scholarly journals New Insights on Diagnosis and Treatment of Cerebral Venous Thrombosis – A Narrative Review

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 17-20
Author(s):  
Thomas Gabriel Schreiner

Cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT), although accounting for only 0.5-1% of all strokes, remains a potentially fatal neurological emergency, which must be promptly diagnosed and treated. Consisting of two parts, this review aims to highlight the most important data from recent years regarding diagnosis and treatment of CVT, illustrating both the current modern therapeutic approach and the future research directions in the field. Regarding the clinical diagnosis, the neurologist may sometimes have difficulties in recognizing this pathology, given the diverse clinical picture of the acute stage of CVT that can mimic various neurological disorders. In addition, although most risk factors (procoagulation status, infections, trauma, systemic diseases) are known and can be easily detected, in a significant percentage of cases the etiology remains uncertain. For paraclinical diagnosis, among the imaging investigations essential to support the diagnosis, CT angiography and MRI venography are reliable alternatives to digital subtraction angiography which represent the gold standard nowadays. In terms of treatment, international guidelines provide general directions for anticoagulation, with low molecular weight heparin being highly recommended. Regarding invasive treatment methods (thrombolysis, thrombectomy) that could be used in severe cases where anticoagulation has been shown to be insufficient, as well as symptomatic therapy, the evidence is often insufficient, new randomized clinical trials with large cohorts of patients being required.

2009 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-69
Author(s):  
Shamas-Ur-Rehman Toor

Management from Islamic Perspectives (MIP) is an emerging field that has begun to attract scholarly attention. However, the research undertaken so far has been rather fragmented and lack a clear agenda. This paper presents a literature review of the field and the areas of current focus. Although the field has a huge growth potential, I argue that it faces several challenges and problems as it develops further. I outline these potential pitfalls, suggest how to develop MIP as a formal discipline, and explain how to integrate it within real-life business practices. The article closes with a call for research to be conducted in a more organized fashion through an international consortium of researchers as well as recommendations for future research directions.


2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-77 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tianyu Ying ◽  
Jun Wen ◽  
Hairong Shan

With the growth of cannabis tourism, destinations such as the Netherlands have begun to offer cannabis-related products and services to visitors, including tourists from countries where all drugs are strictly prohibited. Yet limited research has sought to understand cannabis-oriented tourists' efforts to neutralize deviant connotations, namely by justifying or rationalizing misbehavior, when deciding to participate in cannabis tourism. This research note proposes a framework of deviant consumption behavior (DCB) constructed of geographic shifting, self-identity shifting, and moral identity shifting from the perspective of cannabis-oriented tourists to delineate tourists' decision-making process around engaging in deviant behaviors. The proposed framework suggests that previously developed DCB frameworks in the marketing and consumer behavior literature should be adapted for use in outbound tourism research. This research note also highlights areas for debate and investigation regarding cannabis tourists' deviant behavior. Future research directions are provided based on the proposed framework as it applies to deviant tourism research.


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