The clinical implications of computed tomography (CT) detected sacroiliac joint (SIJ) changes compatible with sacroiliitis has been rarely discussed in the literature. The aim of the present study was to describe prevalence and clinical correlations of sacroiliitis, noted incidentally by abdominal CT in patients referred for non-musculoskeletal complaints, utilizing the New York radiological grading criteria for reference. Five hundred ninety-eight CT scans of the abdomen of patients 18–55 years old, performed at a community medical center, were prospectively examined for the presence of imaging changes consistent with sacroiliitis. Patients with the evidence of bilateral sacroiliitis of grade ≥2 were interviewed and underwent a rheumatologic examination. Twenty-two patients (13 females) were enrolled. Only eight patients (six males) had a history and clinical picture compatible with previously undiagnosed axial spondyloarthritis (SpA). Only the presence of erosions/joint space irregularity and/or inhomogeneous osseous sclerosis around SIJs on CT correlated with the clinical diagnosis of axial SpA. Dense homogenous osseous sclerosis was unrelated to axial SpA and was seen almost exclusively in females. The prevalence of incidental CT sacroiliitis is low, while the New York radiological grading criteria for diagnosing sacroiliitis may be inappropriate for CT imaging. CT noted erosions of the SIJ appear to be a reliable diagnostic sign of sacroiliitis, while the significance of the osseous sclerosis, seen on CT adjacent to SIJs requires better understanding.
Endocarditis is not a usual manifestation of acute Q fever. There is an ongoing debate about the need to screen patients for valvular diseases after acute Q fever. We present, for the first time, three patients with bacterial endocarditis from different aetiologies and a simultaneous diagnosis of acute Q fever. All were treated with prolonged antimicrobial treatment, and none of them developed a persistent Q infection. We suggest screening patients with endocarditis from other aetiologies to Q fever.
Sequential insults (hits) may change the inflammatory reaction that develops in response to separate single hits (e.g., injury, infection); however, their effects on the long-term clinical outcome are still only partially elucidated. Double-hit models are typically severe and fatal. We characterized in C57BL/6 mice a moderate double-hit model of hemorrhage (35%-40% of total blood volume) and resuscitation, followed by peritoneal injection of zymosan A that induced local and systemic inflammation with 58% mortality. This model allowed exploration of the inflammatory response over time in the surviving mice. We show that after 2 days, mice subjected to the double-hit model had elevated proinflammatory systemic and local peritoneal cytokine response (interleukin [IL]-1β, tumor necrosis factor-α, IL-6) and moderately elevated anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-10, transforming growth factor-β), compared with the single-hit and sham mice. However, this dynamically changed, and by day 7, proinflammatory cytokines were reduced, and anti-inflammatory cytokines were markedly (P < 0.05) elevated in the double-hit group. Mice in the double-hit group that inhaled 100% oxygen intermittently for 6 h every day exhibited markedly reduced serum proinflammatory cytokines as early as day 2 (P < 0.05), inhibited macrophage infiltration into the peritoneum (by 13-fold; P < 0.05), and substantially increased survival rates of 85% (P = 0.00144). Oxygen mitigates the inflammatory response and exerts a beneficial effect on survival in a double-hit model of hemorrhage and zymosan-induced inflammation.
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