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Infectious Etiologies of Acute Febrile Illness among
Infectious Etiologies of Acute Febrile Illness among

... illness (AFI) etiologies in tropical regions challenge diagnosis, treatment, and public health responses to endemic and epidemic diseases. Further confounding this is the fact that a majority of the patients present with non-descript symptoms (e.g., low-grade fever, general malaise, headache, and mu ...
OBSCURE GI BLEED - McGill University
OBSCURE GI BLEED - McGill University

... NSAID enteropathy ...
Uric Acid in Chronic Heart Failure
Uric Acid in Chronic Heart Failure

... degradation. The last metabolic steps in this process (from hypoxanthine to xanthine and from xanthine to uric acid) are promoted by the enzyme xanthine oxidoreductase (EC1.1.3.22). This enzyme is a flavoprotein that contains both iron and molybdenum and uses NAD⫹ as an electron acceptor. It exists ...
A CROSS SECTIONAL STUDY OF AETIOLGY OF ANAEMIA IN
A CROSS SECTIONAL STUDY OF AETIOLGY OF ANAEMIA IN

... The problem of anaemia in adolescence girls is 56%as per the UNICEF report in 2010.UNICEF has instituted an Adolescent girls anaemia programme in view of the gravity of the problem1. Iron deficiency is the most common cause of anaemia in women especially in the age group of 20 to 45 years. This is d ...
Intensive Care After Neurosurgery
Intensive Care After Neurosurgery

... the beneficial effects in reducing DVT and in particular PE outweigh a slightly increased risk of clinically significant hemorrhagic complications with anticoagulant prophylaxis ...
The Treatment of Elderly Patients With Acute Myeloid Leukemia
The Treatment of Elderly Patients With Acute Myeloid Leukemia

... stem-cell transplantation is becoming increasingly common (e14), as meta-analyses have revealed a survival advantage for AML patients with an available donor compared to those without a donor (16). According to current data from the German AML Intergroup, allogeneic stem-cell transplantation is perf ...
Prothrombin complex concentrate Octaplex
Prothrombin complex concentrate Octaplex

... Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 2008 Single-arm prospective study was from Oct 05 to Nov 06 at 15 centers in Austria, Germany, Hungary, Israel, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Poland, andSwitzerland. 43 patients with INR > 2 : 26 requiring interventional procedures 17 acute bleeding ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... C Increased binding of VWF to platelets causing depletion of high molecular weight VWF and thrombocytopenia D. Decreased binding of VWF to platelets, but with normal VWF multimer distribution E. Decreased binding of VWF to Factor VIII causing low plasma Factor VIII:c ...
Hypertension Management in Acute Neurovascular
Hypertension Management in Acute Neurovascular

... Data are mixed as to whether there is a relationship between elevated blood pressure at presentation and subsequent hematoma growth.11 Further, studies have demonstrated that hematoma growth in ICH is a significant marker for worse outcomes.11 Thus, clinicians could immediately conclude that if bloo ...
Continuous Renal-Replacement Therapy for Acute Kidney Injury
Continuous Renal-Replacement Therapy for Acute Kidney Injury

... serum creatinine level of 0.3 mg per deciliter (26.5 μmol per liter) or more within 48 hours; a serum creatinine level that has increased by at least 1.5 times the baseline value within the previous 7 days; or a urine volume of less than 0.5 ml per kilogram of body weight per hour for 6 hours.1 Acut ...
الشريحة 1
الشريحة 1

... The presence of cirrhosis by itself is not an indication for liver transplantation, and transplantation is rarely performed in patients who fall into Child class A. For example, the 10-year survival rate is as high as 80 percent in patients with hepatitis C and cirrhosis who have Child class A liver ...
Understanding Myelodysplastic Syndromes: A Patient
Understanding Myelodysplastic Syndromes: A Patient

... three kinds of blood cells: red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. Healthy bone marrow produces immature blood cells — called stem cells, progenitor cells, or blasts — that normally develop into mature, fully functional red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. In MDS, these ste ...
Blood typing lab
Blood typing lab

... Austrian physician, received the Nobel Prize in physiology for this discovery in 1930. Surface GLYCOPROTEINS on red blood cells determine an individual’s blood type. These surface proteins are called ANTIGENS since they stimulate an immune response Individuals with A type glycoproteins (antigens) ha ...
Chronically Impaired Autoregulation of Cerebral Blood Flow
Chronically Impaired Autoregulation of Cerebral Blood Flow

... decrease, but sufficient oxygen supply is still ensured by an increase in the arteriovenous (AV) oxygen extraction. At still lower blood pressures (for a normotensive person about 35 to 40 mm Hg) also this mechanism fails, and cerebral hypoxia develops.2 At the upper limit the capacity of the arteri ...
Risperidone Induced Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome: A case
Risperidone Induced Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome: A case

... Clinical trials have demonstrated that risperidone, a serotonin-dopamine antagonist, is an effective antipsychotic agent that improves negative as well as positive symptoms of schizophrenia.18 At recommended doses the frequency of overall adverse effects and EPS is lower with risperidone than with t ...
this PDF file - Pacific Group of e
this PDF file - Pacific Group of e

... system for blood group compatibility.[2] This is because A, B, and Rh D antigens are strongly immunogenic and upon stimulation elicit a strong antibody response and their alloantibodies can cause destruction of transfused red cells or induce hemolytic disease of newborn.[3] ABO antigens are also imp ...
Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring - Providers
Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring - Providers

... For this policy, we included only studies published since 2000 to reflect the most current research in the United States context. Keystone First identified six systematic reviews and one health technology assessment that addressed the diagnostic accuracy, prognostic value and cost-effectiveness of A ...
Prernarket Notification  for  New  Dietary  Ingredient:
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... not show any differences during the experimental period; male rats treated with low dose (0.3 g/kg) and Intermediate dose (1 .O g/kg) of SKI306X showed differences in water intake compared with those of the control group at day 7, but no more abnormal differences were found. No slgmficant change was ...
L i f e b a n k
L i f e b a n k

... The umbilical cord blood of a newborn contains a high concentration of stem cells – the building blocks of both the blood and immune systems. These cells are one of the most powerful and miraculous cells known to science. Saving your baby’s stem cells may provide medical treatment of a disease or in ...
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Activated recombinant factor VII after cardiopulmonary bypass
Activated recombinant factor VII after cardiopulmonary bypass

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... There are many types of white blood cells. Phagocytes engulf and digest bacteria and other disease-causing microorganisms. Some white blood cells release histamines. Histamines increase blood flow into the affected area, producing redness and swelling. ...
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... a. Higher MAC b. Higher percent as metabolites c. Higher lipophilicity ...
Surgical Management Of PPH - Challenges in Obstetrics
Surgical Management Of PPH - Challenges in Obstetrics

... the targeted artery is occluded. ...
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Hemolytic-uremic syndrome



Hemolytic-uremic syndrome (or haemolytic-uraemic syndrome), abbreviated HUS, is a disease characterized by hemolytic anemia (anemia caused by destruction of red blood cells), acute kidney failure (uremia), and a low platelet count (thrombocytopenia). It predominantly, but not exclusively, affects children. Most cases are preceded by an episode of infectious, sometimes bloody, diarrhea acquired as a foodborne illness or from a contaminated water supply and caused by E. coli O157:H7, although Shigella, Campylobacter and a variety of viruses have also been implicated. It is now the most common cause of acquired acute renal failure in childhood. It is a medical emergency and carries a 5–10% mortality; of the remainder, the majority recover without major consequences but a small proportion develop chronic kidney disease and become reliant on renal replacement therapy.The primary target appears to be the vascular endothelial cell. This may explain the pathogenesis of HUS, in which a characteristic renal lesion is capillary microangiopathy.HUS was first defined as a syndrome in 1955. The more common form of the disease, Shiga-like toxin-producing E. coli HUS (STEC-HUS), is triggered by the infectious agent E. coli O157:H7. Certain Shiga toxin secreting strains of Shigella dysenteriae can also cause HUS. Approximately 5% of cases are classified as pneumococcal HUS, which results from infection by Streptococcus pneumoniae, the agent that causes traditional lobar pneumonia. There is also a rare, chronic, and severe form known as atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), which is caused by genetic defects resulting in chronic, uncontrolled complement activation. Both STEC-HUS and aHUS cause endothelial damage, leukocyte activation, platelet activation, and widespread inflammation and multiple thromboses in the small blood vessels, a condition known as systemic thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA), which leads to thrombotic events as well as organ damage/failure and death.
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