La Revue de médecine interne
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Review Case Reports
[Cerebral infarction and tuberculosis: case report and literature review].
Although tuberculous meningitis is an uncommon presentation of tuberculosis, it still remains one of the deadliest forms of this disease. In this context, the occurrence of a cerebral infarct is an aggravating factor. ⋯ Cerebral infarctions in patients with tuberculous meningitis are events that cannot be underestimated in terms of frequency or severity. Their poor prognosis is partly the result of insufficiently defined management, which combines anti-tuberculosis treatment and early corticosteroid therapy.
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The objective of this short narrative literature review is to highlight the different difficulties encountered by medical doctor in the daily use of EMR. We show that these are not simple transitional phenomena related to a "resistance to change", but rather the fact of a deeper and unfinished transformation. ⋯ Our question concerns the compatibility of the multiple objectives of EMR, the potential influence of computerization on the steps of entering and consulting medical information, the impact on the clinical reasoning, the reality of assistance to medical "performance". The question is not so much what EMRs do less well than the paper record, but to provide insights into how tomorrow's EMRs will do better than today's.
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Patients with sickle cell trait (SCT) are commonly considered as asymptomatic carriers. However, some clinical manifestations may occur. ⋯ SCT may cause acute ischemic complications in a context of prolonged hypoxia or dehydration. The most commonly reported are the splenic infarct and the renal papillary necrosis. A study of hemoglobin should be considered in these clinical situations in patients with compatible ethnic origin.