La Revue de médecine interne
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Sickle cell disease is an inherited disease characterized by the presence of an abnormal haemoglobin. It is the most prevalent genetic disease at birth in the Ile-de-France area. Internists are involved in the management of acute complications, particularly acute vaso-occlusive crisis. ⋯ The management of adult patients with sickle cell disease must be based on a multidisciplinary approach. At the present time, more than 50% of patients survive beyond the fifth decade. This better and longer life in developed countries has resulted from basic investigations and symptomatic treatments.
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Review Case Reports
[A disseminated form of Langerhans histiocytosis associated with diabetes insipidus and diabetes mellitus].
Langerhans' cell histiocytosis is a rare disorder of unknown etiology characterized by a wide clinical spectrum and varied behavior. Diabetes insipidus is a relatively common feature in Langerhans' cell histiocytosis. The presence of both diabetes insipidus and mellitus associated with histiocytosis in an adult is rare. To our knowledge, only three previous cases have been reported. ⋯ The pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus in such an association will be discussed.
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The cluster headache (CH) is one of the most severe types of head pain. It is a typical example of a periodic disease and the International Headache Society classification recognizes two forms of this disease: episodic and chronic CH. Its prevalence is about 0.1 to 0.4% in the general population. ⋯ Contraindications and side-effects of the drugs limit the choice of the prophylactic treatment: corticosteroids in a tapering course, verapamil and methysergide are the most useful treatments of the episodic form. Lithium carbonate is more effective for the chronic stage of CH, but side-effects are often troublesome. Numerous other medications have been used for prophylaxis: valproate, capsaicin, beta-blockers. Unfortunately, double-blind studies are often lacking and are difficult to realize due to spontaneous variable remission of episodic CH. When adequate trials of drug therapies show a total resistance to the treatments, surgery may be considered. Radiofrequency trigeminal rhizotomy is the treatment of choice with 70% of beneficial effects. Risks and complications have to be discussed in balance with the benefit of the different surgical procedures.
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Hereditary hemochromatosis is a fairly common disease in the Caucasian population, with a prevalence estimated at between 1.5 to 3/1,000 inhabitants. Over the past few years, its symptomatology has altered; at present, its clinical aspect with diabetes mellitus, cirrhosis, and darker skin pigmentation only constitutes 10% of new cases of this disease. ⋯ The discovery of the HFE gene has permitted hereditary hemochromatosis to be easily differentiated from other forms of hepatic iron overload including a new syndrome, dysmotabolic hepatosiderosis. Casos of homozygotic C282Y without hepatic iron overload have been described, but the clinical outcome of some of these cases requires further study, and adds to the controversy on whether systematic population screening should be made available.
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The pathophysiological interest of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) has been recently reported in inflammatory and infectious diseases. Thus, TNF-alpha blockade has become a new field of therapeutical research. ⋯ Further studies will define the place of anti-TNF-alpha biological agents among the other available treatments of rheumatoid arthritis and Crohn's disease. Because of their high cost, these drugs will probably be limited to patients with active inflammatory disease despite more conventional treatments.