Determining the diagnosis of Crohn's disease has been highly difficult mainly during the first years of this study carried out at the Pontificia Universidad Catolica (PUC) Clinical Hospital. For instance, it has been frequently confused with Irritable bowel syndrome and sometimes misdiagnosed as ulcerative colitis, infectious colitis or enterocolitis, intestinal lymphoma, or coeliac disease. Consequently, it seems advisable to characterize what the most relevant clinical features are, in order to establish a clear concept of Crohn's disease. This difficulty may still be a problem at other medical centers in developing countries. Thus, sharing this information may contribute to a better understanding of this disease. Based on the clinical experience gained between 1963 and 2004 and reported herein, the main clinical characteristics of the disease are long-lasting day and night abdominal pain, which becomes more intense after eating and diarrhoea, sometimes associated to a mass in the abdomen, anal lesions, and other additional digestive and nondigestive clinical features. Nevertheless, the main aim of this work has been the following: is it possible to make, in an early stage, the diagnosis of Crohn's disease with a high degree of certainty exclusively with clinical data?
Sleep disorders occur in multiple sclerosis patients at higher frequency than the general population. Among sleep disorders; daytime sleepiness, insomnia, restless legs syndrome, sleep disordered breathing and narcolepsy have all been reported to be more frequent in multiple sclerosis patients. Factors that influence the quality of sleep in this population include pain, nycturia, depression, medication effects, location of lesions, and disease severity. Sleep disorders have the potential to negatively impact overall health and quality of life in these patients. Sleep disorders in multiple sclerosis patients are known to be clinically underdiagnosed. High suspicion of this condition is pivotal to prompt diagnosis and treatment. The aim of this paper is to review pathophysiology and clinical aspect of the most frequent sleep disorders in multiples sclerosis patients.
The risk of sudden unexpected death in patients with epilepsy (SUDEP), is 20 to 25 times greater than in the general population. This increased risk is seen specially in refractory epilepsy, with an incidence of 9:1,000 patients-years. Risk factors have been established based on retrospective studies, finding that the frequency of seizures, specially generalized tonic clonic seizures, is the most important one. The physiopathological mechanism of SUDEP is not yet fully understood. Autonomic system abnormalities, as well as cardiac and respiratory changes have been found. The finding of new molecular biomarkers to identify patients with increased risk should be a priority. Treatment is based in the management of risk factors, although clear recommendations are hard to establish given the low level of evidence.
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