Panminerva medica
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Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation has become increasingly important in the treatment of hematologic malignancies over the past 20 years. While it is associated with significant morbidity, it offers the only chance of cure in many circumstances. ⋯ Timing of transplantation and selection of patients are also discussed. New innovations in stem cell transplantation including umbilical cord blood and non-myeloablative transplantation are reviewed.
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Review
Management of treatment resistant obsessive-compulsive disorder. Algorithms for pharmacotherapy.
Treatment resistant OCD subjects, defined as those patients who undergo an adequate trial of SRI (clomipramine or SSRI) and do not respond or show unsatisfactory results, account for 40-50% of all patients. Once the appropriateness of the trial has been assessed, several options exist for the clinicians. If clomipramine or citalopram have been used, an appropriate strategy consists in giving the same drug intravenously. ⋯ An unresolved question is whether augmentation should be preferred to switching. No data exist in OCD; a practical approach would suggest augmentation first, considering that response should be obtained faster than by switching compound. When all the available and effective strategies prove uneffective, clinicians should consider switching the patient to other compounds in monotherapy, such as venlafaxine, sumatriptan, inositol, although research is strongly needed before conclusions on the efficacy of such compounds can be drawn.
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Acute necrotising pancreatitis is the most serious form of acute pancreatitis and accounts for the majority of complications. Treatment of patients with pancreatic necrosis is still controversial. There is a well-established definition for acute pancreatitis and consequent pancreatic fluid collections. ⋯ Although these collections are not completely liquefied, they do not meet criteria for pseudocysts, however, at the same time, they are morphologically different from acute pancreatic necrosis seen during initial presentation of acute pancreatitis. It has been used to call "subacute" these collections of necrotic pancreatic tissue or "subacute pancreatic necrosis". The purpose of this review is to summarise the subacute collections of necrotic pancreatic tissue and its complications, discussing treatment options of the complex pancreatic and peripancreatic collections found in these patients, focusing on the management of subacute pancreatic necrosis.
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Sucralfate is a cytoprotective drug widely used in clinical practice to prevent or treat several gastrointestinal diseases such as gastro-esophageal reflux, gastritis, peptic ulcer, stress ulcer and dyspepsia. Sucralfate is a safe and well tolerated drug, as demonstrated by the quite complete lack of side effects and it is, for this reason, one of the most important therapeutic choices in the management of acid related diseases during pregnancy. Moreover, sucralfate has recently been shown to be useful in non-acid related gastrointestinal disease as well. ⋯ Moreover, sucralfate increases the local levels of fibroblast growth factors and induces a rise in the mucosal concentration of prostaglandins which are considered important factors in mucosal healing. The aim of this paper is to describe the current and probably forthcoming uses of sucralfate in the field of gastrointestinal disorders. Moreover, we investigate the role of sucralfate as a reliable means to prevent the occurrence of reflux-like symptoms after Helicobacter pylori eradication and in the management of Helicobacter pylori negative patients affected by non-ulcer dyspepsia.
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Review Case Reports
Munchausen's syndrome. A case of factitious hemoptysis.
Factitious hemoptysis is the bleeding type of Munchausen's syndrome, rarely reported in the literature (only seventeen cases). After a careful and detailed literature review, the authors report the case of a 22-year-old working-woman, with a history of asthma, Mediterranean anaemia and recurrent hemoptysis, who was admitted several times to the cardiovascular and Respiratory Sciences Department in the Carlo Forlanini Hospital in 1994 for an asthmatic attack and wheeziness at rest. During the admissions the patient underwent laboratory tests (such as the examination of sputum specimens, urinalysis, tuberculin test, cold agglutinins and pneumotropic virus tests) and diagnostic studies (fiberoptic bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage, computerized tomography and radiography of the chest, bronchial arteriography, bronchography, perfusion and ventilation lung scan), because she continually presented with hemoptysis, in order to spot and discover the nature of the bleeding. Since such examinations failed (a few of them-namely fiberoptic bronchoscopies--were even performed when she was coughing up blood) and psychiatric consultations revealed the presence of psychologically traumatic events in the patient's history which could explain the psychopathic traits of her personality (in fact she was aggressive and unstable in interpersonal relations), a diagnosis of factitious hemoptysis in Munchausen's syndrome was made.