Xanthogranulomatous Pyelonephritis (XGP) is a rare, chronic granulomatous inflammatory condition thought to arise secondary to a combination of obstruction, recurrent bacterial infection and an incomplete immune response resulting in focal or diffuse renal destruction. This destruction may be profound with the potential to infiltrate surrounding tissues and viscera. The imaging features of XGP can be ambiguous, mimicking malignancy, tuberculosis (TB) and malakoplakia earning the title of "the great imitator". Computed tomography (CT) is the mainstay of XGP diagnosis and staging, accurately quantifying the stone burden and staging the renal destruction, including the extent of extra-renal spread. Although some cases in children have been successfully treated with antibiotics alone, nephrectomy remains the most common treatment for XGP in adults. The specific management strategy needs to be tailored to individual patients given the potential constellation of renal and extrarenal abnormalities. Although XGP has classically required open nephrectomy, laparoscopic nephrectomy has an increasing role to play arising from the advancement in laparoscopic skills, technique and instruments. Nephron-sparing partial nephrectomy may be considered in the focal form. Interventional radiology techniques most often play a supportive role, eg, in the initial drainage of associated abscesses, but have rarely achieved renal salvage. This narrative review seeks to synthesise the existing literature and summarise the radiological approach and interventional radiology management situated in a clinical context.
This paper describes a stroke quality improvement (QI) project in a primary stroke centre in a 431-bed hospital serving a local population of 114 000 people. Approximately 170 acute strokes are treated each year in a seven-bed stroke unit managed by three geriatricians with a subspecialty interest in stroke. 24-hour CT radiology service is available. Endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) is performed by neuro-interventional radiology at one of two comprehensive stroke centres located 90–120 min away.In 2018, as part of a national collaborative QI initiative a new national thrombectomy referral pathway was introduced with an aim that all eligible patients be referred for EVT. This initiative included maximising timely access to CT and thrombolysis. Review of local data highlighted significant deficits in these areas.A local QI team convened and a multidisciplinary approach was employed to map the existing process for CT access and time to thrombolysis decision.We describe how focused timesaving interventions such as; new emergency and radiology department ‘pre-alerts’, dedicated acute stroke pagers, new ‘FAST’ registration by clerical staff, new CT ordering codes and new ‘FAST packs’ (including tissue plasminogen activator, paper National Institute of Health Stroke Scale scoring tools, consent forms and EVT patient selection tools) were created and incorporated into a multidisciplinary detailed clinical stroke care pathway.We describe how we achieved our SMART aims; to reduce our door to CT time and to reduce our door to needle time to the national target of less than 30 min. A third aim was to increase the number of patients referred for EVT from our centre.This project is an accurate description of how a multidisciplinary approach combined with teamwork and effective communication can create sustainable improved patient care and is generalisable to all institutions that require timely referral to external centres for EVT.
Elements of abdominal obesity noted in one patient. Facial features was represented flat nose, epicantic folds, broad nose tip, long filtrum. EEG was performed in 3 patients. Typical epileptiform activity was not registered. Two children had cardiac arrhythmias: recurrent ventricular tachycardia in one patient, recurrent ectopic atrial tachycardia, transient AV block-in another. Conclusion Duplication 15q11.2 -q13 was diagnosed in 5 patients with behavioral problem.Two patients have cardiac arrhythmias.
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