BACKGROUND Long-term trends of the incidence and outcome of cardiogenic shock (CS) patients are scarce. We analyze for the first time trends in the incidence and outcome of CS during a 20-year period in Switzerland. METHODS AND RESULTS The AMIS (Acute Myocardial Infarction in Switzerland) Plus Registry enrolls patients with acute myocardial infarction from 83 hospitals in Switzerland. We analyzed trends in the incidence, treatment, and in-hospital mortality of patients with CS enrolled between 1997 and 2017. The impact of revascularization strategy on outcome was assessed for the time period 2005 to 2017. Among 52 808 patients enrolled, 963 patients were excluded because of missing data and 51 842 (98%) patients remained for the purpose of the present analysis. Overall, 4090 patients (7.9%) with a mean age of 69.6±12.5 years experienced acute myocardial infarction complicated by CS. Overall, rates of CS declined from 8.
SUMMARY A 34 year old female long distance runner is reported with bloody diarrhoea. Colonoscopy revealed patchy haemorrhagic mucosal lesions throughout the colon. The most extensive lesions were found in the sigmoid colon. Histologic examination disclosed mucosal haemorrhage, dilated capillaries, patchy fibrosis and superficial erosions. Additional findings in this patient were haemorrhagic gastritis, microscopic haematuria and rhabdomyolysis. The only medication taken by the patient was oral contraceptives. We conclude that ischaemic colitis is one of the possible mechanisms leading to gastrointestinal blood loss in competitive runners.Abdominal discomfort and alteration in gastrointestinal function are common in runners. Twenty five per cent of runners had abdominal cramps or diarrhoea in association with competitive running.' Although occult gastrointestinal bleeding seems to be quite common2" bloody diarrhoea remains a rare event.' The pathophysiology of gastrointestinal bleeding during physical exercise is poorly understood, but bowel ischaemia has been proposed as a possible mechanism.2"' We report on a female long distance runner with a bloody diarrhoea syndrome caused by acute ischaemic colitis.Case report A 34 year old female long distance runner was referred to our hospital because of bloody diarrhoea. She competed in a 15 km mountain race; the altitude ranged between 540 and 870 m and the temperature was 14 to 18°C. At 10 km she experienced generalised severe crampy abdominal pains, forcing her to stop the race. During the next hour she noted bloody red stools, over the next few hours she subsequently vomited and noted small portions of blood. The same day she was referred for clinical evaluation. The patient had been in good health all
The effects of an inflammatory insult on albumin of the rat liver were investigated at the cellular level and were correlated with serum albumin concentration. After SC injection of turpentine, the livers were perfused and fixed in vivo; serial liver sections were stained using a streptavidin-ABC-immunoperoxidase technique with an antibody to rat albumin. Albumin and total protein were measured at intervals after turpentine injection in whole livers and in serum. Fibrinogen was determined in plasma only. Twenty-four hours after turpentine injection serum albumin had dropped by 25% and was at 50% of its initial value at Day 3. Serum fibrinogen increased 2.4-fold within 24 hr and decreased thereafter. Liver homogenates showed no significant changes in albumin concentration. Immunohistochemically, all hepatocytes stained positive for albumin in normal animals. During inflammation, the immunostainable albumin content vanished entirely in a majority of all hepatocytes while remaining unchanged in other cells, thus producing a strikingly patchy staining pattern. No signs of resumption of albumin accumulation in depleted hepatocytes were seen after 8 days, despite a clear trend towards normalization of serum albumin concentration. These results suggest that individual hepatocytes differ widely in their response to agents that suppress albumin synthesis in an acute-phase reaction.
We report the case of a 88 years old patient with cough and new onset confusion. Delirium was caused by a necrotizing Methicillin-sensible staphylococcus aureus pneumonia with bacteremia. Despite antibiotic therapy for several weeks and fall of inflammatory markers the patient died from consequences of delirium.
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