Internal medicine
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Review Case Reports
A Significant Increase in the Serum Carbohydrate Antigen 19-9 Level Accompanied by Acute Cholecystitis and Choledocholithiasis: A Case Report and Review of the Literature.
An 80-year-old man with jaundice and fatigue was referred to our hospital. A laboratory examination revealed increased levels of hepatobiliary enzymes, and CA19-9 levels increased to 29,512 U/mL. Based on the findings of imaging examination and laboratory data, the patient was diagnosed with acute cholecystitis and choledocholithiasis. ⋯ Antibiotic administration was commenced, and the common bile duct stone was endoscopically removed. One month after treatment, the CA19-9 level decreased to within the normal range. One year after treatment, imaging examinations did not reveal any malignancy.
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A 65-year-old man with type 2 diabetes who was being treated with metformin developed lactic acidosis following excessive alcohol consumption. While an impaired renal function is a major risk factor for metformin-associated lactic acidosis (MALA), the patient's basal renal function was normal. ⋯ Nevertheless, as MALA in individuals with a normal renal function is extremely rare, the clinical picture of alcohol-induced MALA is unclear. We delineate the clinical picture and discuss the pathogenesis of alcohol-induced MALA based on our experience and previous case reports.
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Early detection and appropriate management of treatment-related interstitial lung disease (ILD) are important in cancer treatment. We established an algorithm for quantifying fine crackles using machine learning and reported that the fine crackle quantitative value (FCQV) calculated by this algorithm was more sensitive than chest radiography for detecting interstitial changes. Using this algorithm, we periodically analyzed respiratory sounds in two patients with lung cancer who developed treatment-related ILDs and found that the FCQV was elevated before the diagnosis of ILD. These cases may indicate the usefulness of the FCQV in the early diagnosis of treatment-related ILDs.
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Cold agglutinin disease is a subtype of autoimmune hemolytic anemia that occurs via the activation of specific anti-red blood cell antibodies (agglutinins) at low temperatures. Autoimmune hemolytic anemia has been reported to cause interstitial pneumonia; however, the underlying mechanism remains unclear. ⋯ Treatment with prednisolone improved the course of cold agglutinin disease and organizing pneumonia in a similar manner. To our knowledge, this is the first report of cold agglutinin associated with organizing pneumonia, suggesting a potential link between the two.
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A 53-year-old man presented with abdominal symptoms and a fever for 6 months and ascites and lower body edema for 2 months before visiting our clinic. Heart failure, renal failure, inferior vena cava or portal vein obstruction, cirrhosis, and malignancy were suspected, but none were present. ⋯ Since the patient's ascites were not satisfactorily controlled medically, a Denver peritoneovenous shunt was placed. As a result, the ascites volume was successfully controlled over an extended period.