Disruption of gene networks for cardiac morphogenesis and vasculogenesis occurred in the preterm fetal heart of nonhuman primates with preterm labor, intraamniotic infection, and severe fetal inflammation. Inflammatory injury to the fetal heart in utero may contribute to the development of heart disease later in life. Development of preterm labor therapeutics must also target fetal inflammation to lessen organ injury and potential long-term effects on cardiac function.
Head and neck manifestations of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome are among the most common complications of this disease. The sinonasal and oral manifestations are more common that the otologic and range from malignancies to infectious processes caused by both opportunistic and nonopportunistic organisms. We report the case of a nasopharyngeal mass of infectious etiology in a severely immunocompromised HIV infected patient. The patient was admitted with a presumptive diagnosis of infectious gastroenteritis and was found to have a nasopharyngeal mass. The mass was extending into the oropharynx and paravertebral soft tissues and was associated with extensive secretions causing near complete occlusion of the oropharynx. CT scan findings favored malignant verses infectious etiology. The surgical biopsy performed twice ruled out malignancy and the bacterial culture proved to be a pure growth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Pseudomonas can inhabit the nasopharynx and lower digestive tract, and is only occasionally associated with causing disease in non-susceptible patients but is a common infection in immunocompromised patients. To the best of our knowledge, and after considering the current literature, we believe this case is unique. We discuss this rare entity and its management. Clinicians should be aware of this potential life threatening condition in the HIV population and add P. aeruginosa infection to the differential diagnosis of an acute inflammatory nasopharyngeal mass.
Background. Takotsubo cardiomyopathy is defined as a transient left ventricular dysfunction, usually accompanied by electrocardiographic changes. The literature documents only two other cases of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in the latter setting. Methods. A 78-year-old female presented to the ED with severe shortness of breath, hypertension, and tachycardia. On physical exam, heart sounds (S1 and S2) were regular and wheezing was noticed bilaterally. We found laboratory results with a WBC of 20.0 (103/μL), troponin of 16.52 ng/mL, CK-mb of 70.6%, and BNP of 177 pg/mL. The patient was intubated for acute hypoxemic respiratory failure. A chest X-ray revealed a large left-sided tension pneumothorax. Initial echocardiogram showed apical ballooning with a LVEF of 10–15%. A cardiac angiography revealed normal coronary arteries with no coronary disease. After supportive treatment, the patient's condition improved with a subsequent echocardiogram showing a LVEF of 60%. Conclusion. The patient was found to have Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in the setting of a tension pneumothorax. The exact mechanisms of ventricular dysfunction have not been clarified. However, multivessel coronary spasm or catecholamine cardiotoxicity has been suggested to have a causative role. We suggest that, in our patient, left ventricular dysfunction was induced by the latter mechanism related to the stress associated with acute pneumothorax.
Even in the absence of Amebic colitis, Amebic liver abscess (ALA) is the most common extraintestinal complication of Entamoeba histolytica infection. In the USA, it is most prevalent in middle aged immigrant males from endemic countries such as Africa, Mexico, and India. One of the complications of ALA is inferior vena cava (IVC) thrombosis, which is believed to result from the mechanical compression of the IVC and the consequent thrombogenic nidus elicited from the resultant inflammatory response. There are very few reported cases and even fewer in which the thrombus became a harbinger to pulmonary thromboembolism. We present the case of a 43-year-old male from West Africa who presented with the chief complaint of right upper quadrant abdominal pain for one week associated with persistent nonproductive cough. He had a positive serum Entamoeba histolytica antibody with CT scan findings of a hepatic abscess with thrombosis of the hepatic vein and inferior vena cava and numerous bilateral pulmonary emboli. This amebic liver abscess was successfully treated with metronidazole and paromomycin, whereas the pulmonary thromboembolism was managed with medical anticoagulation. Based on current knowledge, this is the first reported case in the USA.
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