Background
Thirty percent of Covid‐19 patients admitted to intensive care units present with thrombotic complications despite thromboprophylaxis. Bed rest, obesity, hypoxia, coagulopathy, and acute excessive inflammation are potential mechanisms reported by previous studies. Better understanding of the underlying mechanisms leading to thrombosis is crucial for developing more appropriate prophylaxis and treatment strategies.
Objective
We aimed to assess fibrinolytic activity and thrombin generation in 78 Covid‐19 patients.
Patients and Methods
Forty‐eight patients admitted to the intensive care unit and 30 patients admitted to the internal medicine department were included in the study. All patients received thromboprophylaxis. We measured fibrinolytic parameters (tissue plasminogen activator, PAI‐1, thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor, alpha2 anti‐plasmin, and tissue plasminogen activator‐modified ROTEM device), thrombin generation, and other coagulation tests (D‐dimer, fibrinogen, factor VIII, antithrombin).
Results and Conclusions
We observed two key findings: a high thrombin generation capacity that remained within normal values despite heparin therapy and a hypofibrinolysis mainly associated with increased PAI‐1 levels. A modified ROTEM is able to detect both hypercoagulability and hypofibrinolysis simultaneously in Covid‐19 patients with thrombosis.
Background: Only clinically validated HPV assays can be accepted in cervical cancer screening. Objectives: To update the list of high-risk HPV assays that fulfil the 2009 international validation criteria (Meijer-2009). Data Sources: PubMed/Medline, Embase, Scopus, references from selected studies; published in January 2014 to August 2020. Study eligibility criteria: HPV test validation studies and primary screening studies, involving testing with an index HPV test and a comparator HPV test with reporting of disease outcome (occurrence of histologically confirmed cervical precancer; CIN2þ). Participants: Women participating in cervical cancer screening. Interventions: Testing with an index and a comparator HPV test of clinician-collected cervical specimens and assessment of disease outcome (
Physical activity has a major impact on bone density and on osteoporosis prevention. Sclerostin is produced by osteocytes and inhibits bone formation. The impact of exercise on sclerostin secretion has not been studied so far. This pilot study aimed to explore circulating sclerostin levels immediately after acute exercise. Healthy young women practicing physical activity less than 120 min per week were enrolled. The exercise was a 45-min, low-speed, treadmill running test. Blood samples were taken at rest before exercise and within 5 min after the end of exercise. We assessed serum creatinine, 25-OH vitamin D, alkaline phosphatase, C-telopeptide of type I collagen, bone-specific alkaline phosphatase, and sclerostin. Sclerostin stability at rest was also validated over the same period of time among women fulfilling the same inclusion criteria. The study included 23 participants (mean ± SD age: 22.9 ± 1.5 years) for the exercise test and 9 participants for the resting test (26.1 ± 3.1 years). There was no difference in body mass index between the two groups. Sclerostin increased after exercise in comparison to baseline (mean ± SEM: 410 ± 27 vs. 290 ± 19 pg/mL; p < 0.001) corresponding to an increase of +44.3 ±5.5%. In the resting test, sclerostin remained stable (303 ± 20 vs. 294 ± 20 pg/mL, p = 0.76). There was a substantial increase in serum sclerostin in untrained healthy young women immediately after physical activity. These results suggest the existence of an acute release of systemic sclerostin in response to physical activity.
We report an immunocompetent patient who had fatal encephalopathy after mild influenza. He rapidly died after unusual symptoms related to intracerebral thrombosis and hemorrhage. A brain biopsy specimen was positive for influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 virus RNA, but a lung biopsy specimen and cerebrospinal spinal fluid samples were negative.
Purpose of review
Prone position has been widely used in the COVID-19 pandemic, with an extension of its use in patients with spontaneous breathing (’awake prone’). We herein propose a review of the current literature on prone position in mechanical ventilation and while spontaneous breathing in patients with COVID-19 pneumonia or COVID-19 ARDS.
Recent findings
A literature search retrieved 70 studies separating whether patient was intubated (24 studies) or nonintubated (46 studies). The outcomes analyzed were intubation rate, mortality and respiratory response to prone. In nonintubated patient receiving prone position, the main finding was mortality reduction in ICU and outside ICU setting.
Summary
The final results of the several randomized control trials completed or ongoing are needed to confirm the trend of these results. In intubated patients, observational studies showed that responders to prone in terms of oxygenation had a better survival than nonresponders.
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