Italy is currently experiencing an epidemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19). Aim of our study is to identify the best predictors of Intensive Care Unit (ICU) admission in patients with Covid-19. We examined 28 patients admitted to the Emergency Department (ED) and subsequently confirmed as cases of Covid-19. Patients received, at the admission to the ED, a diagnostic work-up including: patient history, clinical examination, an arterial blood gas analysis (whenever possible performed on room air), laboratory blood tests, including serum concentrations of interleukin-6 (IL-6), lung ultrasound examination and a computed tomography (CT) scan of the thorax. For each patient, as gas exchange index through the alveolocapillary membrane, we determined the alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient (AaDO2) and the alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient augmentation (AaDO2 augmentation). For each patient, as measurement of hypoxemia, we determined oxygen saturation (SpO2), partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood (PaO2), PaO2 deficit and the ratio between arterial partial pressure of oxygen by blood gas analysis and fraction of inspired oxygen (P/F). Patients were assigned to ICU Group or to Non-ICU Group basing on the decision to intubate. Areas under the curve (AUC) and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve were used to compare the performance of each test in relation to prediction of ICU admission. Comparing patients of ICU Group (10 patients) with patients of Non-ICU Group (18 patients), we found that the first were older, they had more frequently a medical history of malignancy and they were more frequently admitted to ED for dyspnea. Patients of ICU Group had lower oxygen saturation, PaO2, P/F and higher heart rate, respiratory rate, AaDO2, AaDO2 augmentation and lactate than patients of Non-ICU Group. ROC curves demonstrate that age, heart rate, respiratory rate, dyspnea, lactate, AaDO2, AaDO2 augmentation, white blood cell count, neutrophil count and percentage, fibrinogen, C-reactive protein, lactate dehydrogenase, glucose level, international normalized ratio (INR), blood urea and IL-6 are useful predictors of ICU admission. We identified several predictors of ICU admission in patients with Covid-19. They can act as fast tools for the early identification and timely treatment of critical cases since their arrival in the ED.
The occurrence and clinical value of anticardiolipin antibodies (aCL) were studied in 33 patients with giant cell arteritis (GCA) and in seven patients with polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR), at onset and during follow-up. aCL were present in 19/40 (47.5%) GCA/PMR cases, most of them of the IgG isotype, whereas all controls (21 subjects) were aCL negative. The presence of aCL was not associated with inflammatory parameters or clinical signs of arteritis; however, they disappeared in a significant percentage (56%) of patients during steroid therapy. No correlation was found between ischaemic events and aCL, suggesting that they are not important for the development of vascular complications in GCA/PMR patients. Moreover, a retrospective evaluation of our data showed a correlation between aCL positivity and anaemia, whose significance remains to be elucidated.
Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy or non-invasive ventilation (NIV) represent the first line therapy for acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema (CPE) together with medical therapy. CPAP benefits in acute CPE with normo-hypocapnia are known, but it is not clear whether the use of CPAP is safe in the hypercapnic patients. The aim of this study is to evaluate CPAP efficacy in the treatment of hypercapnic CPE. We enrolled 9 patients admitted to the emergency room with diagnosis of acute CPE based on history, clinical examination, arterial blood gas analysis (ABG) and lung-heart ultrasound examination. We selected patients with hypercapnia (pCO2 >50 mmHg) and bicarbonate levels <30 mEq/L. All patients received medical therapy with furosemide and nitrates and helmet CPAP therapy. All patients received a second and a third ABG, respectively at 30 and 60 min. Primary end-points of the study were respiratory distress resolution, pCO2 reduction, pH improvement, lactates normalization and the no need for non-invasive ventilation or endo-tracheal intubation. All patients showed resolution of respiratory distress with CPAP weaning and shift to Venturi mask with no need for NIV or endo-tracheal intubation. Serial ABG tests showed clear reduction in CO2 levels with improvement of pH and progressive lactate reduction. CPAP therapy can be effective in the treatment of hypercapnic CPE as long as the patients have no signs of chronic hypercapnia on ABG and as long as the diagnosis of heart failure is supported by bedside lung-heart ultrasound examination.
SUMMARYNicotinamide (NCT) has been shown to be effective in preventing the onset of type 1 diabetes mellitus (IDDM) in mice with non‐obese diabetic (NOD) and beta cell damage, mediated by the diabetogenic agents including streptozotocin. NCT therapy in man has been shown to have a beneficial effect on the remission phase of IDDM, and its use is safe. In this open pilot trial we therefore studied the effect of oral NCT administration on insulin secretion rate and islet‐cell antibody (ICA) titres in IDDM high risk subjects. NCT (25 mg/10 kg bw) was administered in 6/13 high risk patients identified by a family screening programme. Those subjects tested after eight months without treatment showed a decreasing secretion in comparison to onset baseline (56,1 ± 37.8 versus 35,5 ± 12.2), whereas the treated subjects showed an increasing insulin secretion after treatment (26 ± 10 versus 50.2 ± 26.6), in spite of ICA persistence. Statistical analysis shows an increased insulin secretion in the treated group versus the untreated group (χ2= 3.899, P= 0.048). No side‐effects were observed. We conclude that NCT may repair beta‐cell function in high risk subjects too if damage is not too severe; furthermore, the effect seems not to be mediated by an immune mechanism.
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