A multidisciplinary approach was used to identify cases in an outbreak of M. marinum infections. The use of histopathology, culture, and IHC plus PCR from full thickness skin biopsy can lead to improved diagnosis of M. marinum SSTIs compared to relying solely on mycobacterial culture, the current gold standard.
The epidemiology of head injury was studied in the Bronx, N.Y., for the period March 1980 through February 1981. Using a ratio estimation sampling scheme the annual incidence rate, age-adjusted to the 1980 US population was estimated to be 249/100,000. Rates for males were more than twice those for females. Incidences were highest for blacks and Hispanics; this was primarily attributable to high rates of injuries caused by violence in young adult males. Violence and falls were the most frequent causes of injuries, and only 27% of all head injuries were associated with traffic accidents. The annual age-adjusted mortality rate was 27.9/100,000. Over half the mortality was associated with head injuries due to violence.
Polymorphic eruption of pregnancy (PEP), formerly known as pruritic urticarial papules and plaques of pregnancy, is a dermatosis of pregnancy that must be distinguished from pemphigoid gestationis (PG). Although this differential diagnosis may be possible on routine histology, an additional biopsy for direct immunofluorescence (DIF) is often needed. Recent studies have demonstrated the utility of anti-C4d or anti-C3d antibodies in the diagnosis of bullous pemphigoid (BP) in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue (FFPE). We investigated the utility of routine immunohistochemistry (IHC) for anti-C4d in FFPE tissue in the specific differential diagnosis of PEP versus PG in known, DIF-proven cases. We performed C4d IHC on PEP (n = 11), PG (n = 8), DIF-proven BP (n = 12), and other common dermatoses (n = 12) that are typically DIF negative. None of the PEP cases (0/11) or the other common dermatoses (0/12) demonstrated C4d positivity at the basement membrane zone. In comparison, 100% of PG cases (8/8) and 83.3% of BP cases (10/12) showed linear C4d immunoreactant deposition along the basement membrane zone. The results demonstrate the potential utility of C4d IHC in FFPE tissue for distinguishing PEP from PG, thus potentially obviating the need of a repeat biopsy for DIF, particularly in C4d-negative cases where there is a low suspicion of PG on both clinical and histological grounds. Also, patients with positive C4d-positive immunoreactivity may also potentially proceed directly to less invasive serological confirmatory testing, such as BP180 NC16a enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assay.
Objectives To describe patterns of perceived stress across stages of the migraine cycle, within and between individuals and migraine episodes as defined for this study. Methods Individuals with migraine aged ≥18 years, who were registered to use the digital health platform N1‐HeadacheTM, and completed 90 days of daily data entry regarding migraine, headache symptoms, and lifestyle factors were eligible for inclusion. Perceived stress was rated once a day at the participant’s chosen time with a single question, “How stressed have you felt today?” with response options graded on a 0‐10 scale. Days were categorized into phases of the migraine cycle: Ppre = pre‐migraine headache (the 2 days prior to the first day with migraine headache), P0 = migraine headache days, Ppost = post‐migraine headache (the 2 days following the last migraine day with migraine headache), and Pi = interictal days (all other days). Episodes, defined as discrete occurrences of migraine with days in all 4 phases, were eligible if there was at least 1 reported daily perceived stress value in each phase. Individuals with ≥5 valid episodes, and ≥75% compliance (tracking 90 days in 120 calendar days or less) were eligible for inclusion in the analysis. Results Data from 351 participants and 2115 episodes were included in this analysis. Eighty‐six percent of the sample (302/351) were female. The mean number of migraine days per month was 6.1 (range 2‐13, standard deviation = 2.3) and the mean number of episodes was 6.0 (range 5‐10, standard deviation = 1.0) over the 90‐day period. Only 8 (8/351, 2.3%) participants had chronic migraine (defined as 15 or more headache days per month with at least 8 days meeting criteria for migraine). Cluster analysis revealed 3 common patterns of perceived stress variation across the migraine cycle. For cluster 1, the “let down” pattern, perceived stress in the interictal phase (Pi) falls in the pre‐headache phase (Ppre) and then decreases more in the migraine phase (P0) relative to Pi. For cluster 2, the “flat” pattern, perceived stress is relatively unchanging throughout the migraine cycle. For cluster 3, the “stress as a trigger/symptom” pattern, perceived stress in Ppre increases relative to Pi, and increases further in P0 relative to Pi. Episodes were distributed across clusters as follows: cluster 1: 354/2115, 16.7%; cluster 2: 1253/2115, 59.2%, and cluster 3: 508/2115, 24.0%. Twelve participants (12/351, 3.4%) had more than 50% of their episodes fall into cluster 1, 216 participants (216/351, 61.5%) had more than 50% of their episodes fall into cluster 2, and 25 participants (25/351, 7.1%) had more than 50% of their episodes fall into cluster 3. There were 40 participants with ≥90% of their episodes in cluster 2, with no participants having ≥90% of their episodes in cluster 1 or 3. Conclusions On an aggregate level, perceived stress peaks during the pain phase of the migraine cycle. However, on an individual and episode basis, there are 3 dominant patterns of perceived stress variation across the migraine cycl...
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