of chronic lung disease in adults especially affect older adults, adults with immunosuppression, and adults with chronic disease, particularly pulmonary or cardiac disease, who may develop more severe complications. A more accurate determination of the burden of RSV infection in the adult population would improve the approach to infection, especially considering the growth of the older adult population in the world and, above all, that there are currently three approved vaccines aimed at the adult population that could have an effect on the prevention of RSV infection. This review article reviews the most relevant and novel scientific evidence on the epidemiology, diagnosis, treatment and prevention of RSV infection in the adult population.