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Diaz Soto
Diaz Soto

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Wait of endoscopic submucosal dissection-induced abdominal ulcer healing through methotrexate.

A 23-year-old man admitted to our hospital with headache and dysarthria. Head MRI showed multiple acute cerebral infarctions in the right posterior circulation. Atlantoaxial dislocation, atlas dysplasia and thrombotic occlusion of right vertebral artery (VA), and blood flow disruption due to cervical rotation was observed. The axial dental process bordered to the right VA, and repeated contact stimulation by cervical rotation may cause intimal damage resulting in thrombotic occlusion. In this case, various systemic malformations such as atrial septal defect, atlas posterior arch hypoplasia, bovine left common carotid bifurcation malformation, double inferior vena cava and horseshoe kidney may have been congenital syndromes. Atlantoaxial dislocation may be an important and under-recognized cause of stroke in young adults.We report a 77-year-old man who presented with numbness and weakness of the feet bilaterally, that had progressed over 13 years. He was diagnosed with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP) on the basis of nerve conduction studies and a sural nerve biopsy; however, he was inadequately treated and his weakness had progressed. At 76 years of age, he developed spasticity in the legs as well as bladder and rectal incontinences. Gd-enhanced MRI revealed severe compression of the cervical cord by massively enlarged nerve roots. A cervical laminectomy was performed to decompress the cervical cord. A fascicular biopsy of the C5 dorsal root showed a prominent lymphocyte infiltration and edema. Repeated methylprednisolone pulse therapy and IVIg ameliorated the weakness. We concluded that the main cause of nerve root hypertrophy in this patient was active inflammation.An 82-year-old man with advanced lung cancer who had declined aggressive therapy was transferred to our hospital due to sudden-onset consciousness disturbance, global aphasia, and right hemiplegia. An electrocardiogram showed atrial fibrillation, and brain MRI and MRA revealed acute ischemic lesions of the left hemisphere and occlusion of the left internal carotid artery (ICA), respectively. We diagnosed acute ischemic stroke due to left ICA occlusion and performed endovascular thrombectomy, which resulted in complete recanalization of the left ICA after retrieval of the culprit embolus. Pathological examination of the retrieved thrombus revealed the presence of tumor tissue, as well as fibrin or red blood cells. Treatment was continued after admission, but the patient died of respiratory failure on day 40 of hospitalization. Autopsy revealed invasion of the tumor in the pulmonary vein, but not in the wall of the left atrium where thrombi were present. However, pathological examination of these thrombi in the left atrium revealed tumor tissue, along with fibrin or red blood cells. These findings suggest that the wall of the left atrium, in which lung cancer had not invaded, may be an incubator of a mixed embolus containing tumor tissue and thrombi in a case of cerebral embolism associated with both lung cancer and atrial fibrillation.A 66-year-old woman was diagnosed as primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) and was previously hospitalized for ascites and jaundice. She came to our hospital for further examination of the liver by needle biopsy, which showed interface hepatitis that mainly comprised lymphocytes and inflammatory infiltrates in the bile duct in the portal area. On the other hand, numerous intracytoplasmic inclusions that were positive for fibrinogen immunostaining were seen in the lobular area. Finally, we histologically diagnosed as PBC with fibrinogen storage disease (FSD). FSD is rare disease that leads to liver damage caused by abnormal fibrinogen storage in the endoplasmic reticulum of hepatocytes, with only four cases reported in Japan until now.The patient is 36-year-old woman who complained of proptosis and was diagnosed as thyroid cancer. The pathologic diagnosis of her resected specimen was papillary thyroid cancer, cribriform morular variant (CMV). Subsequently, she was suspected of having familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), although she had no family history of it. The diagnosis of FAP was confirmed following colonoscopy, which showed multiple polyps, and the biopsies that revealed multiple adenomas and cancers with APC gene mutation. She underwent restorative proctocolectomy, rectal mucosectomy with ileal pouch anal anastomosis, and ileostomy in our department. Cancer in the adenomas was found in four polyps on histopathological examination. CMV is known to be complicated with FAP. check details However, the number of reported cases remains few. This case was relatively rare, with an initial diagnosis of FAP because of the coexistence of CMV. In patients with papillary thyroid cancer (CMV type), colonoscopy should be considered because of the possibility of FAP.A 19-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of persistent fever of >38°C for 6 days and diarrhea for 4 days. Initially, he was treated for infectious enteritis, but on his second day in the hospital, the two sets of blood cultures came back positive. Cultures from the blood and stool yielded Salmonella sp. (Group O4). The patient's symptoms improved after treatment with fluoroquinolone-based antimicrobial agents for 14 days. Cases of nontyphoidal Salmonella bacteremia are rare;therefore, we reported this case with bibliographic consideration of the risk factors for Salmonella bacteremia.A 42-year-old man, after remission of MALT lymphoma of the small intestine, was repeatedly hospitalized because of abdominal pain and severe dehydration caused by frequent vomiting and watery diarrhea. His symptoms would improve quickly every time when he was fasted and inserted a nasogastric tube. We were unable to find abnormalities on endoscopic examination and computed tomography. He was suspected to have gastrinoma because of active bleeding from a duodenal ulcer. High-level serum gastrin, endoscopic ultrasound, somatostatin receptor scintigraphy, and selective arterial calcium injection test were done. He was diagnosed with pancreatic gastrinoma in the pancreatic head by endoscopic ultrasound fine needle aspiration and subsequently underwent pancreatoduodenectomy. Histopathologic findings showed a 3-mm neuroendocrine tumor located in the duodenal submucosal layer. The presence of metastasis was confirmed in one of the peripancreatic lymph nodes. The pancreatic gastrinoma in the pancreatic head that we initially diagnosed was a lymph node metastasis behind the pancreas.check details

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