A man aged 53 years was admitted to our hospital due to general malaise, fever and chills for the past 24 hours. He had a history of chronic alcoholic liver disease. The blood tests showed leucocytosis with neutrophilia, lactic acidosis and acute-phase reactants. The blood cultures were positive for Parvimonas micra, an anaerobic pathogen which is part of the flora of the oral cavity. There was no evidence of abscess formation in either the examination or the imaging tests, but in the work-up that followed, a gastroscopy showed a stenotic oesophageal mass that turned out to be an invasive squamous cell carcinoma.
Although cardiac tumours are uncommon, cardiac myxomas account for more than fifty percent of all cases and are the most frequent primary cardiac tumour. They have a broad clinical spectrum, usually related to cardiac symptoms, peripheral embolic events or systemic manifestations. We present a case report of a 68-year-old man who presented with systemic symptoms and analytical features suggestive of an autoimmune disease. In the ensuing diagnostic procedures, a cardiac myxoma was found, and after surgical resection, both the systemic manifestations and the analytical abnormalities disappeared.
Infective endocarditis (IE) is a severe condition with high morbidity and mortality, and it requires long-term suppressive antibiotic therapy. Outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) has been used for a range of infectious diseases for more than 30 years, and in Spain it is used in hospital-at-home (HaH) settings. Our objectives were to describe and characterize the demographic, clinical, and microbiological features of patients admitted to an HaH setting and to assess the safety and effectiveness of OPAT. We conducted a retrospective study that included patients diagnosed with IE over a period of 8 years (2011-2018). We collected demographic and clinical features, length of hospital stay, antimicrobial treatment, microbiological profiles, and outcomes. We included 26 patients during the observation period. Their mean age was 66.5 years, and 88.5% were male. The mean hospital stay was 10.5 days, and the mean stay in the HaH setting was 31 days. A total of 6 patients required readmission due to deterioration, of whom 3 had severe mitral insufficiency. The 8 patients had symptoms of heart failure, but they were treated at home and did not require readmission. Ultimately, 12 patients recovered and were referred to a surgical unit for valvular repair and replacement on a scheduled basis. OPAT is a useful and effective tool for the management of patients diagnosed with IE in HaH settings.
We performed exploratory and descriptive analyses of data from our 8 years of experience in hospital-at-home (HaH) treatment to characterize the clinical profile of patients with exacerbated underlying chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Our study had a retrospective research design, using historical electronic health records from patients admitted to the HaH setting between 2012 and 2019. We collected demographic, administrative, and clinical data from patients diagnosed with exacerbated COPD. Between 2012 and 2019, 420 patients diagnosed with acute respiratory infectious disease related to COPD were treated in our HaH setting (18% of all admissions to HaH). Most patients were referred from the Internal Medicine Department. The median length of the hospital stay was 10 days. Most patients (78.8%) presented acute exacerbation with no pneumonia. One-third of the patients required domiciliary oxygen therapy, and half required ventilatory devices for nebulized bronchodilator therapy. All patients were successfully discharged as clinically stable. Our HaH experience in managing patients with exacerbated COPD indicates a means of obtaining cost savings and increased quality of life for patients in which antibiotic and ventilatory therapy is not compromised.
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