Neurological symptoms might be associated with a Covid-19 infection. There are frequent reports in the last weeks. The neurological symptoms range from harmless side effects of a viral infection to meningoencephalitis and acute haemorrhagic necrotizing encephalopathy. Our patient reported burning headache and paresthesia as the initial symptoms mainly without other signs of viral infection like cough or fever. Such an initial neurological presentation seems to be rare. Most cases have neurological symptoms which can be expected after severe systemic viral infections like fever associated headache. Many COVID-19 patients with mild disease are at home and the further course is unknown. Our case shows, that neurological symptoms can be the first manifestation of an COVID-19 disease. While restricted paraesthesia has been reported in SARS-CoV-2 infections, hemisymptoms have not been described as initial symptoms.
Healthy bowel function is an important factor when judging the advisability of early enteral nutrition in critically ill patients, but long-term observation and objective evaluation of gastrointestinal motility are difficult. In the study, real-time continuous measurement of gastrointestinal motility was performed in patients with severe sepsis using a developed bowel sound analysis system, and the correlation between bowel sounds and changes over time in blood concentrations of interleukin (IL)-6, which is associated with sepsis severity, was evaluated. The subjects were five adult patients in the acute phase of severe sepsis on a mechanical ventilator, with IL-6 blood concentrations ≥100 pg/mL, who had consented to participate in the study. Gastrointestinal motility was measured for a total of 62,399 min: 31,544 min in 3 subjects in the no-steroids group and 30,855 min in 2 subjects in the steroid treatment group. In the no-steroids group, the bowel sound counts were negatively correlated with IL-6 blood concentration, suggesting that gastrointestinal motility was suppressed as IL-6 blood concentration increased. However, in the steroid treatment group, gastrointestinal motility showed no correlation with IL-6 blood concentration (r = -0.25, p = 0.27). The IL-6 blood concentration appears to have decreased with steroid treatment irrespective of changes in the state of sepsis, whereas bowel sound counts with the monitoring system reflected the changes in the state of sepsis, resulting in no correlation. This monitoring system provides a useful method of continuously, quantitatively, and non-invasively evaluating gastrointestinal motility in patients with severe sepsis. Gastrointestinal motility might be useful as a parameter reflecting disease severity, particularly in patients treated with steroids.
In Kawasaki disease (KD), the effect of plasma exchange (PE) on immune cells has not been fully elucidated. Therefore, we examined the changes in the number of CD14 + CD16 + activated monocytes, regulatory T (T reg ), and T-helper type 17 (Th17) cells in KD patients treated with PE. The percentage of total monocytes and subclasses of lymphocytes, including CD4 + and CD8 + T cells, and CD19 + B cells, showed no significant difference before and after PE. However, the percentage of CD14 + CD16 + monocytes in total leukocytes decreased significantly after PE (1.1% AE 1.5% vs. 2.1% AE 2.3%, P < 0.05). Furthermore, while the percentage of Th17 cells in CD4 + T cells did not change, the percentage of T reg cells in CD4 + T cells increased significantly after PE (11.1% AE 5.1% vs. 8.0% AE 4.4%, P < 0.05). Therefore, PE downregulates activated monocytes and upregulates T reg cells toward normal levels and thus attenuates inflammation in KD.
Aims: To investigate if a single low-flux HD induces a rise in cardiac biomarkers and if a change in clinical approach may limit such mechanism. Material and methods: A total of 20 chronic HD patients each underwent three different study-dialyses. Dialyzers (low-flux polysulfone, 1.8 sqm) had been stored either dry or wet (Wet) and the blood level in the venous chamber kept low or high. Laboratory results were measured at baseline, 30 and 180 min, adjusted for the effect of fluid shift. Ultrasound measured microemboli signals (MES) within the return line. Results: Hemodialysis raised cardiac biomarkers ( p < 0.001): Pentraxin 3 (PTX) at 30 min (by 22%) and at 180 min PTX (53%), Pro-BNP (15%), and TnT (5%), similarly for all three HD modes. Baseline values of Pro-BNP correlated with TnT (rho = 0.38, p = 0.004) and PTX (rho = 0.52, p < 0.001). The changes from pre- to 180 min of HD ( delta-) were related to baseline values (Pro-BNP: rho = 0.91, p < 0.001; TnT: rho = 0.41, p = 0.001; PTX: rho = 0.29, p = 0.027). Delta Pro-BNP (rho = 0.67, p < 0.001) and TnT (rho = 0.38, p = 0.004) correlated with inter-dialytic-weight-gain (IDWG). Biomarkers behaved similarly between the HD modes. The least negative impact was with an IDWG ⩽ 2.5%. Multiple regression analyses of the Wet-High mode does not exclude a relation between increased exposure of MES and factors such as release of Pro-BNP. Conclusion: Hemodialysis, independent of type of dialyzer storage, was associated with raised cardiac biomarkers, more profoundly in patients with higher pre-dialysis values and IDWG. A limitation in IDWG to <2.5% and prolonged ultrafiltration time may limit cardiac strain during HD, especially in patients with cardiovascular risk.
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