Archive for the ‘Review’ Category

Swine Flu

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Since we are still in midst of the swine flu (H1N1) pandemic – here is a quick summary and useful links:

“In this video, Dr. Joe Bresee with the CDC Influenza Division describes swine flu – its signs and symptoms, how it’s transmitted, medicines to treat it, steps people can take to protect themselves from it, and what people should do if they become ill.”


Map: Weekly Influenza Activity Estimates Reported by State and Territorial Epidemiologists


swine_flu_map.jpg


Swine Flu Cases per million population by country:

(Data taken from The Guardian – Data Blog)

Cases per Million Population by Country


Useful Links:
Center of Disease Control
Swine Flu update RSS feed from CDC
WHO – Epidemic and Pandemic Alert and Response
New England Journal of Medicine H1N1 Influenza Center
Lancet – H1N1 Flu Resource Center
Nature specials – Swine Flu

Surgery’s past, present and robotic future

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Another excellent talk at TED:

“Surgeon and inventor Catherine Mohr tours the history of surgery (and its pre-painkiller, pre-antiseptic past), then demos some of the newest tools for surgery through tiny incisions, performed using nimble robot hands. Fascinating — but not for the squeamish.”


The Story of Malaria

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

Malaria is a mosquito borne illness caused by the female anopheles mosquito. Each year 350-500 million cases of malaria occur worldwide, and over one million people die, most of them young children in Africa south of the Sahara (CDC).

The British Medical Journal has uploaded a 10 minute YouTube video (Death by Mosquito) on the origins of malaria as we understand it now. Prior to the paper published in the BMJ in 1900, malaria was thought to be an airborne infection (mal = foul).

In 1900 Patrick Manson wrote a seminal paper in the BMJ Experimental Proof of the Mosquitomalaria Theory he worked closely with Ronald Ross, who went on to win the Nobel Prize for medicine for his work on malaria.


Thromboangiitis Obliterans

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

(Double click any word for definition)

Also known as Buerger’s Disease (not to be confused with Berger’s disease which is IgA nephropathy)

Small – medium sized blood vessels involved

Strongly linked to tobacco use – smoking (both active and passive) and nicotine patches

Unclear etiology

More common in men than women (3:1)

Typical age group 20 – 45 years


Clinical Features

Diagnosis of exclusion

Typically age is < 45 years

Current or history of tobacco use

Presence of distal extremity ischemia (indicated by claudication, pain at rest, ischemic ulcers, or gangrene) documented by noninvasive vascular testing

Consistent arteriographic findings in the clinically involved and noninvolved limbs

Patients may describe a Raynaud type phenomenon in hands or fingers

Superficial migratory thrombophlebitis may occur

Parasthesias of hands & feet with impaired distal pulses (proximal pulses are generally normal)

Allen test may be positive


Workup

Labs are typically geared towards ruling out other causes

Angiography – may be required in all limbs as TAO may be clinically silent

Typical angiography features include:

  • Nonatherosclerotic
  • Segmental
  • Involvement of small- and medium-sized vessels
  • Formation of distinctive small-vessel collaterals around areas of occlusion known as “corkscrew collaterals”

Echo should always be performed to rule out embolic source


Treatment

Absolute discontinuation of tobacco use

Symptomatic management

  • Protective footwear
  • Avoid injuries and cold
  • Avoid medications which cause vasoconstriction

Surgical options:

  • Due to involvement of small vessels bypass grafting has limited value
  • Omental transfer
  • Sympathectomy
  • Spinal cord stimulator implantation

Neurosarcoidosis

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

(Double click any word for definition)

The frequency of neurologic involvement is generally 5% of all cases of sarcoidosis

About two thirds of patients with neurosarcoidosis have a self-limited monophasic illness, the rest have a chronic remitting relapsing course

Occurs in adults aged 25-50 years

Neurosarcoidosis generally occurs within 2 years of onset of sarcoidosis

If diagnosis of sarcoidosis is known then symptoms may not pose diagnostic challenge (however other differential should be kept in mind esp. Infections)


Clinical Features

Any cranial nerve may be involved

Facial nerve most commonly involved – (Heerfordt syndrome – fever, uveitis, facial nerve palsy)

Peripheral nerve involvement – Mononeuropathy, mononeuritis multiplex, polyneuropathy

Central nervous system involvement may affect the hypothalamus/pituitary gland, cerebral cortex, cerebellum, and rarely spinal cord

Space-occupying lesion of brain (necrotizing sarcoidosis may manifest as agranulomatous mass lesion)

Hypopituitarism (and other endocrine manifestations)

Optic neuritis leading to optic atrophy (and other forms of eye involvement)

Meningitis, especially basal brain involvement

Cerebral infarct or transient ischemic attack due to vasculitis

Spinal cord lesions are rare (Intramedullary lesions resemble demyelinating disease)

Brain stem (sarcoid brainstem encephalitis) and cerebellar involvement (rare)

Seizures may be the first manifestation of neurosarcoidosis

Look for other signs of “regular” sarcoidosis


Workup

CSF may be normal 30%. When abnormal CSF may have nonspecific pattern with high protein level (>0.5 g/L), high leukocyte count (>5 cells/µL), usually lymphocytosis

ACE, lysozyme, and beta2-microglobulin can be elevated in the CSF

Imaging (esp MRI & CT brain) may localize lesions and give other clues

Biopsy of involved tissue to look for non-caseating granulomas


Treatment

Immunosuppressive therapy steroids, azathioprine, cyclosporine, cyclophosphamide, infliximab and methotrexate

Low dose cranial irradiation