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1.
Br J Oral Maxillofac Surg ; 55(10): 1013-1017, 2017 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29113735

ABSTRACT

Our aim was to find out if it is possible to correlate the duration of stay in hospital, the severity of infection, involvement of particular anatomical spaces, white cell count, efficacy of surgical treatment, and fever with C-reactive protein (CRP) concentrations on admission. One hundred patients met our inclusion criteria. After their notes had been examined they were subdivided according to whether the infection of the main facial space involved was less severe, moderately severe, or very severe. The relations between degree of severity and CRP concentration on admission (<100mg/L compared with 100+), age (years), sex, and duration of hospital stay (days) were examined using Poisson regression (because the distribution of characteristics, and particularly the duration of stay, were skewed). The overall model was significant (p=0.003). Pearson and deviance chi square tests did not indicate overdispersion (p=0.97 in both cases), which suggested that the assumptions about the Poisson distribution were valid. Log-rank chi square tests indicated that only severity had a significant effect (p=0.0001), and C-reactive protein concentration was not significantly associated with group on admission, age, or sex. The moderately and very severe groups had longer median (range) durations of stay than the less severe group (5 (2-8) compared with 3 (1-8) days, respectively). CRP concentration was not a prognostic factor for the extent of odontogenic infections or presumed duration of stay, but severity scoring was a significant factor in the prediction of duration of stay in hospital.


Subject(s)
Abscess/blood , C-Reactive Protein/analysis , Inflammation/blood , Inflammation/microbiology , Tooth Diseases/blood , Tooth Diseases/microbiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prognosis , Young Adult
2.
Refuat Hapeh Vehashinayim (1993) ; 33(3): 16-20, 70, 2016 07.
Article in Hebrew | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30699483

ABSTRACT

Differential diagnosis of lateral neck masses is vast, it may be one of many possible pathologies, it may appear in any age group and could be a presentation of a congenital, inflamed or a reactive structure, salivary gland pathology and of a traumatic or an latrogenic origin. Neck mass in adults of 40 years old or older require an immediate attention, the primary concern is of a metastatic dissemination of a local or a distant primary malignancy, in 74% the primary is local and in 11% distant. A 43 years old male, otherwise healthy, was admitted to the ER with a chief complain of a right submandibular mass, presenting over 3 weeks. Prior to addmition he was initially mistreated for odontogenic abscess by extraction of inflamed teeth in right posterior mandibular segment and an antibiotic regime by augmentin and metronidazole, with no resolution. On admission he presented an abnormal blood count, with a severe leukopenia, thrombocytopenia and neutropenia. A bone marrow biopsy has shown a massive infiltration of myeloid blast cells, consequently he was diagnosed with Acute Myeloid Leukemia, and the lateral neck mass was clinically diagnosed as a Chloroma.


Subject(s)
Head and Neck Neoplasms/diagnosis , Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute/diagnosis , Sarcoma, Myeloid/diagnosis , Adult , Biopsy , Diagnosis, Differential , Head and Neck Neoplasms/pathology , Humans , Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute/pathology , Male , Sarcoma, Myeloid/pathology
3.
Eur Heart J ; 19(3): 490-9, 1998 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9568454

ABSTRACT

AIMS: It is not known whether the apparent normality of echocardiographic examination results, in subjects bearing a mutation for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy but without ultrasonic left ventricular hypertrophy, is due to incomplete phenotypic expression, or inaccurate echocardiographic criteria. The aim of this study was to search for echocardiographic abnormalities in these patients. METHODS AND RESULTS: Echocardiography was performed in 100 subjects from two families with a mutation in the beta-MHC (720) or My-BPC (714) genes. We compared genetically affected subjects with an apparently normal left ventricle (thickness < 13 mm) (20 patients), and nonaffected first-degree relatives (61 normal subjects). (1) Patients had a thicker left ventricular wall (9.7 +/- 1.4 vs 8.9 +/- 1.4 mm, P = 0.03), a greater indexed mass (107 +/- 18 vs 97 +/- 17 g. m-2, P = 0.03), a larger left atrium (27 +/- 9 vs 23 +/- 10 mm3, P = 0.09) and lower wall stress (78 +/- 11 vs 89 +/- 15 10(3) dynes. cm-2, P = 0.002); these differences were highly significant after adjustment for height, age and systolic blood pressure either for wall thickness (P = 0.000003), mass (P = 0.005) or atrial volume (P = 0.001), and the ventricular systolic dimension appeared smaller (P = 0.01); (2) results remained significant (P < 0.01) when a lower cut-off value (< or = 11 mm) or only adults (> or = 18 years) were considered; (3) a subanalysis of Family 714 (13 patients, 25 normals matched for sex, age and height) showed the same trends. CONCLUSION: In familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, genetically affected subjects with an apparently normal heart by echocardiography show slight ultrasonic structural and functional left ventricular modifications, suggesting that the phenotype of the disease is a continuous spectrum from normal structure to typical hypertrophy.


Subject(s)
Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic/diagnostic imaging , Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic/genetics , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Analysis of Variance , Child , Female , Heart Ventricles/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular/diagnostic imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Mutation , Phenotype , Ultrasonography
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