Ascariasis is a common parasitic infection caused by ascaris lumbricoides infestation. Although it is mostly seen in the intestines, it may occasionally be seen in the gallbladder. It generally presents with symptoms of right upper quadrant pain. Radiological imaging is very useful in diagnosis. Albendezol or mebendazole may be used in treatment. The case is here presented of a 22-year old male patient radiologically diagnosed with gallbladder ascariasis.
Aim: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is an unprecedented cause of pandemics affecting all segments of society. It is not known whether hemodialysis patients form a different patient group in terms of susceptibility to COVID-19 infection or severe disease. In this study, thorax computed tomography (CT) findings were evaluated in hemodialysis patients diagnosed with COVID-19 infection during the pandemic period. Material and Methods: CT findings of 32 hemodialysis patients diagnosed with COVID-19 with real-time polymerase chain reaction or thorax CT examination were evaluated retrospectively. Radiological findings were classified as ground glass, consolidation, mixed type involvement (ground glass and consolidation), crazy paving appearance, interlobular septal thickening, nodule, halo-reverse halo finding, air bronchogram finding, subpleural curvilinear opacities and tree-in-bud views. Results: A total of 32 patients were included in the study. Twenty-one (65.6%) of the patients were male and 11 (34.4%) were female. The mean age was 67.5±8.5 years. All patients had chronic kidney failure. Thorax CT examination revealed ground-glass opacities in 14 (43.8%) patients, consolidation in 3 (9.4%) patients, and mixed type involvement (ground-glass opacities and consolidation) in 15 (46.9%) patients. The accompanying CT findings were pleural effusion in 23 (71.9%) patients, subpleural curvilinear opacities in 13 (40.6%) patients, bronchial wall thickening in 11 (34.4%) patients, lymphadenopathy in 7 (21.9%) patients, bronchiectasis in 4 (12.5%) patients and pleural thickening in 4 (12.5%) patients. Conclusion: When hemodialysis patients are infected with COVID-19 infection, they differ significantly from other COVID-19 patients in terms of symptoms, clinical course, and prognosis, as well as imaging findings.
Background/aim: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) mostly manifests with fever, shortness of breath, and cough, has also been found to cause some neurological symptoms, such as anosmia and ageusia. The aim of the study was to present the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings of patients with anosmia-hyposmia symptoms and to discuss potential mechanisms in light of these findings.Methods: Of the 2,412 patients diagnosed with COVID-19-related pneumonia (RT-PCR at least once + clinically confirmed) between March and December 2020, 15 patients underwent olfactory MRI to investigate the cause of ongoing anosmia/hyposmia symptoms were included in the study.Results: Eleven (73.3%) patients were female and four (26.7%) were male. A total of eight patients (53.3%) showed thickening in the olfactory cleft region, where the olfactory epithelium is located. In nine patients (60%), enhancement was observed in the olfactory cleft region. Diffusion-weighted imaging showed restricted diffusion in three patients (20%) (corpus callosum splenium in one patient, thalamus mediodorsal nucleus in one patient, and mesencephalon in one patient). Conclusion:This study revealed that there is a relationship between anosmia and MRI findings. Larger studies can enlighten the pathophysiological mechanism and shed light on both diagnosis and new treatments.
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