Introduction: Urgent-start peritoneal dialysis (PD) in patients with newly diagnosed end-stage renal disease (ESRD) is a well-tolerated alternative to hemodialysis (HD). The primary aim of this study was to identify the demographic and clinical characteristics of ESRD patients, as well as the presurgical, surgical, and postsurgical factors associated with urgent-start PD complications. Methods: A retrospective cross-sectional observational study was performed on 102 patients with ESRD who merited urgent-start PD from January 2015 to June 2019. The primary clinical outcome measures were catheter leakage, dysfunction, and peritonitis, whereas the secondary outcomes were catheter removal, repositioning, and death. Statistical inferences were made with the c 2 or Fisher's exact test and independent samples t tests. Results: One hundred two subjects (65 men, 63.7%) 56.2 AE 15.1 years old were included in this study; 64 of the subjects had diabetes and hypertension (62.7%). Catheter leakage occurred in 8 patients (7.8%), catheter dysfunction in 27 patients (26.5%), and peritonitis in 14 patients (13.7%); meanwhile, catheter removal occurred in 6 patients (5.9%), catheter repositioning in 21 patients (20.6%), and death in 3 patients (2.9%).
Cocaine is an illegal drug; its abuse and toxicity are a public health problem due to its high morbidity and mortality. Cocaine can affect the cardiovascular, central nervous and respiratory systems. The case of a 42-year-old male without history of chronic or degenerative diseases, but previous cocaine consumption is presented in this report. The patient is admitted to the Emergency Department given that the clinical presentation included hemoptysis and dyspnea with mild to minimal activity, which evolved to orthopnea. Advanced airway management was required and supportive care at the Intensive Care Unit was provided. Imaging studies showed evidence compatible with alveolar hemorrhage diagnosis. In search of an autoimmune etiology, an antibody-screening panel was requested, reporting negative results for autoimmune disorders. The patient management was based on corticosteroid therapy and plasmapheresis to counter the persistent hemoptysis and hemoglobin serum level decline. The management strategy was based on the clinical suspicion of vasculitis and a torpid clinical evolution. Pulmonary sepsis ensued, resulting in patient's death. The necropsy report describes the primary cause of death as diffuse alveolar hemorrhage secondary to diffuse alveolar injury. This case report presents the detailed clinical, imagining and histopathological findings of a patient with alveolar hemorrhage secondary to cocaine consumption, as well as a review of the literature.
Among the differential diagnoses that should be considered in acute respiratory failure (ARF) are infectious processes, autoimmune diseases, interstitial pulmonary fibrosis, and pulmonary neoplasia. Timely diagnosis of lung neoplasia is complicated in the early stages. An opportune diagnosis, as well as the specific treatment, decrease mortality. ARF occurs 1 in 500 pregnancies and is most common during the postpartum period. Among the specific etiologies that cause ARF during pregnancy that must be considered are: (1) preeclampsia; (2) embolism of amniotic fluid; (3) peripartum cardiomyopathy; and (4) trophoblastic embolism. The case of a 36-year-old patient with a 33-week pregnancy and ARF is presented. The patient presented dyspnea while exerting moderate effort that progressed to orthopnea and type 1 respiratory insufficiency. Imaging studies showed bilateral alveolar infiltrates and predominantly right areas of consolidation. Blood cultures, a galactomannan assay and IgG antibodies against mycoplasma pneumoniae, were reported as negative. Autoimmune etiology was ruled out through an immunoassay. A percutaneous pulmonary biopsy was performed and an invasive pulmonary adenocarcinoma with lepidic growth pattern (i.e. lepidic pulmonary adenocarcinoma, LPA) result was reported. This etiology is rare and very difficult to recognize in acute respiratory failure cases. After infectious, autoimmune and interstitial lung fibrosis have been excluded the clinician must suspect of lung cancer in a patient with acute respiratory failure and chest imaging compatible with the presence of ground-glass nodular opacities, a solitary nodule or mass with bronchogram, and lung consolidation. In the presence of acute respiratory failure, the suspicion of pulmonary neoplasia in an adult of reproductive age must be timely. Failure to recognize this etiology can lead to fatal results.
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