Recenti progressi in medicina
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Asthma (Greek word that means "breathlessness" or "open-mouth breath") is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the airways, with extensive infiltration of the airway lumen and wall with eosinophils, mast cells, activated T-lymphocytes. Airway inflammation is associated with airway hyperresponsiveness, recurrent episodes of reversible airflow limitation and respiratory symptoms such as wheezing, chest tightness, breathlessness and cough with mucus production. Curiously, asthma worsens particularly at night and in the early hours of the morning. ⋯ Short-acting bronchodilators act as "reliever" medications and rapidly reverse acute manifestations of asthma. Asthmatic exacerbations require the repetitive administration of inhaled short-acting beta-2-agonist and the early introduction of oral glucocorticoids. Rarely the severity of exacerbation requires the administration of oxygen (that, if available, is not contraindicated), intravenous bronchodilators, glucocorticoids and epinephryne and mechanical ventilation.
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Mastocytosis is a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by abnormal growth and accumulation of mast cells in skin, bone marrow, bone, gastrointestinal tract, liver, spleen and lymph nodes. Today, regarding its biological features, mastocytosis (with or without myeloid accompanying disorders) is considered to be a hematologic disease. The classification proposed by Metcalfe in 1991 is the most useful in caring for patients with mastocytosis. ⋯ Clinical symptoms occur from the release of chemical mediators and the pathologic infiltration of cells. Although no effective therapy for patients with Mastocytosis is known, some patients may benefit from corticosteroid and interferon alpha treatment. The present article gives an overview of current knowledge about the biology, heterogeneity and treatment of human mastocytosis.
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Cardiotoxicity is the most important side effect of the highly effective chemotherapeutic drugs anthracyclines. The total dose that must not be surpassed to avoid cardiotoxicity is specific for each anthracycline. For doxorubicin the maximal dose is 450-550 mg/mq. ⋯ Endomyocardiac biopsy is highly effective for the diagnosis, but is indicated only for selected cases. The therapy of anthracycline cardiomyopathy is directed mainly to the control of congestive heart failure. In the initial phase the treatment is based on the use of digitalis and diuretics, that are substituted in the following maintaining phase by ACE inhibitors.
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To determine the relation between endocarditis/septicemia and systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), septic shock, MODS, we performed a retrospective analysis in 196 HIV-negative patients, with endocarditis/septicemia. No deaths were observed between 20 patients with endocarditis without severe infective SIRS/septic shock. On the other hand among 10 patients with endocarditis with severe infective SIRS/septic shock we registered 3 deaths (P = 0.052). ⋯ The term "sepsis" has become ambiguous because it has been used as synonym of "acute response to infection", while in the past and presently, at least in Europe, it is synonym of septicemia, persistent bacteremia. The term of SIRS could avoid the misunderstanding. The words: "infective SIRS", "severe infective SIRS", may label properly the reactive events mounted by the host as a useful defence against infections but they become dangerous and bring about septic shock, organ failure and mortality when excessive.