7 research outputs found

    Idiopathic ileal volvulus with multiple concomitant infections in a starving man

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    Background: Small bowel volvulus is defined as the torsion of the small intestine, potentially leading to bowel obstruction, gangrene and perforation. It is a rare condition, especially in adults. Case presentation: A 30-year-old man was retrieved from the jungle with severe weight loss and abdominal symptoms. He succumbed to death despite 22 days of intensive medical treatment. An autopsy revealed a ruptured gangrenous ileal volvulus with peritonitis and subdiaphragmatic abscess. Further laboratory analysis detected systemic Candida tropicalis and intestinal gramnegative bacterial sepsis, systemic Zika virus viremia, leptospirosis complicating rhabdomyolysis and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy, Type I Herpes Simplex virus infection of the tongue and upper gastrointestinal tract. The cause of death was the ruptured ileal volvulus, complicated with upper gastrointestinal bleeding due to Herpes simplex virus esophagitis in a malnourished patient with resolving leptospirosis and underlying Zika virus co-infection. Conclusion: Rare clinical scenarios of adult-onset intestinal volvulus with concomitant multiple infections precludes clinical diagnosis and early treatment, leading to devastating consequences of clinical outcome. The positive clinical and postmortem correlation is a good learning lesson in many disciplines of medicine and science

    Another cause of cardiac tamponade: ruptured coronary artery aneurysm

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    Abstract Background Coronary artery aneurysm can be defined as an abnormal dilatation of the coronaries. In recent years, the disease has been frequently encountered during surgical procedures such as percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA). Case presentation We reported a case of cardiac tamponade due to spontaneous rupture of coronary artery aneurysm in a 53-year-old Chinese man, who had collapsed and died at home after returning from work. Autopsy revealed a cardiac tamponade with ruptured aneurysm of the left circumflex artery. Conclusion This case highlights the need to consider ruptured coronary aneurysm as a differential diagnosis when cardiac tamponade is encountered during autopsy

    A case of angiomatoid epithelioid sarcoma mimicking an epithelioid vascular neoplasm

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    Epithelioid sarcoma is a rare but aggressive soft tissue sarcoma that presents a significant diagnostic and manage- ment challenge to clinicians. We report a 31-year-old female who presented with a non-healing ulcer of three years’ duration on her left thumb after a burn. Examination revealed an ulcerative tumour invading the bone with areas of haemorrhage. Microscopic examination showed an epithelioid neoplasm with central necrosis. The neoplastic cells formed dyscohesive sheets, slit-like channels, and pseudovascular spaces. Erythrocytes were frequently observed in these areas. The neoplastic malignant cells were diffusely positive for cytokeratin AE1/AE3, EMA, vimentin, Fli-1; while focally positive for CD34 and CD31. The morphology and immunophenotype overlap with a vascular neo- plasm. Additional immunohistochemical stain revealed loss of SMARCB1/INI1 expression supporting the diagnosis of epithelioid sarcoma of distal type, angiomatoid variant. We present a distinctive case of angiomatoid epithelioid sarcoma that developed in a burn ulcer and highlight pathological characteristics that distinguish it from epithelioid vascular neoplasms

    Colesional cutaneous talaromycosis (penicilliosis) and Kaposi sarcoma in an HIV-infected patient

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    HIV-infected patients are at high risk of multiple pathologies. Accurate identification of multiple colesional pathologies is critical for the patient management. We report a distinctive case of colesional cutaneous talaromycosis and Kaposi sarcoma. Prudent histopathological examination and judicious use of adjunct diagnostic test are essential for the diagnosis

    A systemic review and recommendation for an autopsy approach to death followed the COVID 19 vaccination

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    The outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) started in December 2019. An immediate prevention approach for the outbreak is the development of a vaccination program. Despite a growing number of publications showing the effectiveness of vaccination in preventing SARS-CoV-2 outbreak and reducing the mortality rate, substantial fatal adverse effects were reported after vaccination. Confirmation of the causal relationship of death is required to reimburse under the national vaccination program and could provide a reference for the selection of vaccination. However, a lack of guidelines in the laboratory study and autopsy approach hampered the investigation of post-vaccination death. In this paper, we performed a systematic electronic search on scientific articles related to severe Covid-19 vaccination adverse effects and approaches in identifying the severe side effects using PubMed and Cochrane libraries. A summary on the onset, biochemistry changes and histopathological analyzes of major lethally side effects post-vaccination were discussed. Ultimately, a checklist is suggested to improve the quality of investigation
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