1.Spontaneous Jamming of Horizontal Semicircular Canal Combined with Canalolithiasis of Contralateral Posterior Semicircular Canal
Salvatore MARTELLUCCI ; Andrea CASTELLUCCI ; Pasquale MALARA ; Giulio PAGLIUCA ; Veronica CLEMENZI ; Andrea STOLFA ; Andrea GALLO ; Giacinto Asprella LIBONATI
Journal of Audiology & Otology 2022;26(1):55-60
Spontaneous canalith jam is an uncommon form of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo mimicking acute vestibular neuritis. We described for the first time a spontaneous horizontal semicircular canalith jam associated with a typical canalolithiasis involving contralateral posterior semicircular canal (PSC), illustrating how the latter condition modified direction-fixed nystagmus during head movements. An 81-year-old woman with persistent vertigo referred to our center. Video-Frenzel examination showed horizontal direction-fixed right-beating nystagmus in primary gaze position, inhibited by visual fixation. She exhibited corrective saccades after leftward head impulses. Chin-to-chest positioning at the head-pitch test did not modify spontaneous nystagmus, whereas slight torsional components with the top pole of the eye beating toward the right ear appeared in backward head-bending, resulting in mixed horizontal-torsional nystagmus. At supine positioning tests, direction-fixed nystagmus turned into direction-changing geotropic horizontal nystagmus, which was stronger on the left side, while overlapping upbeat nystagmus with torsional right-beating components appeared on the right. Primary clinical findings were consistent with a left horizontal semicircular canalith jam, inducing a persistent utriculofugal cupular displacement, combined with a typical right-sided PSC-canalolithiasis. Once canalith jam crumbled, resulting in a non-ampullary arm canalolithiasis of the horizontal semicircular canal, both involved canals were freed by debris with appropriate repositioning procedures.
2.Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Multicenter Study of Changing Trends in Argentina Over the Past 30 Years
Maria Soledad ARCUCCI ; Monica Beatriz CONTRERAS ; Julieta GALLO ; Mariela Andrea ANTONISKA ; Veronica BUSONI ; Cecilia TENNINA ; Daniel D’AGOSTINO ; Maria Hisae KAKISU ; Christian WEYERSBERG ; Marina ORSI
Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology & Nutrition 2022;25(3):218-227
Purpose:
To analyze the characteristics of pediatric inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) over the past three decades in Argentina and determine if there are differences between the first two decades and the past decade.
Methods:
We conducted a retrospective multicenter analytical study in children with IBD between 0 and 18 years of age diagnosed between 1987 and 2017 in three tertiary health centers in Argentina. The evaluation included clinical characterization, endoscopy, histology, and imaging data together with therapeutic strategies. The patients were divided into two groups: Group 1, diagnosed between 1987 and 2007, and Group 2, diagnosed between 2008 and 2017.
Results:
Of the 756 patients included, 409 (54%) had ulcerative colitis (UC), 250 (33%) had Crohn’s disease (CD), and 97 (13%) had IBD-unclassified (IBD-U). The positive family history was 3.8%, which was more frequent among children under two years of age (6.7%). There were no significant differences in clinical presentation and extraintestinal manifestations between periods, with hepatic manifestations being the most frequent. In the last decade, we found an upward trend in CD, a downward trend in UC/IBD-U, even after adjustment for socioeconomic status, and a decrease of 50% in surgical treatments coinciding with the advent of biological therapy.
Conclusion
This is the first multicenter cohort study in a Latin American country to describe clinical, endoscopic, and therapeutic data across the past 30-year period. Although CD was responsible for the overall increase in incidence, UC was still prevalent in this region.
3.Optimization of Trichomonas vaginalis Diagnosis during Pregnancy at a University Hospital, Argentina.
Pamela TESTARDINI ; María Lucía Gallo VAULET ; Andrea Carolina ENTROCASSI ; Claudia MENGHI ; Martha Cora ELISEHT ; Claudia GATTA ; Mirta LOSADA ; María Sol TOUZÓN ; Ana COROMINAS ; Carlos VAY ; Silvio TATTI ; Angela FAMIGLIETTI ; Marcelo Rodriguez FERMEPIN ; Beatriz PERAZZI
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2016;54(2):191-195
The aim of this study was to evaluate different methods for Trichomonas vaginalis diagnosis during pregnancy in order to prevent maternal and perinatal complications. A total of 386 vaginal exudates from pregnant women were analyzed. T. vaginalis was investigated by 3 types of microscopic examinations direct wet mount with physiologic saline solution, prolonged May-Grunwald Giemsa (MGG) staining, and wet mount with sodium-acetate-formalin (SAF)/methylene blue method. PCR for 18S rRNA gene as well as culture in liquid medium were performed. The sensitivity and specificity of the microscopic examinations were evaluated considering the culture media positivity or the PCR techniques as gold standard. The frequency of T. vaginalis infection was 6.2% by culture and/or PCR, 5.2% by PCR, 4.7% by culture, 3.1% by SAF/methylene blue method and 2.8% by direct wet smear and prolonged MGG staining. The sensitivities were 83.3%, 75.0%, 50.0%, and 45.8% for PCR, culture, SAF/methylene blue method, and direct wet smear-prolonged MGG staining, respectively. The specificity was 100% for all the assessed methods. Microscopic examinations showed low sensitivity, mainly in asymptomatic pregnant patients. It is necessary to improve the detection of T. vaginalis using combined methods providing higher sensitivity, such as culture and PCR, mainly in asymptomatic pregnant patients, in order to prevent maternal and perinatal complications.
Argentina*
;
Culture Media
;
Diagnosis*
;
Exudates and Transudates
;
Female
;
Genes, rRNA
;
Humans
;
Polymerase Chain Reaction
;
Pregnancy*
;
Pregnant Women
;
Sensitivity and Specificity
;
Sodium Chloride
;
Trichomonas vaginalis*
;
Trichomonas*