40 research outputs found

    Calcium channel blockers, beta-blockers and digitalis poisoning: management in the emergency room

    Get PDF
    Calcium channel blockers and beta-blockers intoxications account for up to 65% of deaths for cardiovascular drugs, causing severe clinical symptoms refractory to standard medications. The most serious poisonings are those resulting from verapamil and propanolol ingestion. Both support and antidotic therapy are necessary for these potentially unstable patients. Supportive measures and the use of digoxin-specific antibody fragments are first line treatment for digitalis glycoside poisoning

    Calcium channel blockers, beta-blockers and digitalis poisoning: management in the emergency room

    No full text
    Calcium channel blockers and beta-blockers intoxications account for up to 65% of deaths for cardiovascular drugs, causing severe clinical symptoms refractory to standard medications. The most serious poisonings are those resulting from verapamil and propanolol ingestion. Both support and antidotic therapy are necessary for these potentially unstable patients. Supportive measures and the use of digoxin-specific antibody fragments are first line treatment for digitalis glycoside poisoning

    Helicobacter pylori infection and expression of the angiogenic factor plate-derived endothelial cell growth factor by pre-neoplastic gastric mucosal lesions and gastric carcinoma

    No full text
    Background. Expression of the angiogenic factor platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor is induced in some gastric carcinomas. Whether angiogenesis is induced early in the development of gastric pre-neoplastic lesions and whether Helicobacter pylori infection affects platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor expression is not known. Aim. To assess whether chronic gastritis, intestinal metaplasia, gastric dysplasia and gastric carcinomas express platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor and whether Helicobacter pylori infection might affect the expression of platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor in these lesions. Patients and Methods. Patients with gastric carcinomas, atrophic gastritis with associated intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia and controls without infection or carcinoma were studied. Results. Platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor was detected by immunohistochemistry in 9 out 19 gastric carcinomas (45%). Only focal immunostaining was detected in intestinal metaplasia adjacent to dysplasia and in dysplastic cells. Of the tumours, 90% contained platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor-positive interstitial cells. A significant correlation was found between active Helicobacter pylori infection and a larger number of platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor-positive interstitial cells in areas of intestinal metaplasia (p\u3c0.05). Conclusion. Helicobacter pylori infection does not influence the expression of platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor, once gastric cancer has developed. However, Helicobacter pylori infection may increase the extension of expression of platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor by infiltrating interstitial cells in premalignant lesions, such as intestinal metaplasia, which may help create a favourable environment for tumour development. This may possibly be due to non-specific increase in recruitment of inflammatory cells caused by Helicobacter pylori infection. Further studies, with a larger number of samples, are now needed in order to confirm this finding

    An Unusual Case, in Italy, of Hepatocarcinoma Characterized by Portal Hypertension and Absence of Cirrhosis.

    No full text
    We report a case of a 40-year-old man of Bantu origin, affected by both HBV infection and primitive hepatocarcinoma in the absence of cirrhosis. The fine-needle aspiration specimen reported a rare variant of liver cancer resembling an adenocarcinoma. The neoplasm was certainly a hepatic primitive carcinoma, because chest X-ray, cranial computed tomography, colonoscopy, and abdominal computed tomography did not detect neoplastic lesions and alpha-fetoprotein was > 1000 ng/mL. The present neoplasm, characterized by severe portal hypertension and absence of cirrhosis, is rare in Italy, but largely diffused in Bantu people in Africa
    corecore