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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
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11,717
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acute respiratory failure
can be the product of any of a great number of muscular, neuromuscular, and neurologic causes. The family history may be extremely helpful in narrowing the differential diagnosis. We report the case of a girl who, during the course of a slight upper respiratory infection, presented with
acute respiratory failure
requiring mechanical ventilation. The family history was significant for a brother who had arthrogryposis and died at 15 h of life, also from respiratory failure. The patient herself had a history of palpebral
ptosis
in the evening. The absence of electromyographic and muscle biopsy abnormalities and the patient's positive response to anticholinesterase therapy supported the diagnosis of familial infantile myasthenia. We emphasize the importance of considering the myasthenic syndromes in the differential diagnosis of
acute respiratory failure
, since appropriate therapy can rapidly resolve the symptoms. Furthermore, an accurate diagnosis allows appropriate genetic counseling for the hereditary forms.
...
PMID:Familial infantile myasthenia: a neuromuscular cause of respiratory failure. 795 8
A 66-year-old man developed diplopia,
ptosis
, dysphagia, and
acute respiratory failure
. The initial diagnosis was myasthenia gravis and prednisolone had been administrated for three years. Because of recurrent upper respiratory infections, prednisolone was tapered off. Two months later, auricular chondritis, arthritis, and conjunctivitis appeared. He was diagnosed as having relapsing polychondritis on the basis of histological findings of the ear lobe biopsy. Reinstituted prednisolone had the effect on the auricular chondritis, arthritis, and conjunctivitis, but no effect on dysphagia, hoarseness, and respiratory failure caused by the deformity of the pharynx and airway. Tracheal collapse usually causes rapid death, so early tracheostomy and the use of endotracheal prostheses have been recommended in patients with airway obstruction from relapsing polychondritis, but such surgical management can only partially open up the large airways and has no effect on smaller airways. In this case tracheostomy and endoluminal stent placement have helped improve the patient's respiratory failure, but have had little effect on its aggravation at night in the supine position. The use of BiPAP after surgical management can be an effective treatment for airway involvement in relapsing polychondritis probably because it keeps the narrowed airways from collapsing, especially at night.
...
PMID:[A case of relapsing polychondritis with oculobulbar symptoms and successful treatment of respiratory failure with BiPAP]. 1065 66
The 2020 pandemic caused by the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, had its headquarters in China. It causes Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and presents a broad spectrum of clinical manifestations, ranging from entirely asymptomatic through severe
acute respiratory failure
and death. Presuming a significant quantity of ventilator-dependent patients, several institutions strategically delayed elective surgeries. Particularly procedures performed involving the nasal mucosa, such as a transsphenoidal approach of the pituitary gland, considering the tremendous level of viral shedding. Nevertheless, critical cases demand expeditious resolution. Those situations are severe pituitary apoplexy, declining consciousness level, or risk of acute visual loss. This case presents a successful urgent perioperative management of a 47 year-old male COVID-19 positive patient who presented to the Emergency Department with a left frontal headache that culminated with diplopia, left eye
ptosis
, and left visual acuity loss after 5 days. Transsphenoidal hypophysectomy was uneventfully performed, and the patient was discharged from the hospital on postoperative day four. It additionally describes in detail the University of Mississippi Medical Center airway management algorithm for patients infected with the novel coronavirus who need emergent surgical attention.
...
PMID:[Pituitary tumor resection in a patient with SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) infection. A case report and suggested airway management guidelines]. 3260 26
BACKGROUND Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease characterized by antibodies binding skeletal muscle acetylcholine receptors (AChR). Rarely does the disease manifest with orolaryngeal symptoms before ocular ones. We present a case of MG that on initial presentation had symptoms of cranial nerves (CN) IX and X weakness, including dysphagia and dysphonia. CASE REPORT A 51-year-old woman with panic attacks presented to the Emergency Department (ED) with complaints of her throat closing, swallowing difficulty, and hoarse voice. Multiple ED visits revealed no etiology. However, she developed stridor, which prompted further evaluation. Laryngoscopy and imaging studies revealed no gross abnormalities; therefore, her symptoms of dysphonia and difficulty breathing were attributed to anxiety. Her hospital course was complicated by a cardiac arrest requiring intubation. ECHO, CTA chest, and MRI brain were unremarkable. Her cardiac arrest was hypothesized as being secondary to laryngeal spasm. During her ICU course, she failed extubation multiple times due to
acute respiratory failure
. An autoimmune etiology was suspected, prompting a paraneoplastic screen, which revealed elevated levels of AChR antibodies at 124 mmol/L. MG was diagnosed and treatment with plasmapheresis and steroids was initiated. However, complications of thrombocytopenia, anemia, and ARDS ensued, so MG treatment was discontinued. The patient was eventually transferred to a LTACH. Thereafter, at outpatient followup, her MG was treated with mycophenolate and prednisone, which led to significant symptom improvement. CONCLUSIONS MG commonly presents in the third decade with clinical features of
ptosis
, diplopia, and facial weakness. However, initial and isolated symptoms of dysphagia and dysphonia are rare, leading to missed diagnoses. Our case of a middle-aged woman posed a diagnostic challenge because of her uncommon presentation and comorbidities of panic attacks and obesity. This case highlights the crucial need for a high index of clinical suspicion for MG in any patient presenting with symptoms of CN IX and X weakness.
...
PMID:Cranial Nerve IX and X Weakness: An Unusual Initial Presentation of Myasthenia Gravis. 3277 33