4 research outputs found
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A 77-Year-Old Woman With Capillary Hypoxia and Perioral Cyanosis
Case presentationA 77-year-old woman with asthma, hypothyroidism, irritable bowel syndrome, overactive bladder, and multiple rheumatologic conditions was sent from the clinic to the ED for evaluation of hypoxia. In the clinic, she reported dizziness without shortness of breath and was noted to have perioral cyanosis with an oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry (Spo2) of 80%. She was given a nonrebreather mask delivering oxygen at 8 L/min, but the Spo2 remained at 77% to 82%. In the ED, the patient reported intermittent shortness of breath, 2 to 3 days of mild left lower extremity swelling, and a brief episode of lightheadedness earlier in the day that had since resolved. She denied fevers/chills, upper respiratory symptoms, and chest pain. She had been referred to the pulmonology clinic 3 years earlier to evaluate mild hypoxia with Spo2 readings in the low 90% range, but pulmonary function testing failed to identify an etiology. There was no history of VTE. Her rheumatologic conditions included osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, Sjögren's syndrome, and fibromyalgia
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Occult Colonic Perforation in a Patient With Coronavirus Disease 2019 After Interleukin-6 Receptor Antagonist Therapy.
BackgroundInterleukin-6 blockade (IL-6) has become a focus of therapeutic investigation for the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).MethodsWe report a case of a 34-year-old with COVID-19 pneumonia receiving an IL-6 receptor antagonist (IL-6Ra) who developed spontaneous colonic perforation. This perforation occurred despite a benign abdominal exam and in the absence of other known risk factors associated with colonic perforation.ResultsExamination of the colon by electron microscopy revealed numerous intact severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) virions abutting the microvilli of the colonic mucosa. Multiplex immunofluorescent staining revealed the presence of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein on the brush borders of colonic enterocytes that expressed angiotensin-converting enzyme 2. However, no viral particles were observed within the enterocytes to suggest direct viral injury as the cause of colonic perforation.ConclusionsThese data and absence of known risk factors for spontaneous colonic perforation implicate IL-6Ra therapy as the potential mediator of colonic injury in this case. Furthermore, this report provides the first in situ visual evidence of the virus in the colon of a patient presenting with colonic perforation adding to growing evidence that intact infectious virus can be present in the stool
Literature and reading
This article examines anthropological approaches to fiction reading. It asks why the field of Literary Anthropology remains largely disinvested of ethnographic work on literary cultures and how that field might approach the study of Literature and reading ethnographically. The issue of the creative agency of fiction readers is explored in the context of what it means to ask anthropological questions of literature; this includes the challenge of speaking back to dominant approaches grounded in forms of critical analysis. Finally, the article looks to recent work in the Anthropology of Christianity on Bible reading and engagements with biblical character to open up new questions about the relationship between fiction reading and temporal regimes