24 research outputs found

    Positivity to p-ANCA in patients with status epilepticus

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    BACKGROUND: Status epilepticus (SE) may occur in the setting of several internal or neurologic diseases. Anti-neutrophilic cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) are a group of Ig that may be observed in patients with different autoimmune disorders but are particularly associated with systemic vasculitis named ANCA-associated-vasculities (AAV). We herein report 3 patients with SE and positivity to p-ANCA. CASE PRESENTATION: One patient had a catastrophic evolution and died 5 months after disease onset. The other two patients had a good outcome and remained seizure-free at 30 months and 5 years of follow-up respectively. CONCLUSION: This report highlights the importance of considering ANCA dosage in patients with SE of unclear origin

    The Clinical Impact of the Pulmonary Embolism Severity Index on the Length of Hospital Stay of Patients with Pulmonary Embolism: A Randomized Controlled Trial.

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    BACKGROUND The Pulmonary Embolism Severity Index (PESI) is an extensively validated prognostic score, but impact analyses of the PESI on management strategies, outcomes and health care costs are lacking. Our aim was to assess whether the adoption of the PESI for patients admitted to an internal medicine ward has the potential to safely reduce the length of hospital stay (LOS). METHODS We carried out a multicenter randomized controlled trial, enrolling consecutive adult outpatients diagnosed with acute PE and admitted to an internal medicine ward. Within 48 h after diagnosis, the treating physicians were randomized, for every patient, to calculate and report the PESI in the clinical record form on top of the standard of care (experimental arm) or to continue routine clinical practice (standard of care). The ClinicalTrials.gov identifier is NCT03002467. RESULTS This study was prematurely stopped due to slow recruitment. A total of 118 patients were enrolled at six internal medicine units from 2016 to 2019. The treating physicians were randomized to the use of the PESI for 59 patients or to the standard of care for 59 patients. No difference in the median LOS was found between the experimental arm (8, IQR 6-12) and the standard-of-care arm (8, IQR 6-12) (p = 0.63). A pre-specified secondary analysis showed that the LOS was significantly shorter among the patients who were treated with DOACs (median of 8 days, IQR 5-11) compared to VKAs or heparin (median of 9 days, IQR 7-12) (p = 0.04). CONCLUSIONS The formal calculation of the PESI in the patients already admitted to internal medicine units did not impact the length of hospital stay

    Pharmacological modulation in mesial temporal lobe epilepsy: current status and future perspectives

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    Mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) is frequently associated with hippocampal sclerosis (Hs), possibly caused by a primary brain injury that occurs a long time before the appearance of neurological symptoms. MTLE-Hs is, however, a heterogeneous condition that evolves with time, involving both environmental and genetic components. Recent experimental studies emphasize that drugs or drug combinations that target modulation and circuitry reorganization of the epileptogenic networks favorably modify the complex molecular and cellular alterations underlying MTLE. In particular, the link between neuroinflammation, GABAAR and epilepsy has been extensively studied mainly because of the relevant therapeutic implications that the pharmacological modulation of these phenomena would have in the clinical practice. In this review, we briefly summarize the studies that could pave the road to develop new disease-modifying therapeutic strategies for pharmacoresistant MTLE patients. Both clinical observations in human MTLE and experimental findings will be discussed, highlighting the potential modulatory crosstalk between the deregulation of the inhibitory (GABAergic) transmission and the sustained activation of the innate immune response

    A new score to predict Clostridioides difficile infection in medical patients: a sub-analysis of the FADOI-PRACTICE study

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    Medical divisions are at high risk of Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) due to patients' frailty and complexity. This sub-analysis of the FADOI-PRACTICE study included patients presenting with diarrhea either at admission or during hospitalization. CDI diagnosis was confirmed when both enzyme immunoassay and A and B toxin detection were found positive. The aim of this sub-analysis was the identification of a new score to predict CDI in hospitalized, medical patients. Five hundred and seventy-two patients with diarrhea were considered. More than half of patients was female, 40% on antibiotics in the previous 4 weeks and 60% on proton pump inhibitors (PPIs). CDI diagnosis occurred in 103 patients (18%). Patients diagnosed with CDI were older, more frequently of female sex, recently hospitalized and bed-ridden, and treated with antibiotics and PPIs. Through a backward stepwise logistic regression model, age > 65 years, female sex, recent hospitalization, recent antibiotic therapy, active cancer, prolonged hospital stay (> 12 days), hypoalbuminemia (albumin < 3 g/dL), and leukocytosis (white blood cells > 9 x 10<^>9/L) were found to independently predict CDI occurrence. These variables contributed to building a clinical prognostic score with a good sensitivity and a modest specificity for a value > 3 ( 79% and 58%, respectively; AUC 0.75, 95% CI 0.71-0.79, p < 0.001), that identified low-risk (score <= 3; 42.5%) and high-risk (score > 3; 57.5%) patients. Although some classical risk factors were confirmed to increase CDI occurrence, the changing landscape of CDI epidemiology suggests a reappraisal of common risk factors and the development of novel risk scores based on local epidemiology

    Advanced morphological neuroimaging study in lateral temporal lobe epilepsy: A multicentric study

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    Lateral temporal lobe epilepsy (lTLE) is a rare condition characterized by auditory auras or receptive aphasia, negative MRI, and relatively benign evolution. With the low number of cases in the world, our objective was to analyze a cohort of sporadic cases with lTLE (slTLE), in order to investigate possible cerebral morphological alterations. Forty patients with lTLE (34.93 ± 12.08 years of age) and 38 healthy controls (CTRL, 34.55 ± 9.08 years of age) were enrolled from four tertiary Italian epilepsy centers, which provided brain MRI T1-weighted images following a standard protocol for patients with epilepsy. We performed group comparison by following different approaches: voxel-based morphometry (VBM, SPM8), cortical thickness (CT), and local gyrification index (lGI) (FreeSurfer 5.3). At a more conservative threshold (p < 0.05, FWE correction), no significant differences between groups survived, neither in VBM nor CT/lGI. Multicenter studies have more power than smaller studies in conducting sophisticated evaluations of rare diseases, and further investigations are required to develop a full picture of this rare phenotype
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