976 resultados para CONGENITAL PTOSIS
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The author emphasizes the importance of the congenital transmission of Chagas' disease and discusses the possible risk factors for transmission such as age, origin, obstetrical history and maternal form of disease. Exacerbation of infection during pregnancy is also considered as a possible risk factor for transmission. Besides, a relationship between the frequency of transmission and gestational age is presented. Concerning breast-feeding, the risk of transmission is directly related to the acute phase of maternal disease and bleeding nipples. The deleterious effects of chagasic infection on the fetus and newborn are also considered.
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The surface of human syncytiotrophoblast does not induce maternal blood platelet aggregation even though it is not an endothelium. It can be surmised that as occurs in endothelial injury the subcellular components of the syncytiotrophoblast may have pro-or antiaggregatory activity. During congenital Chagas' disease which is associated to trophoblast lesions, platelets may play a role in the development of T. cruzi-induced placentitis. In the present work the aggregatory behaviour of normal human blood platelets was recorded after their challenging with subcellular fractions of syncytiotrophoblast isolated from normal and chagasic women. Nuclear, Mitochondrial, Microsomal and Supernatant fractions isolated from normal and chagasic syncytiotrophoblast failed to induce per se any aggregatory reaction on platelets. When samples of platelet-rich plasma (PRP) were preincubated with normal and chagasic nuclear fractions and then stimulated with collagen at threshold level (CT-PRP) an inhibition of the aggregatory response was observed. Treatment of CT-PRP with normal and chagasic mitochondrial fractions induced inhibition of platelet aggregation whereas only chagasic fraction reduced latency time. Microsornal fraction from normal placentas showed no significant effects on platelet aggregation. It is concluded that subcellular fractions of normal human syncytiotrophoblast do not exhibit any effect on platelet aggregation, whereas those subcellular fractions enriched in intracellular membrane components isolated from chagasic placentas inhibit platelet aggregation.
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Resumo O vírus citomegálico humano (CMV) é o principal agente de infecção congénita, atingindo cerca de 0.2 a 2.2% de todos os recém-nascidos. As crianças que nascem infectadas por este vírus têm cerca de 11% a 12.7% de probabilidades de apresentarem sintomas e sinais de doença citomegálica ao nascimento, podendo cerca de 40 a 58% destas virem a apresentar sequelas neurológicas permanentes. Das crianças infectadas que terão infecção assintomática no período neo-natal, 5 a 15% poderão vir igualmente a sofrer de sequelas tardias, sobretudo a surdez ou o atraso mental. Em Portugal, desconhece-se a dimensão deste problema. O primeiro objectivo desta dissertação foi, desta forma, a determinação da prevalência através do recurso aos cartões do diagnóstico precoce (“Guthrie cards”), utilizando uma técnica de nested-PCR dirigida para o vírus. Foram estudados 3600 cartões, seleccionados de todo o território nacional (continente e ilhas), de uma forma proporcional ao número de nascimentos em cada distrito, dos quais 38 foram positivos, o que dá uma prevalência de 1.05% (intervalo de confiança para 95%: 0.748-1.446). A revisão sobre a experiência acumulada nos últimos 15 anos, na área do diagnóstico pré-natal, juntamente com um estudo adicional sobre a técnica da avidez, permitiu retirar algumas ilações, nomeadamente que este diagnóstico constitui uma arma diagnostica fiável para a avaliação pré-natal desta infecção congénita e que a selecção dos casos para amniocentese deverá obedecer a indicações serológicas precisas, como a “seroconversão para IgG” ou a “IgM confirmada” (devendo o método de confirmação ser a avidez das IgG com um índice <0,6) e as alterações ecográficas de etiologia não esclarecida. A possibilidade de utilizar pools de urinas para detectar a infecção congénita por CMV foi abordada na terceira parte do trabalho experimental. A metodologia aí descrita teve correlação total com o método de referência, permitindo uma redução bastante significativa nos tempos de execução e nos custos em consumíveis, pelo que abre a possibilidade da sua utilização para o rastreio da infecção congénita por CMV nos recém-nascidos.
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Dengue congenital disease was not confirmed in 10 children whose mothers had the infection during pregnancy. The fetal sera presented anti-dengue IgG antibodies which progressively declined, and disappeared after 8 months. IgM antibodies to dengue were not observed in the sera. Other normal data suggesting the healthy state of the children included: absence of malformations, pregnancy time, Apgar index, weight, and placenta aspect
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RESUMO: Contexto: Indicadores fidedignos da composição corporal são importantes na orientação das estratégias nutricionais de recém-nascidos e pequenos lactentes submetidos a cuidados intensivos. O braço é uma região acessível para avaliar a composição corporal regional, pela medida dos seus compartimentos. A antropometria e a ultrassonografia (US) são métodos não invasivos, relativamente económicos, que podem ser usados à cabeceira do paciente na medição desses compartimentos, embora esses métodos não tenham ainda sido validados neste subgrupo etário. A ressonância magnética (RM) pode ser usada como método de referência na validação da medição dos compartimentos do braço. Objectivo: Validar em lactentes pré-termo, as medidas do braço por antropometria e por US. Métodos: Foi estudada uma coorte de recém-nascidos admitidos consecutivamente na unidade de cuidados intensivos neonatais, com 33 semanas de idade de gestação e peso adequado para a mesma, sem anomalias congénitas major e não submetidas a diuréticos ou oxigenoterapia no momento da avaliação. Nas vésperas da alta, foram efectuadas medições do braço, com ocultação, pelos métodos antropométrico, ultrassonográfico e RM. As medidas antropométricas directas foram: peso (P), comprimento (C), perímetro cefálico (PC), perímetro braquial (PB) e prega cutânea tricipital (PT). As área braquial total, área muscular (AM) e área adiposa foram calculadas pelos métodos de Jeliffee & Jeliffee e de Rolland-Cachera. Utilizando uma sonda PSH-7DLT de 7 Hz no ecógrafo Toshiba SSH 140A foram medidos os perímetros braquial e muscular e calculadas automaticamente as áreas braquial e muscular, sendo a área adiposa obtida por subtracção. Como método de referência foi utilizada a RM – Philips Gyroscan ACS-NT, Power-Track 1000 ®, 1.5 Tesla com uma antena de quadratura do joelho. Na análise estatística foram utilizados os métodos paramétricos e não paramétricos, conforme adequado. Resultados: Foram incluídas 30 crianças, nascidas com ( ±DP) 30.7 ±1.9 semanas de gestação, pesando 1380 ±325g, as quais foram avaliadas às 35.4 ±1.1 semanas de idade corrigida, quando pesavam 1786 ±93g. Nenhuma das medidas antropométricas, individualmente, constitui um indicador aceitável (r2 <0.5) das medições por RM. A melhor e mais simples equação alternativa encontrada é a que estima a AM (r2 = 0.56), derivada dos resultados da análise de regressão múltipla: AMRM = (P x 0.17) + (PB x 5.2) – (C x 6) – 150, sendo o P expresso em g, o C e o PB em cm. Nenhuma das medidas ultrassonográficas constitui um indicador aceitável (r2 <0.4) das medições por RM. Conclusões: A antropometria e as medidas ultrassonográficas do braço não são indicadores fidedignos da composição corporal regional em lactentes pré-termo, adequados para a idade de gestação.----------ABSTRACT: Background: Accurate predictors for body composition are valuable tools guiding nutritional strategies in infants needing intensive care. The upper-arm is a part of the body that is easily accessible and convenient for assessing the regional body composition, throughout the assessment of their compartments. Anthropometry and by ultrasonography (US) are noninvasive and relatively nonexpensive methods for bedside assessment of the upper-arm compartments. However, these methods have not yet been validated in infants. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may be used as gold standard to validate the measurements of the upper-arm compartments. Objective: To validate the upper-arm measurements by anthropometry and by US in preterm infants. Methods: A cohort of neonates consecutively admitted at the neonatal intensive care unit, appropriate for gestational age, with 33 weeks, without major congenital abnormalities and not subjected to diuretics or oxygen therapy, was assessed. Before the discharge, the upper-arm was blindly measured by anthropometry, US and MRI. The direct anthropometric parameters measured were: weight (W), length (L), head circumference (HC), mid-arm circumference (MAC), and tricipital skinfold thickness. The arm area (AA), arm muscle area (AMA) and arm fat area were calculated applying the methods proposed by Jeliffee & Jeliffee and by Rolland-Cachera. Using the sonolayer Toshiba SSH 140A and the probe PSH-7DLT 7Hz, the arm and muscle perimeters were measured by US, the arm and muscle areas included were automatically calculated, and the fat area was calculated by subtraction. The MR images were acquired on a 1.5-T Philips Gyroscan ACS-NT, Power-Track 1000 scanner, and a knee coil was chosen for the upper-arm measurements. For statistical analysis parametric and nonparametric methods were used as appropriate. Results: Thirty infants born with ( ±SD) 30.7 ±1.9 weeks of gestational age and weighing 1380 ±325g were included in the study; they were assessed at 35.4 ±1.1 weeks of corrected age, weighing 1786 ±93g. None of the anthropometric measurements are individually acceptable (r2 <0.5) for prediction of the measurements obtained by MRI. The best and simple alternative equation found is the equation for prediction of the AMA (r2 = 0.56), derived from the results of multiple regression analysis: AMARM = (W x 0.17) + (MAC x 5.2) – (L x 6) – 150, being the W expressed in g, and L and MAC in cm. None of the ultrasonographic measurements are acceptable (r2 <0.5) predictors for the measurements obtained by MRI. Conclusions: The measurements of the upper-arm by anthropometry and by US are not accurate predictors for the regional body composition in preterm appropriate for gestational age infants.
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In view of the scarce references concerning the histological data in congenital parvovirus human B19 infection, we intend to provide a description of the pathological features observed in six autopsies.The virus was detected by DNA hybridization (ISH-DBH),PCR and electronmicroscopy (EM) in paraffin-embedded feto-placentary tissues.These cases constitute a subset from 86 Non Immunologic Hydrops Fetalis (NIHF) cases, in which a systemic complex of inflammatory/degenerative lesions of unknown etiology was visualized by optical microscopy. In one case a syphilitic process was detected, typefying a double infection. All fetuses showed a similar pathology - hydrops, hepato-splenomegaly, lung hypoplasia and erythroblastemia, the specific histological feature being the presence of intranuclear inclusions in the erythroid progenitors, in the erythropoietic visceral tissue and in blood marrow. Complex cardiopathy allied to abnormal lung lobulation and polisplenia were observed once; in 2 cases endocardial fibroelastosis was diagnosed. The pulmonary lesions were represented by dysmaturity allied to interstitial mononuclear infiltration. The hepatic consisted of cholestasis, portal fibrosis, canalicular proliferation, hemossiderosis, focal necroses and giant cell transformation. The central nervous system lesions were predominantly anoxic although the autolysis impaired a correct diagnosis.
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Paracoccidioidomycosis (PCM) is a primary pulmonary infection that often disseminates to other organs and systems. Involvement of the central nervous system (CNS) is rare and due to the fact that both clinical alertness and establishment of the diagnosis are delayed, the disease progresses causing serious problems. We report here a case of neuroparacoccidioidomycosis (NPCM), observed in a 55 year-old male, who consulted due to neurological symptoms (left hemiparesis, paresthesias, right palpebral ptosis, headache, vomiting and tonic clonic seizures) of a month duration. Upon physical examination, an ulcerated granulomatous lesion was observed in the abdomen. To confirm the diagnosis a stereotactic biopsy was taken; additionally, mycological tests from the ulcerated lesion and a bronchoalveolar lavage were performed. In the latter specimens, P. brasiliensis yeast cells were visualized and later on, the brain biopsy revealed the presence of the fungus. Treatment with itraconazole (ITZ) was initiated but clinical improvement was unremarkable; due to the fact that the patient was taking sodium valproate for seizure control, drug interactions were suspected and confirmed by absence of ITZ plasma levels. The latter medication was changed to clonazepam and after several weeks, clinical improvement began to be noticed and was accompanied by diminishing P. brasiliensis antigen and antibody titers. In the PCM endemic areas, CNS involvement should be considered more often and the efficacy of itraconazole therapy should also be taken into consideration.
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Pain transmission at the spinal cord is modulated by descending actions that arise from supraspinal areas which collectively form the endogenous pain control system. Two key areas involved of the endogenous pain control system have a circunventricular location, namely the periaqueductal grey (PAG) and the locus coeruleus (LC). The PAG plays a crucial role in descending pain modulation as it conveys the input from higher brain centers to the spinal cord. As to the LC, it is involved in descending pain inhibition by direct noradrenergic projections to the spinal cord. In the context of neurological defects, several diseases may affect the structure and function of the brain. Hydrocephalus is a congenital or acquired disease characterized by an enlargement of the ventricles which leads to a distortion of the adjacent tissues, including the PAG and LC. Usually, patients suffering from hydrocephalus present dysfunctions in learning and memory and also motor deficits. It remains to be evaluated if lesions of the periventricular brain areas involved in pain control during hydrocephalus may affect descending pain control and, herein, affect pain responses. The studies included in the present thesis used an experimental model of hydrocephalus (the rat injected in the cisterna magna with kaolin) to study descending modulation of pain, focusing on the two circumventricular regions referred above (the PAG and the LC). In order to evaluate the effects of kaolin injection into the cisterna magna, we measured the degree of ventricular dilatation in sections encompassing the PAG by standard cytoarquitectonic stanings (thionin staining). For the LC, immunodetection of the noradrenaline-synthetizing enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) was performed, due to the noradrenergic nature of the LC neurons. In general, rats with kaolin-induced hydrocephalus presented a higher dilatation of the 4th ventricle, along with a tendency to a higher area of the PAG. Due to the validated role of detection the c-fos protooncogene as a marker of neuronal activation, we also studied neuronal activation in the several subnuclei which compose the PAG, namely the dorsomedial, dorsolateral, lateral and ventrolateral (VLPAG) parts. A decrease in the numbers of neurons immunoreactive for Fos protein (the product of activation of the c-fos protooncogene) was detected in rats injected with kaolin, whereas the remaining PAG subnuclei did not present changes in Fos-immunoreactive nuclei. Increases in the levels of TH in the LC, namely at the rostral parts of the nucleus, were detected in hydrocephalic animals. The following pain-related parameters were measured, namely 1) pain behavioural responses in a validated pain inflammatory test (the formalin test) and 2) the nociceptive activation of spinal cord neurons. A decrease in behavioral responses was detected in rats with kaolin-induced hydrocephalus was detected, namely in the second phase of the test (inflammatory phase). This is the phase of the formalin test in which the motor behaviour is less important, which is important since a semi-quantitative analysis of the motor performance of rats injected with kaolin indicates that these animals may present some motor impairments. Collectively, the results of the behavioral studies indicate that rats with kaolin-induced hydrocephalus exhibit hypoalgesia. A decrease in Fos expression was detected at the superficial dorsal layers of the spinal cord in rats with kaolin-induced hydrocephalus, further indicating that hydrocephalus decreases nociceptive responses. It remains to be ascertained if this is due to alterations in the PAG and LC in the rats with kaolin-induced hydrocephalus, which may affect descending pain modulation. It remains to be evaluated what are the mechanisms underlying the increased pain inhibition at the spinal dorsal horn in the hydrocephalus rats. Regarding the VLPAG, the decrease in neuronal activity may impair descending modulation. Since the LC has higher levels of TH in rats with kaolininduced hydrocephalus, which also appears to increase the noradrenergic innervation in the spinal dorsal horn, it is possible that an increase in the release of noradrenaline at the spinal cord accounts for pain inhibition. Our studies also determine the need to study in detail patients with hydrocephalus namely in what concerns their thresholds to pain and to perform imaging studies focused on the structure and function of pain control areas in the brain.
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Reports on children presenting symptoms compatible with the chronic phase of Chagas disease are sporadic. We report a case of a 7-year-old boy who had megaesophagus and megacolon, both of them a consequence of the trypanosomiasis. The etiology was established by means of laboratory and histological features. Based on epidemiological data, the authors concluded that vertical transmission was the most probable route of acquisition. This diagnosis should be considered in children presenting similar complaints, even those living away from endemic areas.
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From January, 1984 to March, 1999, 31 children under 15 y old (ages 1-14 y, median 8 y) were admitted after being bitten by rattlesnakes (Crotalus durissus ssp). One patient was classified as "dry-bite", 3 as mild envenoming, 9 as moderate envenoming and 18 as severe envenoming. Most patients had neuromuscular manifestations, such as palpebral ptosis (27/31), myalgia (23/31) and weakness (20/31). Laboratory tests suggesting rhabdomyolysis included an increase in total blood creatine kinase (CK, 28/29) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH, 25/25) levels and myoglobinuria (14/15). The main local signs and symptoms were slight edema (20/31) and erythema (19/31). Before antivenom (AV) administration, blood coagulation disorders were observed in 20/25 children that received AV only at our hospital (incoagulable blood in 17/25). AV early reactions were observed in 20 of these 25 cases (9/9 patients not pretreated and 11/16 patients pretreated with hydrocortisone and histamine H1 and H2 antagonists). There were no significant differences in the frequency of patients with AV early reactions between the groups that were and were not pretreated (Fisher's exact test, p = 0.12). Patients admitted less than and more than 6 h after the bite showed the same risk of developing severe envenoming (Fisher's exact test, p = 1). No children of the first group (< 6 h) showed severe complications whereas 3/6 children admitted more than 6 h post-bite developed acute renal failure. Patients bitten in the legs had a higher risk of developing severe envenoming (Fisher's exact test, p = 0.04). There was a significant association between both total CK and LDH blood enzyme levels and severity (p < 0.001 for CK and p < 0.001 for LDH; Mann-Whitney U test). No deaths were recorded.
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Isolated anterior mitral leaflet cleft (not associated with atrio-ventricular septal defect) is a rare cause of congenital mitral regurgitation, and the treatment consists of direct suturing of the cleft. We present a clinical case with this entity.
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Apresenta-se o caso de um doente avaliado por sopro cardíaco contínuo, em que o estudo ecocardiográfico permitiu diagnosticar ruptura de aneurisma congénito do seio de Valsalva (SV) para a aurícula direita. Os autores fazem uma breve revisão sobre os aspectos clínicos desta patologia.
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Seroprevalence of HCMV in Costa Rica is greater than 95% in adults; primary infections occur early in life and is the most frequent congenital infection in newborns. The objectives of this study were to determine the genetic variability and genotypes of HCMV gB gene in Costa Rica. Samples were collected from alcoholics, pregnant women, blood donors, AIDS patients, hematology-oncology (HO) children and HCMV isolates from neonates with cytomegalic inclusion disease. A semi-nested PCR system was used to obtain a product of 293-296 bp of the gB gene to be analyzed by Single Stranded Conformational Polymorphism (SSCP) and sequencing to determine the genetic polymorphic pattern and genotypes, respectively. AIDS patients showed the highest polymorphic diversity with 14 different patterns while fifty-six percent of HO children samples showed the same polymorphic pattern, suggesting in this group a possible nosocomial infection. In neonates three genotypes (gB1, gB2 and gB3), were determined while AIDS patients and blood donors only showed one (gB2). Of all samples analyzed only genotypes gB1, 2 and 3 were determined, genotype gB2 was the most frequent (73%) and mixed infections were not detected. The results of the study indicate that SSCP could be an important tool to detect HCMV intra-hospital infections and suggests a need to include additional study populations to better determine the genotype diversity and prevalence.
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Myasthenia Gravis is an autoimmune disorder that generally presents with ocular symptoms, specially diplopia and ptosis. Dysphagia may be a manifestation of the generalised type of the disease, but rarely is its presenting feature. The authors describe a case of Myasthenia Gravis in an old patient complaining of dysphagia and dysarthria. Because Myasthenia Gravis is a potentially serious but treatable disease, we emphasize the need to consider it in the differential diagnosis of dysphagia, namely in the elderly. In fact, the disorder is probably underdiagnosed in this population group, because clinicians tend to accept other more frequent diagnosis to explain these symptoms.
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INTRODUCTION: Chylothorax is a rare but serious postoperative condition in children with congenital heart disease. Conventional medical treatment consists of specific long-term dietary modification, and surgical reintervention, such as lymphatic duct ligation, may be indicated in refractory cases. In recent years, an additional conservative treatment, octreotide, a synthetic analog of somatostatin, has been used in management of congenital and postoperative chylothorax. METHODS: The objective of this work was to analyze the efficacy and safety of this treatment for chylothorax after congenital heart surgery. We reviewed the records of sixteen patients with chylothorax after surgery for congenital heart disease between January 1999 and December 2007, and collected the following data: demographic information; type of surgical procedure; onset, duration and management of chylothorax and treatment; and duration of hospital stay. To analyze efficacy we compared these parameters in children receiving conventional treatment only with those receiving octreotide. To analyze safety we compared the adverse effects of both treatments. Octreotide was administered at a dose of 4 to 10 microg/kg/hour, with monitoring of side effects. RESULTS: The incidence of chylothorax in our population was 1.6%. It occurred more often after Glenn and Fontan procedures (8 patients). Octreotide was begun three days after diagnosis of chylothorax and continued for a median of seventeen days (ranging from 4 to 26 days), until complete resolution. Side effects were frequent (in 3 of the 8 patients) but of no clinical relevance. All patients responded to the therapy and there was no indication for further surgical intervention. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Octreotide is safe and effective in the treatment of postoperative chylothorax in children with congenital heart disease. It is a useful adjunctive therapy to the conventional treatment of this complication.