Objective-Asthma self-management depends partly on access to inhalers; for children, this includes independent inhaler carry and use at school ("self-carry"). Although laws and policies support self-carry, little is known about practices within schools. This study aimed to identify factors associated with inhaler self-carry among children and examine barriers and facilitators to self-carry.Methods-This mixed-methods observational study included child-parent dyads and nurses from four Chicago schools. Children and parents answered questions about asthma care and morbidity, confidence in self-carry skills, and facilitators and barriers to self-carry. Nurses reported asthma documentation on file and their confidence in children's self-carry skills. Analysis utilized logistic regression. Thematic analysis was performed for open-ended questions.
Cyst-like lesion in the coronoid process of the mandible is a challenging diagnosis to make, as it may present with a range of non-specific symptoms. A middle-aged woman reported a one-year history of non-bloody, pus discharge from the right angle of the mandible. There was a history of prior surgery comprising teeth removal two years ago for a painful swelling on the right side of her face, following which her symptoms regressed but in the due course, she developed a chronic sinus with draining abscess. Radiographic findings, in combination with clinical symptoms, are critical in the diagnosis and evaluation of cysts and cyst-like lesions of the jaws. The orthopantomograph (OPG) revealed a cyst-like lesion in the coronoid process of the mandible with an extra-oral sinus tract leading to the epicenter of the cyst-like radiolucency, and so this, in combination with the patient's atypical symptoms, presented a diagnostic challenge. This case report explores the events which led to the diagnosis of osteomyelitis and shows several unique learning points.
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