BackgroundVarious risk scoring systems have been recently developed to predict clinical outcomes in patients with upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB). The two commonly used scoring systems include full Rockall score (RS) and the Glasgow-Blatchford score (GBS). Bleeding scores were assessed in terms of prediction of clinical outcomes in patients with UGIB.Patients and methodsTwo hundred patients (age >18 years) with obvious symptoms of UGIB in the emergency department of Rasoul Akram Hospital were enrolled. Full RS and GBS were calculated. We followed the patients for records of rebleeding and 1-month mortality. A receiver operating characteristic curve by using areas under the curve (AUCs) was used to statistically identify the best cutoff point.ResultsEighteen patients were excluded from the study due to failure to follow-up. Rebleeding and mortality rate were 9.34% (n=17) and 11.53% (n=21), respectively. Regarding 1-month mortality, full RS was better than GBS (AUC, 0.648 versus 0.582; P=0.021). GBS was more accurate in terms of detecting transfusion need (AUC, 0.757 versus 0.528; P=0.001), rebleeding rate (AUC, 0.722 versus 0.520; P=0.002), intensive care unit admission rate (AUC, 0.648 versus 0.582; P=0.021), and endoscopic intervention rate (AUC, 0.771 versus 0.650; P<0.001).ConclusionWe found the full RS system is better for 1-month mortality prediction while GBS system is better for prediction of other outcomes.
Background. The 2010 revision of the McDonald criteria, widely used for the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis (MS), has established that dissemination in time (DIT) can be demonstrated by the simultaneous presence of asymptomatic gadolinium-enhancing and non-enhancing plaques on a single magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). When the use of gadolinium contrast agents is contraindicated, diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) is utilized to confirm diffusion alterations in active inflammatory plaques. This study intended to examine whether DWI can be a viable alternative to contrast-enhanced T1-weighted imaging for demonstrating DIT in MS. Material and methods.We assessed 30 previously diagnosed MS patients during acute relapse (based on the 2010 McDonald criteria) and evaluated their brain MRI via DWI‚ contrast-enhanced T1-weighted imaging, and FLAIR sequences. Asymptomatic plaques were defined as either hyperintense or non-hyperintense in DWI and enhancing or non-enhancing in T1GAD-MRI. Statistical indices for the prediction of plaque enhancement in T1 GAD-MRI via DWI-MRI were calculated and compared. Results. The 30 participants in our study had a total of 925 demyelinating plaques that were larger than 3mm in size and presented to be hyperintense in FLAIR-MRI. Diffusion hyperintensity and plaque enhancement were significantly correlated. The sensitivity‚ specificity, positive predictive value‚ negative predictive value, and accuracy of DWI were calculated to be 69.66%‚ 99.76%‚ 96.88%‚ 96.86%, and 96.86%, respectively. Conclusions. Hyperintense DWI findings do not necessarily overlap with contrast enhancements in T1 GAD-MRI. DWI was shown to produce a higher rate of false-positive results. Our study concludes that although T1 GAD-MRI should not be replaced by DWI to determine DIT due to its lower specificity, DWI’s continued use as a surrogate screening imaging sequence whenever the use of T1GAD-MRI is of concern is not without its merits.
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