Praxis
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A young woman developed acute polysynovitis and vasculitis-like changes to the skin. Her blood cultures were positive for Neisseria meningitidis, enabling us to diagnose chronic meningococcemia. ⋯ Usually, Neisseria gonorrhoeae (gonococci) are involved and, as in the case described, only very rarely Neisseria meningitidis (meningococci). The present case report is given to illustrate new clinical aspects of known, but rare disease, to remind clinicians to consider the differential diagnosis of acute polyarthritis and to generate discussion about the clinical signs and pathogenesis of reactive arthritides, in particular, Neisseria.
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Differentiated thyroid carcinoma is a unique tumour in that a low risk-patient population with a tumour-related death rate of near 0% can be found. Yet in these patients the risk and risk factors of curable recurrences must be considered. The question therefore arises, whether in defined subgroups of low risk-patients a reduced extent of treatment (hemithyroidectomy, total thyroidectomy without 131I ablation) may result in cure without recurrence, including low morbidity of treatment and reduced costs. ⋯ The decrease in goiter endemicity during the last decades in Switzerland paralleled a decrease in the incidence of grossly invasive follicular carcinoma over the 25 year period of the study. Following selective treatment, low risk TNM stage I and II-patients with papillary carcinoma had a tumor-related death rate of 0% and a low (3.6%) recurrence rate. N1-status represents a risk factor for nodal recurrence (even with remnant ablation). Elective vs. selective lymphadenectomy lead to slight stage migration but it presented no advantage in terms of recurrence and death which were rare events. No death occurred in the subgroups of minimally invasive follicular carcinoma of young (< 45) patients (41%) and in the patients without vascular invasion (28%), even without remnant ablation in most instances. No curable recurrence occurred in foll
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A 20-year-old male patient was brought to the emergency department by Emergency Medical Services after having been found unconscious. Upon arrival the patient was comatose with a GCS of 3, his vital signs were stable (with blood pressure 100/54 mmHg, heart rate 48 per minute, respiration rate 12 per minute and oxygen saturation 98% on room air). Both pupils were 3 mm, symmetric, and only minimally responsive. ⋯ The combination with other CNS depressants such as alcohol, opioids, and other narcotics is particularly dangerous. Physicians should be alerted to the clinical effects of GHB since abuse has become more widespread in Switzerland within the last months. In patients with unexplained coma the differential diagnosis of GHB-intoxication should be taken into consideration.