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Case Report

May 19 2017

Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia

Morning Report

Thank you Dr. John Hollowed for an excellent presentation on acute promyelocytic leukemia

Teaching Points

  • APL accounts for 5-20% of AML cases
  • Increased incidence in people with prior cytotoxic therapy
  • Presents with complications of pancytopenia, weakness, fatigue, infections, increased bruising/bleeding, DIC
  • Diagnosis: bone marrow analysis and confirmation with PCR, FISH, or cytogenic analysis
  • Treatment is All-trans Retinoic Acid (ATRA)
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May 15 2017

Huntington’s Disease

Morning Report

Thank you Dr. Liza Buchbinder for an excellent presentation on Huntington’s Disease

Teaching Points

  • Etiology: Autosomal dominant; Drug induced (antipsychotics, estrogen containing); Endocrine (thyrotoxicosis, hyperglycemia); pregnancy (chorea gravidarum); streptococcal infection (Sydenham chorea); autoimmune (SLE, APLS); neurodegenerative d/o of basal ganglia.
  • Associated w/ parkinsonism, impulsiveness, psychiatric disorders, and dementia.
  • Treatment is symptomatic
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Apr 03 2017

TCA Induced Cardiotoxicity

Morning Report

Thank you Dr. Daniel Jimenez for an excellent presentation on TCA induced cardiotoxicity Teaching Points Clinical presentation: anticholinergic sx (urinary retention, constipation), CNS (seizures, coma), acidosis, arrythmias ECG: prolonged QRS/PR/QT --> predisposes for ventricular arrhythmias) Management: supportive care, benzos for seizures,…

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Feb 13 2017

Neuropsychiatric Lupus

Morning Report

Excellent morning report today with Thomas Vu on Neuropsychiatric Lupus! Take a look at on the latest review on neuropsychiatric SLE: Management of Neuropsychiatric Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: Current Approaches and Future Perspectives on PubMed

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Feb 01 2017

Disseminated Histoplasmosis

Morning Report

histo-microscopy

Thank you Dr. Brendan Cerk for an excellent presentation on neurocysticercosis presenting with new onset seizure

Teaching Points

  • Histoplasmosis is a common endemic mycosis, usually asymptomatic but occasionally results in severe illness
  • Hematogenous dissemination occurs during the acute infection before cellular immunity develops
  • Diagnosis: serum and urine antigen
  • Treatment: itraconazole for 12 months, if CNS then liposomal amphotericin B for 4-6 weeks then itrazonazole for an additional 12 months
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Jan 30 2017

Neurocysticercosis

Morning Report

Thank you Dr. Rajat Suri for an excellent presentation on neurocysticercosis presenting with new onset seizure

Teaching Points

  • Initial treatment for seizure: IV lorazepam 0.1mg/kg –> IV fosphenytoin –> sedation/intubation
  • Neurocysticercosis  is caused by Taenia Solium
  • Spreads hematogenously to the brain, liver, muscle
  • Diagnosis: presentation+imaging.  serum testing not reliable
  • Treatment: dexamethasone, albendazole, anti-epileptic
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Jan 25 2017

Acute Esophageal Variceal Bleed

Morning Report

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Thank you Dr. Kirollos Zaki for an excellent presentation on UGIB from esophageal varices

Teaching Points

  • Management of GI bleed
    • fluids, goal hg>7, plt >50, INR<1.5.
    • protonix drip if UGIB, add octreotide drip if concern for variceal bleed
  • Endoscopy
    • variceal ligation: using banding, goal is within 12 hours
    • sclerotherapy: usueally epi is used, similar results as ligation but high rebleeding risk
  • TIPS
    • Indications: active hemorrhage despite endoscopic treatment or recurrent bleed
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Oct 28 2016

Pulmonary Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Morning Report

1

Thank you Dr. Annie Belzowski for an excellent presentation of pulmonary squamous cell carcinoma complicated by pulmonary abscess

Teaching Points

  • Common causes of pulmonary abscess:
    • Bacterial: Anaerobic bacteria, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Mycobacteria
    • Fungal: Aspergillus, Coccidioides, Histoplasma, Blastomyces, Cryptococcus
    • Non-infectious: malignancy, embolism, vasculitis, scarcoidosis
  • Clindamycin preferred agent, time course dependent on follow up imaging
  • Common forms of lung cancer: adenocarcinoma (40%), small cell (15%), squamous cell (30%)
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