Acute necrotizing encephalitis (ANE) is a rare complication of viral respiratory tract infections, with specific histological changes. The condition is most commonly described in the pediatric population, however, it can also develop in the elderly, with some genetic factors being described as contributory. Herein, we report the autopsy finding of a patient with a viral respiratory tract infection, complicated with ANE. The patient was a 77-year-old female with multiple comorbidities living in a social home. For the two months prior, she had been hospitalized with cerebral infarction, respiratory tract infection, and exacerbation of chronic cardiac failure and concomitant hypertension and type 2 diabetes. On gross examination, the brain was edematous, with ground-glass opacity meninges a focus of encephalomalacia in the right cerebral hemisphere and multiple petechial hemorrhages. Histology revealed diffuse foci of encephalitis, with large areas of neuronal necrosis (coagulative-like necrosis) around the blood vessels and a sharp border with the surrounding healthy parenchyma-ANE. The patients tested negative for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
Introductions
Immuno-oncology is a rapidly developing field wherein tumor-immune system interactions can be harnessed for diagnostics. Herein, we set out to establish the role of the immune system response, as measured by preoperative neutrophil, platelet, and monocyte to lymphocyte ratios (NLR, PLR, and MLR) as prognostic markers for patient survival based on the newly defined criteria for glioblastoma (GBM).
Materials and methods
The study included patients diagnosed with GBM at a four-year interval. Exclusion criteria were patients subject to reoperation in the time period; tumors in more than one system; a history of hematological and autoimmune diseases; and cases with infectious or other inflammatory conditions. Data regarding patient demographics and preoperative blood counts were pulled from patient records and compared to postoperative survival.
Results
A total of 22 patients fit the established criteria, with a male to female ratio of 2.14:1, a mean age of 66.23 years, and a mean survival of 255.72 days (8.04 months, range 24-801 days). Eight patients had an elevation of NLR and five of PLR, with no statistical correlation to survival. Six patients had an increase in MLR with a statistically significant (p=0.0044) shorter postoperative survival. Synergic increases in NLR and PLR did not show significance, while synergic increases with MLR showed no added benefit.
Conclusion
Preoperative MLR, but not NLR or PLR, is a promising independent biomarker for patient survival in GBM. It is suggested that elevations in these ratios directly correlate to tumor biological potential.
The preauricular sinus (PAuS) is a congenital foramen, opening or invagination, usually located on the crus of the auricular helix and is considered a congenital malformation and component of multiple syndromes. The structure can be present unilaterally or bilaterally, with the possibility of more than one fistula present on one ear, predominantly on the auricular tags. As a well-defined and established clinical entry, PAuS has a very strictly laid-out history. However, different works of art give us a glimpse into the structure before its first true clinical description, showing that the PAuS was known to man long before it was first clinically described, such as those of Hieronymous Bosch, with the first medical descriptions being attributed to Heusinger and Virchow. In modern times, the condition is considered both an individual malformation and a component of several genetic syndromes.
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