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INTRODUCTION: Epidemiological evidence regarding the relationship between smoking and secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure and carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT) has been limited in Asian populations. Employing baseline data from the Aidai Cohort Study, Japan, we evaluated the evidence in this cross-sectional study. METHODS: Study subjects were 727 men aged 35-88 years and 1297 women aged 34-85 years. Information on smoking, SHS exposure, and confounders was obtained through a self-administered questionnaire. An automated carotid ultrasonography device was used to measure the right and left CIMT. The greatest CIMT measurement in the left or right common carotid artery was considered the maximum CIMT, and a maximum CIMT >1.0 mm was indicative of carotid wall thickening. Age, alcohol consumption, leisure time physical activity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes mellitus, body mass index, waist circumference, employment, and education level were adjusted at one time. RESULTS: The prevalence of carotid wall thickening was 13.0%. The prevalence of never smoking was 30.5% in men and 90.1% in women. Among those who had never smoked, the prevalence of never SHS exposure at home and work was 74.3% and 48.2% in men and 38.3% and 56.3% in women, respectively. Active smoking and pack-years of smoking were independently positively related to carotid wall thickening regardless of sex, although the association with current smoking in women was not significant. Independent positive relationships were shown between former smoking and pack-years of smoking and maximum CIMT in men but not in women. No significant relationships were found between SHS exposure at home and work and carotid wall thickening or maximum CIMT in either men or women. CONCLUSIONS: Active smoking, especially pack-years of smoking, was positively associated with carotid wall thickening in both sexes. Such positive associations with maximum CIMT were found only in men; however, interactions between smoking and sex were not significant.
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Brain abscesses, infections within the brain parenchyma, can arise as complications of various conditions including infections, trauma, and surgery. However, brain abscesses due to polymicrobial organisms have rarely been reported in children. We herein report a case of a 9-year-old girl with unresolved congenital cyanotic heart disease (CCHD) presenting with right hemiplegia who was diagnosed with brain abscess caused by Streptococcus intermedius, Parvimonas micra, and Fusobacterium nucleatum after oropharyngeal injury. She was treated with intravenous antimicrobial therapy, drainage under craniotomy, and antiedema therapy with glycerol and goreisan, which led to the improvement of right hemiplegia to baseline; she was discharged following eight weeks of intravenous antimicrobial therapy. The clinical diagnosis of the brain abscess was difficult due to the nonspecific presentation, highlighting the importance of cranial imaging without haste in patients at increased risk for brain abscesses such as those with CCHD, presenting with fever in the absence of localizing symptoms or fever, accompanied with abnormal neurological findings.
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Aim: To assess the diagnostic performance of lateral radiograph of the neck for supraglottitis in adults and children. Methods: Electronic database searches (including PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, Web of Science, and WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform) were carried out through July 2014. Citations of included studies and recent narrative reviews were searched. Studies that compared lateral radiograph of the neck with a reference standard of direct/indirect laryngoscopy were included. Two reviewers independently assessed the methodological quality of included studies by Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies 2 (QUADAS-2). Results: Of 2,088 potentially relevant citations, two single-gate (cohort) studies and six two-gate (case-control) studies were identified. These included studies of design are at the moderate or high risk of bias in QUADAS-2. The pooled sensitivity from bivariate random-effects regression was 92.9% (95% confidence interval [CI], 88.5-95.9%) and the pooled specificity was 89.2% (95% CI, 85.9-91.9%), but the diagnostic value would be overestimated because of selection bias in the six two-gate studies. The sensitivity and specificity of the single-gate studies were 100.0% (95% CI, 92.2-100.0%) and 30.6% (95% CI, 15.5-35.6%) in children and 81.0% (95% CI, 78.2-93.2%) and 85.7% specificity (95% CI, 78.2-93.2%) in adults. Conclusion: This study determines that there are insufficient studies of lateral neck radiograph for detecting supraglottitis. Lateral radiograph of the neck seems to have moderate accuracy for detecting supraglottitis. Further approximately unbiased studies are needed to obtain more valid and reliable estimates of test accuracy.