Clinical medicine (London, England)
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Review
Austrian Syndrome: report of one case and a systematic review of case reports - new insights.
The objective of this review was to gain new insight into the rare condition, Austrian syndrome: the triad of endocarditis, meningitis, and pneumonia caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae. ⋯ Austrian syndrome is rare but deadly. The true incidence is unknown but is commoner in middle-aged men and in alcoholics. Affected patients are usually critically unwell, often requiring ICU admission and prolonged hospital stays. Treatment is aggressive including prolonged courses of antibiotics and often, surgery. Despite these, the case fatality rate is high, with death occurring in over a quarter of patients. Surgery appears to be associated with better prognosis.
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Patients with heart failure (HF) and iron deficiency are at increased risk of adverse clinical outcomes. We searched databases for randomized controlled trials that compared IV iron to placebo, in patients with HF with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). A total of 7813 participants, all having HFrEF with 3998 receiving IV iron therapy, and 3815 control recipients were included. ⋯ A significant improvement in 6-minute walk test was noted, with MD 34.87, 95% CI [20.02, 49.72], p<0.00001. Furthermore, IV iron showed significant improvement in NYHA class, peak VO2, serum ferritin, and haemoglobin levels. Finally, despite the lack of difference in terms of all-cause hospitalisation and HF-related death, IV iron was associated with a significant reduction in HF-related, any cardiovascular reason hospitalisations, and all-cause death; which supports the need for implementation of IV iron as a standard of care in patients with HF and iron deficiency.
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Huntington's disease (HD) usually manifests in adulthood and is characterised by progressive neurodegeneration in the brain that causes worsening involuntary movements, mental health and cognition over many years. Depression, anxiety and apathy are common. ⋯ Progression of HD is usually slow, and so acute deteriorations often indicate another problem, such as intercurrent infections, constipation, urinary retention, gastro-oesophageal reflux disease or poor dentition. In this review we outline common presentations in HD patients, both acute and chronic, consider therapeutic options and discuss specific considerations in advanced HD.
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Stroke and TIAs are amongst the common neurological presentations encountered by specialists and non-specialist health care providers. Despite the advances of neuroimaging techniques, clinicians are frequently faced with diagnostic challenges on evaluation of patients with suspected stroke. In this review, we discuss the characteristic features of cerebrovascular diseases and how to identify them. We also aim to provide a resource for non-stroke specialist clinicians to help them to correctly identify the symptoms and signs of disorders that may masquerade as stroke such as migraine, seizure, and functional disorder, and at the same time we explore how we can identify strokes that present atypically.