An efficient substrate dependent NaN 3 /NH 4 Cl promoted azacyclization was developed via metal free cascade transformation. A wide variety of bicyclic/tricyclic isoindolinone derivative was achieved with excellent diastereoselectivity from achiral reagent system. This protocol also provided synthetic route of dopamine D 4 receptor in short way. The bio-imaging study towards CHO cell line with our isoindolinone embedded new fluorophore was also demonstrated.
We often face situations when the exact etiological diagnosis of meningitis is difficult. The reason behind this is that many pathogens have similar clinical, radiological, and laboratory pictures. The low yield of the pathogen in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), non-availability of detail tests in all corners of the world, delay in availability of reliable results (like cultures), and difficulty in performing confirmatory tests like brain biopsy (in inconclusive cases) make the job of a clinician challenging. We report here a case where a late diagnosis of a disease owing to inconclusive results leads to dissemination. The complications following the introduction of the treatment based on presumption lead to further difficulty. We remained inclined to our diagnosis based on clinical judgement, acknowledged and managed the inflammatory changes secondary to the infection, and finally won the long battle. So, sometimes we need to make decisions based on clinical grounds. We need to depend on the fact that uncommon presentations of common diseases are commoner than a common presentation of uncommon diseases.
A 52-year-old lady with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy, atrial flutter, and old right hemispheric stroke in the background underwent implantable cardioverter-defibrillator implantation for complete heart block. She was yet to start her regular anticoagulant and presented to hospital emergency with acute right middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory stroke (NIH Stroke Scale/Score of 14). After ruling out absolute contraindications, she was given intravenous thrombolysis (did not have a blood vessel target for endovascular therapy). Post thrombolysis, she had clot mobilization from the internal carotid artery to the MCA and systemic embolization to kidneys and lower limbs. The patient underwent an urgent embolectomy and lower limbs were saved from amputation. Our case highlights the importance of checking peripheral pulses in acute stroke patients post thrombolysis. Though the patient had initial deterioration after thrombolysis, she gradually improved and later achieved satisfactory modified Rankin scale underscoring the ultimate potential benefits of thrombolysis in acute stroke. There is a high chance of thrombus formation in patients with atrial flutter who undergo recent cardiac procedure especially if they are off anticoagulation for even a short period. Hence, unnecessary apprehension of anticoagulant use in proper situations may create life-threatening complications.
Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) is a relatively rare neurotoxic disorder. Our patient was a 56-year-old male who underwent an elective coronary angiography. Few hours postprocedure, the patient developed bilateral painless vision loss, headache, vomiting and hypertension and was subsequently diagnosed with PRES. Possible trigger factors could be contrast agent used, or hypertension. Contrast agent–induced PRES in hypertensive patients is benign and reversible, and a high-grade suspicion about this possibility is critical for precise management. Our patient was successfully treated with supportive management and was doing well on follow-up.
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