6 research outputs found

    Sudden vestibular and hearing loss in mediterranean spotted fever: The first case report

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    Mediterranean spotted fever is an infection disease caused by Rickettsiae and transmitted by tick puncture; the diffusion of such disease is wide in countryside of the Mediterranean regions. The disease may be complicated by several organ failure due to a vasculitis, and also the inner ear can be involved although rarely. We report the first documented case of total involvement of inner ear with sensorineural hearing loss and acute vestibular impairment. The patient was treated with medical therapy and resolution of the infection, but the inner ear damage was not reversible with persistent loss of all functions, documented by instrumental vestibular analysis

    Diagnostic Role of Combined Electrocochleography and Pure-Tone Audiometry Monitoring During Dehydrating Test in Ménière's Disease: A Case Series

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    Objectives: To evaluate the diagnostic role of combined electrocochleography and pure-tone audiometry monitoring during dehydrating test in Ménière's disease and consider its suitability as a diagnostic tool to differentiate those patients with unclear differential diagnosis and therefore identify those with clear endolymphatic hydrops responsive to dehydrating test. To study the efficacy of dehydrating therapy on vertiginous symptoms and hearing loss in patients with Ménière's disease. Study design: Prospective case series. Settings: University hospital, secondary referral center. Patients: Thirty patients, 20 women and 10 men, age range of 25 to 75 years, matching the criteria for definite Ménière's disease according to the Barany Society classification. Intervention: Diagnostic. During an active phase of the disease, electrocochleography and pure-tone audiometry were performed, and repeated at 30th, 45th, and 60th minutes after intramuscular injection of 40 mg furosemide and 40 mg methylprednisolone. Main outcome measure: Data related to symptoms, electrocochleography, and pure-tone audiometry during the dehydrating test were collected at different times and statistically analyzed. Results: After the administration of dehydrating therapy, we observed that both summating potential and action potential ratio and summating potential and action potential area ratio were normalized in 21 of 30 subjects. Furthermore, pure-tone audiometry thresholds improved significantly. An improvement of ear fullness was also observed, whereas tinnitus unchangeably persisted. Conclusions: The monitoring of the electrocochleography and pure-tone audiometry thresholds during dehydrating tests with furosemide and methylprednisolone could allow to detect an improvement of instrumental features and clinical symptoms related to endolymphatic hydrops, and therefore, it could be used as a diagnostic tool in the identification of those patients affected by Ménière's disease with unclear differential diagnosis

    Sites of recurrent disease and prognostic factors in SCLC patients treated with radiochemotherapy

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    Objectives: Concurrent radiochemotherapy (RCHT) is standard treatment in locally advanced small cell lung cancer (SCLC) patients. Due to conflicting results on elective nodal irradiation (ENI) or selective node irradiation (SNI) there is no clear evidence on optimal target volumes. Therefore, the purposes of this study were to assess the sites of recurrent disease in SCLC and to evaluate the feasibility of SNI versus ENI. Methods: A retrospective single-institution study of 43 consecutive patients treated with RCHT was performed. After state-of-the-art staging including FDG-PET/CT, all patients underwent three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy to a total dose of 45â¯Gy in twice-daily fractions of 1.5â¯Gy starting concurrently with the first or second chemotherapy cycle. All sites of loco-regional recurrences were correlated to the initial tumor and dose delivered. The impact of potential prognostic variables on outcome was evaluated using the Cox-regression model. Results: 13 patients (30%) relapsed locally or regionally: six within the initial primary tumor volume, five within the initially affected lymph nodes, one metachronously within primary tumor and initially affected lymph nodes, and one both inside and outside of the initial nodal disease. All sites of loco-regional recurrence had received 92â106% of the prescribed dose. Conclusion: In our study most recurrences occurred within the primary tumor or initially affected lymph nodes, or distantly. We did not register any case of isolated nodal failure, supporting the use of selective nodal irradiation, possibly with the addition of supraclavicular irradiation in patients with nodal disease in the upper mediastinum. Keywords: Small cell lung cancer, Recurrence, Radiotherapy, Selective node irradiatio

    Magnetic Resonance, Vendor-independent, Intensity Histogram Analysis Predicting Pathologic Complete Response After Radiochemotherapy of Rectal Cancer

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    Purpose: The objective of this study is finding an intensity based histogram (IBH) signature to predict pathologic complete response (pCR) probability using only pre-treatment magnetic resonance (MR) and validate it externally in order to create a workflow for the external validation of an MR IBH signature and to apply the model out of the environment where it has been tuned. The impact of pCR and the final predictors on the survival outcome were also evaluated. Methods and Materials: Three centers using different MR scanners were involved in this retrospective study. The first center recruited 162 patients for model training, and the second and third centers provided 34 plus 25 patients for external validation. Patients provided written consent. Accrual period was from May 2008 to December 2014. After surgery pathologic response was defined. T2-weighted MR scans acquired before chemoradiation therapy (CRT) were used for analysis addressed on primary lesions. Images were pre-processed using Laplacian of Gaussian (LoG) filter with multiple \u3c3, and first order intensity histogram-based features (kurtosis, skewness, and entropy) were extracted. Features selection was performed using Mann-Whitney test. Tumor staging (cT, cN) was added to build a logistic regression model and predict pCR. Model performance was evaluated with internal and external validation using area under the curve (AUC) of the receiver operator characteristic (ROC) and calibration with Hosmer-Lemeshow test. The linear cross-correlation matrix (Pearson's coefficient) and the variance inflation factor (VIF) were used to check the correlation and the co-linearity among the final predictors. The amount of the information added through the radiomics features was estimated by using the DeLong's test, and the impact of pCR and the final predictors on survival outcomes were evaluated through the Kaplan-Meier curves by using the log-rank test and the multivariate Cox model. Results: Candidate-to-analysis features were skewness (\u3c3 = 0.485, P value =.01) and entropy (\u3c3 = 0.344, P value <.05). Logistic regression analysis showed as significant covariates cT (P value <.01), skewness-\u3c3 = 0.485 (P value =.01), and entropy-\u3c3 = 0.344 (P value <.05). Model AUCs were 0.73 (internal) and 0.75 (external). Conclusions: This MR-based, vendor-independent model can be helpful for predicting pCR probability in locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) patients only using pre-treatment imaging
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