The American journal of the medical sciences
-
Fahr's disease is a sporadic or familial neurodegenerative disorder characterized by symmetrical calcification of cerebral structures, particularly the basal ganglia, cerebellar dentate nuclei and surrounding white matter, in the absence of metabolic causes of calcification. We report the case of a previously fit, high functioning 58-year-old man who developed catastrophic irreversible neuropsychiatric collapse after sepsis despite appropriate antimicrobial treatment. Cranial computed tomography revealed extensive diffuse calcifications located in unusual areas. ⋯ Important diagnostic considerations in the septic patient who develops neurological complications, namely sepsis-associated encephalopathy and antibiotic-associated encephalopathy, are discussed. The patient remains severely handicapped 6 months after the acute event. Patients with clinically silent neurodegenerative/neuropsychiatric conditions, such as Fahr's disease, may present with florid and unpredicted neurological features in the context of systemic illness.
-
Review Case Reports
Inflammatory Demyelinating Pseudotumor With Liver Dysfunction: IgG4 Related Disease With Primary Biliary Cholangitis.
Immunoglobulin G4 related disease (IgG4-RD) is a recently recognized immune-mediated disease which is far from understanding. A case of inflammatory demyelinating pseudotumor had been confirmed as IgG4-RD according to pathology features and clinical context. ⋯ This is the first report in which mass lesions in the brain parenchyma were caused by IgG4-RD while liver dysfunction was due to primary biliary cholangitis. The clinical features of IgG4-RD are miscellaneous, and the accumulation of case reports might enrich clinicians experience and broaden their horizons about this condition.
-
The association between grit, defined as perseverance and passion for long-term goals, and professional burnout has not been studied in internal medicine residents. Our objective was to examine whether internal medicine residents' scores on a grit scale were associated with various measures of burnout. ⋯ Grit appeared to be an independent predictor of burnout in internal medicine residents in this sample, with lower grit scores associated with higher burnout scores. By measuring grit early in residency, programs can potentially identify residents at risk for symptoms of burnout, specifically emotional exhaustion, and implement targeted interventions.
-
The effect of abdominal palpation on bowel sounds is controversial. The authors developed an auscultation apparatus to count bowel sounds and determined whether abdominal palpation modifies the number of bowel sounds in healthy volunteers and gastrointestinal outpatients. ⋯ Using an apparatus devised by medical students, the authors found that abdominal palpation did not modify the number of bowel sounds in healthy volunteers and gastrointestinal outpatients.
-
Risk stratification is important for the management of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). The present study aimed to investigate the clinical impact of N-terminal prohormone of brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) on prognosis and to identify clinical characteristics associated with NT-proBNP elevation in CAP patients. ⋯ NT-proBNP level was a useful marker for the prediction of 30-day mortality in patients hospitalized with CAP, and provided additional prognostic value to PSI or CURB-65 alone.