6 research outputs found

    Diagnosis and Management of Infected Total Knee Arthroplasty§

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    Infection following total knee arthroplasty can be difficult to diagnose and treat. Diagnosis is multifactorial and relies on the clinical picture, radiographs, bone scans, serologic tests, synovial fluid examination, intra-operative culture and histology. Newer techniques including ultrasonication and molecular diagnostic studies are playing an expanded role. Two-stage exchange arthroplasty with antibiotic cement and 4-6 weeks of intravenous antibiotic treatment remains the most successful intervention for infection eradication. There is no consensus on the optimum type of interval antibiotic cement spacer. There is a limited role for irrigation and debridement, direct one-stage exchange, chronic antibiotic suppression and salvage procedures like arthrodesis and amputation. We examine the literature on each of the diagnostic modalities and treatment options in brief and explain their current significance

    Where's the real lecturer?: the experiences of doctoral educators in the UK

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    Teaching within Higher Education has traditionally been seen as a vital part of the professional apprenticeship of Politics postgraduates. Changes in UK Higher Education in the past twenty years have seen the numbers of postgraduates accepting some teaching duties while writing a Ph.D. grow. This article draws on the experience of the author and some of his Ph.D. colleagues to consider the challenges and benefits of teaching, and the status of postgraduates as educators

    Isolated Renal Relapse of Sarcoidosis under Low-Dose Glucocorticoid Therapy

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    Sarcoidosis is a multisystem disease of unknown etiology. Renal manifestation is rare and usually caused by hypercalcemia and nephrocalcinosis. Moreover, renal disease can occur as granulomatous interstitial nephritis (GIN), which is a histological diagnosis. We describe a case of sarcoidosis first presenting with multiple organ involvement including renal failure caused by severe GIN and subsequent remission on glucocorticoid therapy. After 18 months under low-dose prednisolone, the patient was readmitted with acute renal failure, histologically confirmed to be a relapse of renal sarcoidosis. Extrarenal manifestations of sarcoidosis were not present. Glucocorticoid dose was raised and kidney function again recovered significantly. Usual serologic markers of disease activity were not appropriate to indicate disease activity. Renal manifestation of sarcoidosis should be diagnosed by renal biopsy to guide therapy and probably requires larger glucocorticoid doses and prolonged treatment to prevent relapse
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