3 resultados para TEMPORAL ADMINISTRATION
Resumo:
A administração intravenosa acidental de adrenalina é um erro raro mas potencialmente fatal. Descrevemos um caso de uma mulher de 74 anos que durante uma intervenção cirúrgica a uma Colelitíase recebeu por acidente 4 mg de adrenalina intravenosa em vez de Neostigmina, no despertar da anestesia. A doente apresentou um episódio de Taquicardia Supra Ventricular (TSV) juntamente com uma crise hipertensiva e sinais de perfusão periférica fracos. O tratamento adequado resultou numa recuperação favorável sem sequelas. Discutimos a gestão adequada desta complicação e possíveis mecanismos para evitar erro humano na administração de fármacos durante a anestesia.
Resumo:
Aseptic meningitis can be an adverse drug reaction to intravenous immunoglobulin. We describe a previously healthy 4-yearold boy, admitted for idiopathic thrombocytopaenic purpura. He received two infusions of intravenous immunoglobulin. Four hours after the last administration the patient developed a meningeal syndrome. Analysis of cerebrospinal fluid revealed 500 cells/μl (predominantly neutrophils) and normal biochemistry. Bacteriological and virological tests were negative. After 48h he was asymptomatic. Given the absence of other aetiological factors and the temporal relationship between the administration of immunoglobulin and the development of symptoms, we believe the patient had an aseptic meningitis related to intravenous immunoglobulin. This therapy may cause headache, fever and vomiting; however, lumbar puncture is not usually performed, so this complication may be underdiagnosed.
Resumo:
We report two cases of a peculiar leukoencephalopathy with temporal cysts. Both patients have a non-progressive neurological disorder with mental retardation, microcephaly and sensorineural deafness although clinical differences between them may reflect a different aetiology. The metabolic disorders with white matter involvement and the recently described leukoencephalopathies (Van Der Knaap disease, 'vanishing white matter disease') were excluded based on clinical, biologic and imaging findings. Cytomegalovirus infection is a likely possibility in the first case although the magnetic resonance imaging picture is only partially similar to previously reported cases. Our patients are strikingly similar to the patients reported by Deonna et al. and Olivier et al. We discuss the clinical and imaging findings in our patients and the differential diagnosis considering the known disorders of the white matter in childhood.