399 resultados para MCA MALFORMATION SYNDROMES
Resumo:
Chaque année, près de 14000 personnes sont victimes d'un accident vasculaire cérébral (AVC) en Suisse (1). Parmi elles, 3000-4000 individus décèdent des suites de leur attaque et environ 2000 personnes survivent avec des séquelles qui peuvent être relativement importantes. Cette affection a donc un poids non négligeable en terme de morbidité et de mortalité ; dans les pays indistrualisés, elle représente la première cause de handicap, la deuxième cause de démence ainsi que la troisième cause de mortalité. Il existe deux types d'AVC : les accidents ischémiques et les accidents hémorragiques (2,3). Dans environ 80% des cas, les AVC sont des accidents ischémiques, résultant d'une occlusion artérielle ou veineuse - les ischémies sur occlusion veineuse étant rares en comparaison de celles sur occulsion artérielle. En outre, on parle d'accident ischémiques transitoires (AIT) lorsque les symptomes sont spontanément résolutifs en moins de 24 heures. Les accidents hémorragiques, quant à eux, ne constituent qu'une minorité des AVC (20%) et sont secondaires à une rupture de vaisseau. La physiopathologie des différents types d'AVC a été particulièrement bien étudiée, ce qui a permis de mettre en évidence un certain nombre de causes. Un AVC peut donc être d'origine cardiaque (embole à point de départ cardiaque, fibrillation auriculaire), d'origine athéromateuse (embole sur plaque d'athéromatose des vaisseaux pré-cérébraux) ou encore, la conséquence directe d'une hypertension artérielle (maladie des petits vaisseaux, hémorragies intracérébrales) (3). Il existe également des causes un peu moins fréquentes, telles que les dissections aortiques, les ruptures d'anévrisme, les malformations artério-veineuses, les états pro-coagulants, les vasculites, la prise de toxiques. De nombreux facteurs de risque ont été mis en évidence (3). Certains d'entre eux, tels que l'âge, le sexe ou l'éthnie, ne sont pas modifiables. Mais il en est d'autres sur lesquels il est possible d'avoir un impact positif et leur identification fait donc partie intégrante du bilan de base chez les patients victimes d'AVC. Il s'agit de l'hypertension artérielle, du diabète, du tabagisme actif et de l'hypercholestérolémie. La présentation clinique de l'AVC est fonction du territoire vasculaire touché (3). Historiquement, la localisation et la compréhension des fonctions cérébrales ont été le fruit de corrélations anatomo-clinique puis radiologico-clinique (2). Dans la majorité des cas, on étudiait la partie commune à toutes les lésions de différents patients présentant un symptôme, et cette partie était présumée responsable de cette fonction. Néanmoins, le patient pouvait présenter d'autres symptômes associés, ce qui peut représenter un certain biais. A l'heure actuelle, l'imagerie fonctionnelle remplace progressivement ces corrélations radiologico- cliniques (2). Finalement, des études de cas isolés, avec lésions relativement circonscrites, ont également contribués à la compréhension des fonctions cérébrales (4-12). Le but principal de cette étude est d'analyser les syndromes cliniquement isolées (CIS, atteinte d'une fonction cérébrale, d'un segment corporel) dans le registre lausannois des accidents vasculaires cérébraux en terme de facteurs de risques, et de caractéristiques de l'AVC (origine, localisation) afin de déterminer des facteurs indépendants de survenue de telles atteintes, d'un point de vue général et pour chacune d'entre elles.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVES: To compare the use of guideline-recommended medical and interventional therapies in older and younger patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACSs). DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTING: Fifty-five hospitals in Switzerland. PARTICIPANTS: Eleven thousand nine hundred thirty-two patients with ACS enrolled between March 1, 2001, and June 30, 2006. ACS definition included ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI), and unstable angina pectoris (UA). MEASUREMENTS: Use of medical and interventional therapies was determined after exclusion of patients with contraindications and after adjustment for comorbidities. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to calculate odds ratios (ORs) per year increase in age. RESULTS: Elderly patients were less likely to receive acetylsalicylic acid (OR=0.976, 95% confidence interval (CI)=0.969-0.980) or beta-blockers (OR=0.985, 95% CI=0.981-0.989). No age-dependent difference was found for heparin use. Elderly patients with STEMI were less likely to receive percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or thrombolysis (OR=0.955, 95% CI=0.949-0.961). Elderly patients with NSTEMI or UA less often underwent PCI (OR=0.943, 95% CI=0.937-0.949). CONCLUSION: Elderly patients across the whole spectrum of ACS were less likely to receive guideline-recommended therapies, even after adequate adjustment for comorbidities. Prognosis of elderly patients with ACS may be improved by increasing adherence to guideline-recommended medical and interventional therapies.
Resumo:
Abstract The 5q deletion is a chromosomal abnormality that is observed in a subset of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). When isolated, this abnormality defines a specific clinical syndrome termed MDS associated with isolated deletion 5q, presenting with macrocytic anemia, normal platelet count or slight thrombocytosis, hypolobated megakaryocytes and fewer than 5% blasts in the bone marrow. MDS with the 5q deletion have a particular sensitivity to treatment with lenalidomide, a thalidomide analog. In this article, molecular changes in 5q- MDS derived from haploinsufficiency of genes encoded from the deleted region in 5q are reviewed, and mechanisms that link these molecular lesions with lenalidomide sensitivity are proposed.
Resumo:
Recurrence of cardiovascular events and mortality remain high after acute coronary syndromes. A Swiss multicentric study, "Inflammation and acute coronary syndromes (ACS)--Novel strategies for prevention and clinical managements", is currently underway with the support of the Swiss National Science Foundation. The study includes a clinical research subproject of which the aim is to assess the impact of the ELIPS program (multi-dimEnsionaL prevention Program after acute coronary Syndrome) on the recurrence of cardiovascular events after an ACS. The basic research sub-projects aim to investigate novel cardiovascular risk biomarkers and genetic determinants of recurrence and to study the role of stem cells after an ACS. Another sub-project will evaluate intracoronary imaging techniques and the efficacy of different types of stents.
Resumo:
Genetic tumor syndromes reflect an inherited predisposition to develop benign and malignant tumors. Increased frequency of neoplasms within the family or occurring at an early age are clinical clues for a possible underlying genetic susceptibility. Awareness of their associated cutaneous manifestations can facilitate early detection of risk for tumors. The goal of this article is to review clinical and molecular features of some genetic tumor syndrome which present with skin involvement at birth or during childhood.
Resumo:
Anorectal malformation (ARM) can be divided in high, intermediate, and low forms according to the level of termination of the rectum in relation to the pubococcygeal and ischiatic lines. Patients with Down's syndrome have a high incidence of gastrointestinal anomalies, such as tracheoesophageal fistula, duodenal obstruction, annular pancreas, Hirschsprung's disease, and ARM. In these children, ARM is generally low with or without a fistula. The mode of inheritance of ARM and its genetic relation with Down's syndrome is not known, even if the association (ARM-Down's syndrome) seems not to be coincidental. We describe here a very rare case of monozygotic twins born with the association of ARM and Down's syndrome.
Resumo:
We report a full-term newborn girl with a giant vein of Galen malformation and extreme cerebral atrophy of prenatal origin. She presented on the 3rd day of life with intractable congestive heart failure. The diagnosis of the vascular malformation was confirmed by ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging.
Resumo:
The ongoing aging of the population will lead to an increasing prevalence of chronic diseases and functional limitation. Preventative measures need to be promoted to prevent health care utilization and health costs explosion. Among these measures, those aimed at promoting early recognition of chronic conditions associated with functional decline, will have to be reinforced. This paper proposes simple, feasible, and efficient procedures to screen, in primary care practices, common geriatric conditions, as cognitive impairment, gait impairment, hearing and vision impairment or functional limitation.
Resumo:
CD34/QBEND10 immunostaining has been assessed in 150 bone marrow biopsies (BMB) including 91 myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), 16 MDS-related AML, 25 reactive BMB, and 18 cases where RA could neither be established nor ruled out. All cases were reviewed and classified according to the clinical and morphological FAB criteria. The percentage of CD34-positive (CD34 +) hematopoietic cells and the number of clusters of CD34+ cells in 10 HPF were determined. In most cases the CD34+ cell count was similar to the blast percentage determined morphologically. In RA, however, not only typical blasts but also less immature hemopoietic cells lying morphologically between blasts and promyelocytes were stained with CD34. The CD34+ cell count and cluster values were significantly higher in RA than in BMB with reactive changes (p<0.0001 for both), in RAEB than in RA (p=0.0006 and p=0.0189, respectively), in RAEBt than in RAEB (p=0.0001 and p=0.0038), and in MDS-AML than in RAEBt (p<0.0001 and p=0.0007). Presence of CD34+ cell clusters in RA correlated with increased risk of progression of the disease. We conclude that CD34 immunostaining in BMB is a useful tool for distinguishing RA from other anemias, assessing blast percentage in MDS cases, classifying them according to FAB, and following their evolution.
Resumo:
Hereditary periodic fever syndromes, also called autoinflammatory syndromes, are characterized by relapsing fever and additional manifestations such as skin rashes, mucosal manifestations, or arthralgias. Some of these disorders present without fever but with the associated systemic manifestations. The responsible mutated genes have been identified for most of these disorders, which lead to the induction of the uncontrolled and excessive production of interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta). The inhibition of IL-1beta through IL-1 receptor antagonist or monoclonal antibody against IL-1beta is used with success in most of these diseases. In case of TNF-receptor associated periodic syndrome (TRAPS) and paediatric granulomatous arthritis (PGA), TNF-antagonists may also be used; in familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) colchicine remains the first choice.