Myopericarditis: recognition and impact in the military population

2018 ◽  
Vol 165 (6) ◽  
pp. 451-453
Author(s):  
Jessica R Bailey ◽  
A Loftus ◽  
R J C Allan

We present a case of a fit and well British Army officer with sudden-onset chest pain following a viral illness, on a background of arduous skiing over an 8-week period. This resulted in a 6-month downgrade with no clearly defined plan for return to full fitness and deployability. The diagnosis and differentiation of myopericarditis from other causes of chest pain is reviewed. The treatment and management of myopericarditis is summarised and commentary is made on the paucity of evidence underpinning the return to fitness guidelines. The impact of this condition primarily affecting young fit individuals, commonly exacerbated by viral illness and arduous activity, is discussed in the context of individual employability and operational capability in a military setting.

Author(s):  
Christopher Joseph Lopa

This chapter was written from the perspective of a Hawaii resident who identifies as Black and local. My upbringing is explored including the cultural forces that shaped me and the impact that the portion of my upbringing on the East Coast has had on rounding out my Black worldview. This chapter also address challenges to the growth of the Hawaii based African American community including a lack of education about the pre and post-missionary presence of Blacks in Hawaii, the geographic isolation, the transient nature of the State’s largest portion of the Blacks: Service Members in the United States the Military. The struggle of local Black folks to connect to the Black Military population secondary to isolation fostered by base housing and the impact of the Military’s role in historical trauma related to the illegal overthrow of the Hawaiian Monarchy. Solutions to the issue of Black community cohesion are explored throughout the remainder of the chapter. They include a Cultural Mentorship program for Hawai‘i’s Black Youth, connections to Black art and popular culture and it’s adaption in Hawaii (with a particular focus on reggae and Hip-Hop as the key conduits for identifying and facilitating Black Cultural impact in Hawaii).


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Clara Duque ◽  
Camilo A. Correa-Cárdenas ◽  
Sebastián Londoño-Méndez ◽  
Carolina Oliveros ◽  
Julie Pérez ◽  
...  

The description of the epidemiological indicators of SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19), such as the mortality rate (MR), the case fatality rate (CFR), and the attack rate (AR), as well as the geographical distribution and daily case reports, are used to evaluate the impact that this virus has had within the Colombian Army and its health system. As military forces around the world represent the force that defends sovereignty, independence, the integrity of the national territory, and the constitutional order, while maintaining migration controls in blocked border areas during this critical pandemic times, they must carry out strict epidemiological surveillance to control the situation among the servicemen. Up to date, the Colombian Army has faced a very high attack rate (AR = 8.55%) due, among others, to living conditions where active military personnel share bedrooms, bathrooms, and dining facilities, which facilitate the spread of the virus. However, being a mainly young and healthy population, the MR was 1.82 deaths/1,000 ha, while the CFR = 2.13% indexes consistently low if compared with those values reported for the national population. In addition, the effectiveness of vaccination is shown in daily cases of COVID-19, where, for the third peak, the active military population presented a decrease of positive patients compared to the dynamics of national transmission and the total population of the military forces (active, retired, and beneficiaries).


2019 ◽  
Vol 185 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 477-485
Author(s):  
Marion Schmitt ◽  
Joffrey Marchi ◽  
Arnaud Jouvion ◽  
Thomas Trappier ◽  
Lisa Reyes-Rivet ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Ankle sprain is the most common musculoskeletal injury in the physically active population (up to 50% of sports injuries) and is common in the general population with about one ankle sprain per 10 000 person-days worldwide. It is an even more frequent pathology in the military population with a prevalence of five to eight times higher than in the civilian population. In the general population, 20 to 74% of sprains are complicated by chronic ankle instability. No studies estimate this prevalence in a French military population. The main objective of our study was, therefore, to estimate the prevalence of chronic ankle instability in French paratroopers. Materials and Methods The study was carried out in a French parachute regiment over a period of 1 year during periodic medical examinations. To diagnose chronic ankle instability, we used the criteria defined by the International Ankle Consortium in 2013 and two questionnaires that this consortium recommended (FAAM and IdFAI). Results Chronic ankle instability has a prevalence of 43.1% after an ankle sprain with a total of 2.3% among paratroopers, which is comparable to data in the literature. After their first sprain, 23.1% of subjects did not consult a health professional and 47.6% of subjects did not receive physiotherapy. Conclusions Physiotherapy is the basis of care, both for prevention and treatment of chronic ankle instability. It is necessary to raise awareness of this injury among the military and to encourage their adherence to treatment in order to preserve the operational capabilities of combat units. Subsequently, further studies are needed to expand the study population to provide a more comprehensive view of the impact of this injury on the military. Studies concerning the management of chronic ankle instability adapted to the military population would also be relevant.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Ian Walker

Finding balance between institutional or bureaucratic inclinations and professional ones is a challenge for all professions, but this is especially difficult for the military profession owing to its unique role and the unusual pressures that are placed upon armed forces personnel. The military profession is charged with delivering violence for the benefit of wider society and by morally appropriate means. It is unique among professions by virtue of the authorised use of abhorrent methods and a requirement for personnel to be prepared to die in the performance of their duties. The special conditions of the military profession are further underscored by the supremacy of the mission and group over individual, such that at times institutional imperatives can dominate. The cultivation of appropriate professional military character is clearly a very complex endeavour, particularly when members of the profession must face some of the most challenging conditions imaginable. In this chapter, I shall focus on the British Army to argue that although the British Army Officer Corps is a profession, it must be considered a precarious one owing to an ongoing interplay between institutional and bureaucratic factors on the one hand and a requirement that Army officers exercise professional and ethical autonomy on the other. Moral aspects of the profession form the main emphasis of the chapter since a defining feature of any profession is its ethic or code of ethics (Bayles 1988, Oakley and Cocking 2002, Wolfendale 2009).


Author(s):  
David G. Morgan-Owen

Historians have argued that the British Army was afflicted with an insular focus on home defence in the late nineteenth century and that this preoccupation was evidence of the paucity of military strategic thought and the lack of co-operation and dialogue between the two services. This chapter challenges that viewpoint and argues that the military leadership was, in fact, consistently much more interested in preparing for operations overseas than it was in planning to prevent an invasion. The military authorities were only deflected from this aim by differences of opinion with the Admiralty on the application of naval power and on the Navy’s inability to commit to the safe passage of troops by sea, disagreements which obliged the War Office to limit the scope of its strategic discourse. This had significant implications for both military and imperial policy, particularly the defence of India.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. e238863
Author(s):  
Krishidhar Nunna ◽  
Andrea Barbara Braun

A previously healthy 37-year-old man presented with fevers and myalgias for a week with a minimal dry cough. Initial SARS-CoV-2 nasopharyngeal testing was negative, but in light of high community prevalence, he was diagnosed with COVID-19, treated with supportive care and self-quarantined at home. Three days after resolution of all symptoms, he developed sudden onset chest pain. Chest imaging revealed a large right-sided pneumothorax and patchy subpleural ground glass opacities. IgM and IgG antibodies for SARS-CoV-2 were positive. His pneumothorax resolved after placement of a small-bore chest tube, which was removed after 2 days.This case demonstrates that patients with COVID-19 can develop a significant pulmonary complication, a large pneumothorax, despite only minimal lower respiratory tract symptoms and after resolution of the original illness. Medical professionals should consider development of a pneumothorax in patients who have recovered from COVID-19 and present with new respiratory symptoms.


2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (01) ◽  
pp. 005-011
Author(s):  
Amanda B. Reed-Maldonado ◽  
Kristin C. Madden

AbstractMale infertility is a condition that affects approximately 50% of infertile couples and about 30% of those couples have only male factor infertility identified. There has been speculation that male military service members may have an even greater lifetime prevalence of infertility as compared to the general population, but very few scientific publications focus on male factor infertility in the military population specifically. This review will discuss many of the unique considerations regarding male infertility in the military and highlight future opportunities for research. The military/federal health system has the potential to serve as a leader in both the delivery of health care for male factor infertility and in the clinical investigation into the etiologies of and treatments for male factor infertility.


2004 ◽  
Vol 116 (3) ◽  
pp. 83-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Schillinger ◽  
Gottfried Sodeck ◽  
Giora Meron ◽  
Karin Janata ◽  
Mariam Nikfardjam ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexa José Escudero Siosi ◽  
Hudaifa Al Ani ◽  
Antoni Chan

Abstract Case report - Introduction Coronavirus (SARS-COV-19) typically targets the respiratory tract; however extra-respiratory manifestations such as myositis and myopericarditis may be the only presenting feature. We present a patient with myopericarditis who developed sudden onset muscle weakness. CT thorax showed typical appearance of COVID-19 with an absence of respiratory symptoms. MRI of both thighs revealed diffuse symmetrical myositis. Her clinical and paraclinical abnormalities improved with the aid of steroids. We present our approach to the case and highlight that clinicians should consider myositis as another COVID-19 manifestation when reviewing the differentials. Case report - Case description A 50-year-old female, non-smoker, presented with few days history of central chest pain radiating to her back. This was exacerbated by lying down and inspiration. Associated with mild shortness of breath on exertion. She denied upper respiratory tract symptoms. Her past medical history included hypertension and myopericarditis in 2012 and 2013 requiring pericardiocentesis. In 2017 she presented with post-streptococcal erythema nodosum and reactive arthritis in left ankle. On auscultation her heart sounds were normal, and chest was clear. Initial investigations revealed a mild lymphopenia 0.63, a C-reactive protein of 11mg/L, and a raised troponin 77 and 103 on repeat. D-dimer, Chest x-ray were normal. ECHO showed trivial anterior pericardial effusion, good biventricular function. Treatment included colchicine 500 micrograms four times a day and Ibuprofen 400 mg three times a day. On her second day of admission she developed hypotensive episodes BP 75/49 mm/Hg and mild pyrexia of 37.5 degrees. Her chest pain continued. Electrocardiogram was normal, repeat echocardiogram showed stable 1.40 cm pericardial effusion. CT thorax revealed no dissection or features suggesting pulmonary sarcoidosis but ground-glass opacity changes in keeping with COVID-19. Her COVID-19 swab test came back positive. On the 4th day of admission, she complained of sudden onset of severe pain affecting her thighs, shoulders, and arms, with marked proximal lower limbs and truncal weakness. Because of this, she struggled to mobilise. There was a rapid rise in her creatine kinase from 6.423U/L (day 5) to 32.230 U/L (day 7). ALT increased to 136. MRI showed diffuse myositis with symmetrical appearances involving the anterior, medial, and posterior muscle compartments of both thighs. In view of her previous and current presentation, autoimmune screen and extended myositis immunoblot were sent and were negative. Interestingly, her clinical and paraclinical abnormalities improved dramatically after few days with no steroids initially. Case report - Discussion The identification of extra-pulmonary manifestations neurological, cardiac, and muscular have recently increased as the number of COVID-19 cases grow. This case highlights cardiac and skeletal muscle involvement could perhaps represent early or only manifestation of COVID-19. Cardiac involvement in COVID-19 commonly manifests as acute cardiac injury (8–12%), arrhythmia (8.9–16.7%) and myocarditis. In our case the cardiac MRI demonstrated evidence of myocarditis in the basal inferoseptum and apex. Myalgia and muscle weakness are among the symptoms described by patients affected by COVID-19. Some studies report the prevalence of myalgia to be between 11%-50%. The onset of symptoms and the fact that her symptoms improved rapidly led us to consider a viral myositis as the underlying cause, the viral component being COVID-19. We also considered other potential causes. There are reported cases of colchicine myopathy however this is more common in patients with renal impairment, which was absent in this case. On further examination she did not have other clinical signs or symptoms of connective tissue disease or extra muscular manifestation of autoimmune myositis. Her abnormal ALT may be derived from damaged muscle, and therefore in this context is not necessarily a specific indicator of liver disease. Interestingly abnormal liver function tests have been attributed in 16 - 53% of COVID-19 cases. Little is known about the multiple biologic characteristics of COVID-19 and there are no established clinic serological criteria for COVID-19 related myositis nor useful values/cut offs to exclude cardiac involvement in myositis, further research is therefore warranted. In conclusion, clinicians should be aware of the rare manifestation of COVID-19 and consider this in the differentials. Of course, it is important in the first instant to rule out any serious underlying disease or overlap disorder before attributing symptoms to COVID-19. Case report - Key learning points  Myositis is a rare manifestation of COVID-19 that clinicians should be aware of.Detailed medical history, examination and investigations identifies the most likely underlying cause.In the right clinical context, COVID-19 – 19 testing should be included in baseline tests of patients presenting with myositis.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document