scholarly journals Current concepts from diagnosis to management in Gorham–Stout disease: a systematic narrative review of about 350 cases

2022 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-48
Author(s):  
Andrea Angelini ◽  
Nicolò Mosele ◽  
Elisa Pagliarini ◽  
Pietro Ruggieri

Patients with Gorham–Stout disease (GSD) present progressive destruction and resorption of bone. Typical bone-related symptoms include swelling, pain and functional impairment in the region involved. The three aspects of GSD etiopathology are osteoclasts, angiogenesis/lymphangiogenesis and osteoblast function. Multi-targeted pharmacological approach includes innovative options and represent milestones of treatment, sometimes associated with radiotherapy. Surgery is mainly used to treat complications: pathologic/impending fractures, spinal instability or deformities and chylothorax. In this narrative review, we highlight current standards in diagnosis, clinical management and therapeutic strategies.

2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-4 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Plevin ◽  
Nicholas Smith

Anxiety and depression in children and adolescents with epilepsy are common comorbidities which place a significant burden on patients and families and complicate the clinical management of epilepsy. This paper presents a narrative review on the aetiology, phenomenology, assessment, and management of depression and anxiety among paediatric patients with epilepsy. The recognition of affective comorbidity in paediatric epilepsy is limited at present, and the contributory role of antiepileptic medication towards such comorbidity must be considered by clinicians.


Author(s):  
Nora Bruns ◽  
Christian Dohna-Schwake

Abstract Especially critically ill children are exposed to antibiotic overtreatment, mainly caused by the fear of missing out a severe bacterial infection. Potential adverse effects and selection of multi-drug resistant bacteria play minor roles in decision making. This narrative review first describes harm from antibiotics and second focuses on different aspects that could help to reduce antibiotic overtreatment without harming the patient: harm from antibiotic treatment, diagnostic approaches, role of biomarkers, timing of antibiotic therapy, empiric therapy, targeted therapy, and therapeutic drug monitoring. Wherever possible, we linked the described evidence to the current Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines. Antibiotic stewardship programs should help guiding antibiotic therapy for critically ill children. Impact Critically ill children can be harmed by inadequate or overuse of antibiotics. Hemodynamically unstable children with a suspicion of infection should be immediately treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics. In contrast, in hemodynamically stable children with sepsis and organ dysfunction, a time frame of 3 h for proper diagnostics may be adequate before starting antibiotics if necessary. Less and more targeted antibiotic treatment can be achieved via antibiotic stewardship programs.


2020 ◽  
Vol 93 (1115) ◽  
pp. 20200465 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Luigi Cazzato ◽  
Julien Garnon ◽  
Guillaume Koch ◽  
Danoob Dalili ◽  
Pramod Prabhakar Rao ◽  
...  

Management of musculoskeletal (MSK) tumours has traditionally been delivered by surgeons and medical oncologists. However, in recent years, image-guided interventional oncology (IO) has significantly impacted the clinical management of MSK tumours. With the rapid evolution of relevant technologies and the expanding range of clinical indications, it is likely that the impact of IO will significantly grow and further evolve in the near future. In this narrative review, we describe well-established and new interventional technologies that are currently integrating into the IO armamentarium available to radiologists to treat MSK tumours and illustrate new emerging IO indications for treatment.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 382.2-382
Author(s):  
Kerry Micklewright ◽  
Morag Farquhar

IntroductionInformal carers play a key supportive role for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) but with considerable impact on their health and wellbeing.1 2 The literature on support needs of these carers has not been fully synthesised and our knowledge of the comprehensiveness of the Carer Support Needs Assessment Tool3 (CSNAT) for carers of patients with COPD is limited.AimTo identify relevant carer support needs from the published literature in order to explore the comprehensiveness of the CSNAT for carers of patients with COPD.MethodsEnglish language studies published between 1997–2017 were identified against predetermined inclusion/exclusion criteria through searches of MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE, CDSR, ASSIA, PsycINFO and Scopus. Further studies were identified through searching reference lists and citations of included papers. Papers were critically appraised and data extracted and synthesised by two reviewers. Identified needs were mapped to CSNAT items.Results24 studies were included in the review. Preliminary results (synthesis ongoing: completes September 2018) indicate that carers have support needs in a range of domains that include physical psychological spiritual and social needs. Early findings suggest additional CSNAT items may be required in order to encompass the full range of needs of this group particularly relating to difficulties within the patient-carer relationship and accessing services.ConclusionBased on preliminary results there is evidence to suggest the need for additional CSNAT items for COPD carers and that these carers would benefit from identification and response to their support needs by healthcare professionals to improve carer support.References. Cruz J, Marques A, Figueiredo D. Impacts of COPD on family carers and supportive interventions: A narrative review.Health and Social Care in the Community2017;25(1):11–25.. Grant M, Cavanagh A, Yorke J. The impact of caring for those with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) on carers’ psychological well-being: A narrative review. International Journal of Nursing Studies2012;49:1459–1471.. Ewing G, Grande G. The CSNAT2018. Available at: http://csnat.org/ (Accessed: 29/05/18)


2020 ◽  
Vol 98 (10) ◽  
pp. 1447-1455 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Eggermann ◽  
Johanna Brück ◽  
Cordula Knopp ◽  
György Fekete ◽  
Christian Kratz ◽  
...  

Abstract Molecular diagnostic testing of the 11p15.5-associated imprinting disorders Silver-Russell and Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (SRS, BWS) is challenging due to the broad spectrum of molecular defects and their mosaic occurrence. Additionally, the decision on the molecular testing algorithm is hindered by their clinical heterogeneity. However, the precise identification of the type of defect is often a prerequisite for the clinical management and genetic counselling. Four major molecular alterations (epimutations, uniparental disomies, copy number variants, single nucleotide variants) have been identified, but their frequencies vary between SRS and BWS. Due to their molecular aetiology, epimutations in both disorders as well as upd(11)pat in BWS are particular prone to mosaicism which might additionally complicate the interpretation of testing results. We report on our experience of molecular analysis in a total cohort of 1448 patients referred for diagnostic testing of BWS and SRS, comprising a dataset from 737 new patients and from 711 cases from a recent study. Though the majority of positively tested patients showed the expected molecular results, we identified a considerable number of clinically unexpected molecular alterations as well as not yet reported changes and discrepant mosaic distributions. Additionally, the rate of multilocus imprinting disturbances among the patients with epimutations and uniparental diploidies could be further specified. Altogether, these cases show that comprehensive testing strategies have to be applied in diagnostic testing of SRS and BWS. The precise molecular diagnosis is required as the basis for a targeted management (e.g. ECG (electrocardiogram) and tumour surveillance in BWS, growth treatment in SRS). The molecular diagnosis furthermore provides the basis for genetic counselling. However, it has to be considered that recurrence risk calculation is determined by the phenotypic consequences of each molecular alteration and mechanism by which the alteration arose. Key messages The detection rates for the typical molecular defects of Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome or Silver-Russell syndrome (BWS, SRS) are lower in routine cohorts than in clinically well-characterised ones. A broad spectrum of (unexpected) molecular alterations in both disorders can be identified. Multilocus imprinting disturbances (MLID) are less frequent in SRS than expected. The frequency of MLID and uniparental diploidy in BWS is confirmed. Mosaicism is a diagnostic challenge in BWS and SRS. The precise determination of the molecular defects affecting is the basis for a targeted clinical management and genetic counselling.


Breathe ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. e65-e71 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham Bothamley

The Tuberculosis Network European Trials Group (TBNET) is the largest clinical research organisation in Europe. Educational activities include the TBNET Academy and the European Advanced Course in Clinical Tuberculosis. Four of their publications are reviewed to show how the clinical management of tuberculosis is changing.Key pointsMost tuberculosis (TB) in contacts is found at their first visit.In contacts of pulmonary TB patients, the likelihood of later TB is ≤3%.Genetic tests can indicate when another antimycobacterial drug in the same class might be effective (e.g.rifabutin when there is rifampicin resistance or which injectable to choose).The short-course “Bangladesh” regimen can only be rarely used in Europe.Treatment completion in multidrug-resistant TB should not be included as a successful outcome.


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