13 research outputs found

    A Fatal Case of Metastatic Pulmonary Calcification during the Puerperium

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    We present an unusual case of a fatal respiratory failure in a young woman developed two weeks after she gave birth at home. Circumstantial and clinical features of the case were strongly suggestive for a ‘classical’ septic origin of the respiratory symptoms. Autopsy, together with histopathological and immunohistochemical analyses allowed demonstrating a massive calcium redistribution consisting of an important osteolysis, especially from cranial bones and abnormal accumulation in lungs and other organs. Such physiopathology was driven by a primary hyperparathyroidism secondary to a parathyroid carcinoma as demonstrated by immunohistochemistry. This very rare case is furthermore characterised by a regular pregnancy course, ended with the birth of a healthy new-born. A complex interaction between pregnancy physiology and hyperparathyroidism might be hypothesised, determining the discrepancy between the relative long period of wellness and the tumultuous cascade occurred in the puerperium

    Calibration of myocardial T2 and T1 against iron concentration.

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    BACKGROUND: The assessment of myocardial iron using T2* cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) has been validated and calibrated, and is in clinical use. However, there is very limited data assessing the relaxation parameters T1 and T2 for measurement of human myocardial iron. METHODS: Twelve hearts were examined from transfusion-dependent patients: 11 with end-stage heart failure, either following death (n=7) or cardiac transplantation (n=4), and 1 heart from a patient who died from a stroke with no cardiac iron loading. Ex-vivo R1 and R2 measurements (R1=1/T1 and R2=1/T2) at 1.5 Tesla were compared with myocardial iron concentration measured using inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy. RESULTS: From a single myocardial slice in formalin which was repeatedly examined, a modest decrease in T2 was observed with time, from mean (± SD) 23.7 ± 0.93 ms at baseline (13 days after death and formalin fixation) to 18.5 ± 1.41 ms at day 566 (p<0.001). Raw T2 values were therefore adjusted to correct for this fall over time. Myocardial R2 was correlated with iron concentration [Fe] (R2 0.566, p<0.001), but the correlation was stronger between LnR2 and Ln[Fe] (R2 0.790, p<0.001). The relation was [Fe] = 5081•(T2)-2.22 between T2 (ms) and myocardial iron (mg/g dry weight). Analysis of T1 proved challenging with a dichotomous distribution of T1, with very short T1 (mean 72.3 ± 25.8 ms) that was independent of iron concentration in all hearts stored in formalin for greater than 12 months. In the remaining hearts stored for <10 weeks prior to scanning, LnR1 and iron concentration were correlated but with marked scatter (R2 0.517, p<0.001). A linear relationship was present between T1 and T2 in the hearts stored for a short period (R2 0.657, p<0.001). CONCLUSION: Myocardial T2 correlates well with myocardial iron concentration, which raises the possibility that T2 may provide additive information to T2* for patients with myocardial siderosis. However, ex-vivo T1 measurements are less reliable due to the severe chemical effects of formalin on T1 shortening, and therefore T1 calibration may only be practical from in-vivo human studies

    Primary mesenteric liposarcoma. Report of a case

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    Primary mesenteric liposarcomas are very rare neoplasms. The authors report a case of mesenteric liposarcoma recently observed. The patient presented with a history of dyspeptic syndrome, meteorism and abdominal pain associated with a change in bowel habit and constipation. On physical examination there was a large, well-circumscribed, abdominal mass. Computed tomography revealed an abdominal, dishomogeneous, low-density mass. Surgical excision with a tumour-free margin was achieved. The histologic appearances were those of a well-differentiated liposarcoma (atypical lipomatous tumour). The patient is alive and disease-free 33 months after the surgery. Primary mesenteric liposarcoma is often resectable and requires aggressivesurgical management; in consideration of the high risk of tumour recurrence, the treatment of choice is a wide surgical excisio

    A Fatal Case of Metastatic Pulmonary Calcification during the Puerperium

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    We present an unusual case of a fatal respiratory failure in a young woman developed two weeks after she gave birth at home. Circumstantial and clinical features of the case were strongly suggestive for a ‘classical’ septic origin of the respiratory symptoms. Autopsy, together with histopathological and immunohistochemical analyses allowed demonstrating a massive calcium redistribution consisting of an important osteolysis, especially from cranial bones and abnormal accumulation in lungs and other organs. Such physiopathology was driven by a primary hyperparathyroidism secondary to a parathyroid carcinoma as demonstrated by immunohistochemistry. This very rare case is furthermore characterised by a regular pregnancy course, ended with the birth of a healthy new-born. A complex interaction between pregnancy physiology and hyperparathyroidism might be hypothesised, determining the discrepancy between the relative long period of wellness and the tumultuous cascade occurred in the puerperium

    IMMEDIATE CAUSES OF DEATH IN SHORT-TERM SURVIVING HEART-TRANSPLANT RECIPIENTS

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    From 1985 to 1992, 1068 cardiac transplants have been performed in the Italian units. The immediate causes of death of 142 of the 148 orthotopic cardiac transplantation recipients who died within the first 6 postoperative months were surveyed. Deaths were grouped into three periods: perioperative (less than or equal to 1 month, 68.3%), early (>1 less than or equal to 3 months, 23.2%), and advanced (>3 less than or equal to 6 months, 8.5%). Acute graft failure (arising from the ischemic damage to the donor heart, from surgical problems, from severe pulmonary hypertension, or from multiorgan failure) accounted for 49% of perioperative deaths and, along with noncardiac emergencies (23% of perioperative deaths), was significantly more frequent in this period than in the subsequent ones. The dissection of thoracic arteries was responsible for 4% of postoperative deaths, occurring exclusively among patients transplanted for ischemic or valvular heart disease. In the early and advanced periods, untreatable acute rejection (13%) and fatal infections (38%), mostly saprophytic, were significantly more frequent. Ischemic heart damage secondary to graft vasculopathy already caused 26% of deaths between the fourth and sixth months after transplantation. Some diseases, such as acute rejection, had the same frequency as both underlying disease and immediate cause of death. On the contrary, graft failure is more common as primary disease, leading to death also through noncardiac complications and saprophytic infections. Bacterial infections have the same frequency as both prime and immediate cause of death, viral infections are more common as primary disease, and the opposite is true for saprophytic infections

    WHEN AND WHY DO HEART-TRANSPLANT RECIPIENTS DIE - A 7 YEAR EXPERIENCE OF 1068 CARDIAC TRANSPLANTS

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    This mortality study deals with the 1068 heart transplants (1054 patients) performed in Italian Units from November 1985 to April 1992. The death rate was 19.7% and the actuarial survival was 89% at 1 month, 83% at 1 year and 74% at 6.5 years. Recipients who died had been less often transplanted for dilated cardiomyopathy, were older (44.1 vs. 41.7 years) and more often male (84.5 vs. 72.7%). Analysis of the causes of death was restricted to orthotopic transplantations (1029/1068 procedures, 195/208 deaths). Deaths were grouped within four intervals: peri-operative (less-than-or-equal-to 1 month, 50.0% of deaths), early (> 1 month less-than-or-equal-to 3 months, 17.2%), intermediate (> 3 months less-than-or-equal-to 2 years, 22.6%) and late (> 2 years, 10.2%). The prime causes of death were mostly post-operative graft failure (whose effects brought about 64% of peri-operative deaths, 28% of early and 7% of intermediate deaths), post-operative complications (10% of peri-operative deaths), acute rejection (10% of total deaths, distributed in all the periods), graft arteriopathy (6% of early, 36% of intermediate and 58% of late deaths), infections (17% of deaths, occurring in all periods but late) and malignant tumours (7% of deaths), lymphomas being the first to occur and Kaposi's sarcoma occuring only in the intermediate period. Repeat transplantation had a poor outcome (death rate 71.4%), two-thirds of the re-transplanted patients' deaths being due to early graft failure and a third to late relapsing graft vasculopathy
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