Purpose of review In the context of the rising incidence and complexity of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), telehealth offers new ways to support remote and efficient delivery of healthcare services. The aim of this review is to assess the current status of telehealth services in the management of IBD and challenges to adopting telehealth in clinical practice. Recent findings Different modalities of telehealth such as virtual clinics and remote patient monitoring have been studied in many IBD centers. They are found to be associated with high patient acceptance, decreased healthcare costs, improved quality of life, treatment adherence, and disease knowledge among patients. The major challenges encountered in the integration of telemedicine into clinical practice include risks to patient privacy and confidentiality, requirement for informed consent, lack of uniform reimbursement policies, operational difficulties, provider acceptance, and licensing. Summary Telehealth is an effective, efficient, and low-cost intervention that can address increasingly complex care of patients with IBD. However, for telemedicine to be adopted widely, new policies and reforms need to reduce the burden of physician licensing in multiple states, allow for receipt of all telehealth services in the patient's home or office, and require reimbursement for services on par with an office visit.
Background: Minocycline is a tetracycline antibiotic that is widely used to treat infections, and is a first-line oral antibiotic in the treatment of moderate to severe inflammatory acne. Although it has high efficacy, several adverse reactions, including life-threatening ones have been reported in association with its use. Objective: To identify all the potential adverse reactions due to minocycline and analyze them in terms of the number of cases reported so far, salient features, severity and clinical outcome. Methods: Comprehensive PubMed search of English and non-English literature for case reports of adverse reactions to minocycline. Results: A total of 550 cases were identified from over 200 publications. The major reported adverse events caused by minocycline are drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms syndrome, autoimmune syndromes like hepatitis, lupus and vasculitis, acute eosinophilic pneumonia, pseudotumor cerebri, hyperpigmentation, serum sickness like reaction, Sweet’s syndrome and drug fever. Several other reactions involving multiple organ systems have also been reported. All of these show an overlap of clinical features and may be associated with multiple events causing considerable morbidity. Eight of these cases resulted in the death of the patients. Conclusion: In view of the evident potential of minocycline to cause long-lasting and severe adverse effects, significant morbidity and even mortality, it should be prescribed with caution in the first-line treatment for moderate to severe acne.
Background Worldwide leprosy is a common cause of peripheral neuropathy. Electrophysiology is underutilized in its diagnosis. Objective This study aims to evaluate the usefulness of electrophysiological study in the diagnosis of leprous neuropathy. Materials and Methods Clinical and electrophysiological abnormalities of 36 histopathology proven leprosy patients from January 2015 to January 2017 were studied. Statistical Analysis Proportions were compared by Chi-square test. Results Total patients were 36. Thirty-four patients had abnormal electrophysiology and 34 had neurological deficits like weakness, sensory changes, and thickening. By clinical examination, multiple nerve involvement (motor weakness, sensory changes, and nerve thickening) occurred in 29, single nerve in 5, and no nerve involvement in 2. With electrophysiology, multiple nerve involvement (mononeuritis multiplex) was present in 32, single nerve in 2, and normal conduction parameters in 2. From the 36 patients, a total of 1,008 nerves were subjected to clinical examination and 132 were picked up clinically as affected, (13.1%). Electrophysiological study was done in 504 nerves, and 215 were found to be involved, (43%). Nerve abnormality detected by electrophysiology is significantly higher than clinical detection. (Chi-square =164.4054; p = 0.0000). Clinically, the most commonly affected nerve was unar (27) and the least affected was median (2) nerve. Electrophysiology detected 69% of nerves with demyelination and 35% of nerves with axonal features (mosaic pattern). Discussion There was subclinical neuropathy with electroclinical dissociation, as evidenced by more abnormality in electrophysiology than clinical examination. The nerve involvement was mononeuritis or mononeuritis multiplex pattern, both clinically and electrophysiologically. Electrophysiology showed both axonal and demyelinating nerve involvement (mosaic pattern). All the three features are present in leprous neuropathy. In corollary, if a patient has these electrophysiological features, he should be thoroughly investigated for leprosy. Conclusion Triple findings, such as subclinical neuropathy with electroclinical dissociation, mononeuritis multiplex, and mosaic pattern of demyelination and axonopathy, suggest leprous neuropathy
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