Melioidosis is a frequently fatal infection caused by the Gram-negative bacillus Burkholderia pseudomallei endemic to Southeast Asia and Northern Australia. It is a rare imported pathogen in the United States and is a potential bioterror agent. We report the case of an 82-year-old previously healthy man who presented with 2 weeks of fever and epigastric pain after he returned from the Philippines. A diagnosis of nondissecting mycotic aneurysm in the descending thoracic aorta was made with the help of CT angiogram and positive blood cultures. The patient completely recovered with a 6-month antibiotic therapy followed by surgical repair of the aneurysm. Given the slight increase in the number of melioidosis cases reported by CDC since 2008, melioidosis might be considered an emerging infectious disease in the United States. The purpose of this report is to raise awareness of the disease among clinicians as well as travelers.
Paxlovid (nirmatrelvir/ritonavir) is a game changer in the fight against COVID-19 due to its ease of administration and significant benefits of reducing progression to severe COVID-19, hospitalization, and death. Cardiac adverse events such as bradycardia and syncope are not known with this medication. We report a case of a 71-year-old patient who developed symptomatic bradycardia, syncopal episodes, and sinus pause after taking Paxlovid. Discontinuing medication and intravenous atropine helped to reverse the bradycardia and symptoms promptly. She did not require a pacemaker. We would like to report this possible association between Paxlovid and bradycardia. Until further information or studies are available, it is advised to promptly discontinue Paxlovid after any evidence of bradycardia and closely monitor for at least 40 hours in a hospital setting. The reported half-life (t 1/2) of the medication is 6.05 ± 1.79 hours and using 8 hours as a reference for the upper limit of t 1/2, around 97 % of the medication should be cleared off in about 40 hours (five half-lives).
Vitamin B12 deficiency-induced pseudo-thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (pseudo-TTP) is a rare condition. In reported literature, most cases were due to pernicious anemia (confirmed by the presence of anti-parietal cells or anti-intrinsic factor antibodies). Nutritional vitamin B12 deficiency causing pseudo-TTP is a much rarer entity. Differentiating thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) cases from pseudo-TTP (from any cause) should be done as soon as possible since the etiology, treatment, and outcome are different. Hematological findings from pseudo-TTP (when associated with vitamin B12 deficiency) respond to B12 replacement but do not respond to plasmapheresis. Neurological symptoms are one of the criteria for TTP, and altered mentation or psychosis in these cases is presumed secondary to either TTP or vitamin B12 deficiency. However, neurological symptoms are more characteristic of TTP rather than pseudo-TTP. In the rarer subsets of patients concerned with nutritional deficiency and neuropsychiatric symptoms, prompt consideration of concomitant vitamin B1 deficiency and Wernicke encephalopathy is essential. Immediate empiric treatment with high-dose IV thiamine should be started. If unrecognized and left untreated, thiamine deficiency can cause rapid progression to irreversible neurological symptoms, coma, and death, despite hematological improvement with B12 replacement. We report a rare case of concomitant vitamin B12 and vitamin B1 deficiency presenting with confusion, severe hemolytic anemia, acute renal failure, diarrhea, and thrombocytopenia mimicking TTP.
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