Summary:Purpose: To examine interictal EEG abnormalities in patients with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNESs).Methods: (a) Retrospective study of EEG reports of 187 consecutive patients with PNES seen at the Department of Epileptology, Bonn, Germany; (b) Blinded, multirater comparison of EEGs of all PNES patients with no other clinically recognizable cause of EEG disturbance (n ס 50) and healthy controls (n ס 50).Results: Of 187 consecutive patients with PNESs, 57 patients had PNESs and epilepsy (PNES+E), and 130 patients, PNESs alone. The diagnosis of additional epilepsy was based on ictal (video-) EEG or on the critical assessment of all clinical data by an experienced epileptologist. Retrospective review of all available EEG reports showed that 92.9% of patients in the PNES+E and 53.8% in the PNES-only group had one or more abnormal EEGs (median number of EEGs per patient, three; range, one to 42). In the PNES-only group, EEG changes were nonspecific in 42.3% of patients. Only 50 of 130 patients with PNESs alone had no other clinically recognizable cause of EEG disturbance and entered the controlled study. In this study, 18% of patients and 10% of controls had abnormal EEGs. The frequency of epileptiform EEG changes was similar to that in previous population studies in both groups (2.0%).Conclusions: PNESs often occur in patients with organic brain disease. Even in patients with PNESs alone and no clinically recognizable cause of EEG disturbance, nonspecific abnormalities are found 1.8 times as often as in healthy controls. Interictal EEG changes are common in patients with PNESs and, in isolation, should not be interpreted as evidence of epilepsy.
The aim of this study is to review the worldwide acceptance of the World Health Organization (WHO) ultrasound protocol for assessing hepatosplenic morbidity due to Schistosoma mansoni since its publication in 2000. A PubMed literature research using the keywords "schistosomiasis and ultrasound," "schistosomiasis and ultrasonography," and "S. mansoni and ultrasound" from 2001 to 2012 was performed. Case reports, reviews, reports on abnormalities due to parasites other than S. mansoni, organ involvement other than the human liver, and reports where ultrasound method was not described were excluded. Six studies were retrieved from other Brazilian sources. Sixty studies on 37,424 patients from 15 countries were analyzed. The WHO protocol was applied with increasing frequency from 43.75% in the years 2001 to 2004 to 84.61% in 2009 to 2012. Results obtained using the pictorial image pattern approach of the protocol are reported in 38/41 studies, whereas measurements of portal branch walls were applied in 19/41 and results reported in 2/41 studies only. The practical usefulness of the pictorial approach of the WHO protocol is confirmed by its wide acceptance. This approach alone proved satisfactory in terms of reproducibility, assessment of evolution of pathology, and comparability between different settings. The measurements of portal branches, also part of the protocol, may be omitted without losing relevant information since results obtained by these measurements are nonspecific. This would save resources by reducing the time required for each examination. It is also more feasible for examiners who are not specialized in medical imaging. As with all protocols, incipient liver fibrosis is difficult to distinguish from normal ultrasound findings of the liver. The ability of this protocol to predict complications in severe cases should be further evaluated in a higher number of patients. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64
Solitary neurofibroma is a rare benign non-odontogenic tumor. Particularly in the oral cavity, neurogenic tumors are rare, especially if they are malignant. Neurofibromas may present either as solitary lesions or as part of the generalised syndrome of neurofibromatosis or von Recklinghausen's disease of the skin. Clinically, oral neurofibromas usually appear as pediculated or sessile nodules, with slow growth and mostly without pain. The diagnosis can be confirmed by histological examination. Neurofibromas are immunopositive for the S-100 protein, indicating its neural origin. Treatment is surgical and the prognosis is excellent. For illustration a rare case of a solitary neurofibroma in the mandible is presented.
Cystadenolymphomas (Warthin's tumors) are the second most frequent lesions of the parotid gland. Due to their benign clinical behavior, the low rates of recurrence and malignant transformation they were classified as tumor-like lesions. In addition, a polyclonal growth of the epithelial components of the tumor could be detected. Warthin's tumors occur bilateral in 7-10%, whereas a multifocal appearance is extremely rare. Even if the pathogenesis is still unclear a heterotopia of salivary tissue during embryogenesis is the most likely explanation for the origin of these tumors in the upper neck and periparotideal region. Here we present a rare case of bilateral, multifocal, extraglandular Warthin's tumors in lymph nodes of the upper neck and give a brief review of the literature. If a primary malignancy can be excluded by a careful staging procedure prior to the operation an isolated excision of the lesions of the neck is the adequate treatment.
In 2000, the World Health Organization (WHO) published an ultrasound field protocol for assessing morbidity due to schistosomiasis. The present study aims to review the acceptance of the WHO protocol for Schistosoma haematobium. A PubMed literature research using the keywords "ultrasound OR ultrasonography (US) AND schistosomiasis," "US AND S. haematobium," "US AND urinary schistosomiasis" from 2001 through 2014 was performed. Thirty-eight eligible publications reporting on 17,861 patients from 13 endemic and 2 non-endemic countries were analysed. Of these, 33 referred to field studies on 17,317 patients. The Niamey protocol was applied to 15,367/17,317 (88.74%) patients in 23/33 (69.70%) of field studies (all studies: 15,649/17,861 [87.61%] patients (25/38 [68.42%] studies). The acceptance of the protocol by single country in field studies varied from 0 to 100%. It varied over time between 55.56% (5/9) in the period from 2001 to 2004, to 87.50% (7/8) from 2005 to 2008, to 62.50% (5/8) from 2009 to 2011 and 75.00% (6/8) from 2012 through 2014 (all studies: 50% [5/10], 88.89% [8/9], 62.50% [5/8], 63.64% [7/11], respectively). The Niamey protocol was applied also in 2/5 hospital studies in 282/544 (51.84%) patients.The usefulness of the WHO protocol for S. haematobium infections is confirmed by its worldwide acceptance. Some simplifications might facilitate its use also for focused ultrasound examinations performed by less skilled examiners. Organ abnormalities due to schistosomiasis detectable by ultrasonography not yet covered by the WHO protocol should be added to the additional investigations section.
A 60-year-old male presented with nine-month history of pain and progressively increasing swelling over the dorsomedial aspect of the right foot. It started as a small painful swelling over the dorsum of the foot. The patient developed a non-healing fungating ulcer at the biopsy site during the course of disease (Figures 1a and b). There was no history of trauma, fever or discharging sinus, and no history of any other swelling in the body. There was no history of radiation exposure. The patient was non-diabetic and did not present with any other systemic ailment. On examination, a diffuse, hard swelling about 10×15 cm was present over the dorsomedial aspect of the right foot. A fungating ulcer, about 4×4 cm in size, was present over the swelling. There was full range of motion of the ankle. Examination of the chest and abdomen was normal.Plain radiograph of the foot showed a poorly defined lytic lesion with complete destruction of the first metatarsal bone extending into the surrounding tissues, second metatarsal, medial and middle cuneiform (Figure 2). AbstractIntroduction: Primary leiomyosarcoma of bone is a rare entity which has never been reported in the foot. We report a case of primary leiomyosarcoma of metatarsal bone.
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