1.Hepatotoxicity in an Adolescent with Black Iced Tea Overconsumption
Adamos HADJIPANAYIS ; Elisavet EFSTATHIOU ; Vasiliki PAPAEVANGELOU
Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology & Nutrition 2019;22(4):387-391
Tea is the most widely consumed beverage after water in the world. The consumption of iced tea has increased in Western countries and spiked among teenagers for enjoyment, freshening up and alertness. A teenager presented with symptoms of hepatitis. Liver ultrasound revealed sludge in the gallbladder. Laboratory investigations excluded all known causes of hepatotoxicity. Detail nutritional history revealed that the patient had been drinking 1.5–2 liters of black iced tea per day for the last three months. He was immediately advised to stop drinking any tea. Gradually all symptoms disappeared and two months after discontinuation of the tea, all liver enzymes returned to normal and the sludge in the gallbladder disappeared. This case report underlines the importance of a meticulous assessment of a child's dietary behavior when investigating a case of hepatotoxicity and raises awareness about the potential side effects of tea overconsumption.
Adolescent
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Beverages
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Drinking
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Gallbladder
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Hepatitis
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Humans
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Liver
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Sewage
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Tea
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Ultrasonography
;
Water
2.The Economic Crisis in Greece and Its Impact on the Seasonality of Suicides in the Athens Greater Area.
Christos CHRISTODOULOU ; Vasiliki EFSTATHIOU ; Ioannis MICHOPOULOS ; Maria GKEREKOU ; Antonios PARASCHAKIS ; Filippos KOUTSAFTIS ; Athanassios DOUZENIS
Psychiatry Investigation 2017;14(1):16-20
OBJECTIVE: The economic crisis and the implementation of austerity measures in Greece lead to significant socioeconomic changes. The effects of the crisis were mainly felt by the Greek population during the years 2011 and 2012. This study aimed to investigate the impact of Greece's economic crisis on the seasonality of suicides in the Athens Greater Area. METHODS: Data were collected for all recorded cases of suicides committed over a 5-year period (from 2008 to 2012) from the Athens Department of Forensic Medicine. Two sub-periods were studied in relation to the economic crisis: 2008–2010 and 2011–2012. Seasonality was estimated with the Poison regression variant of the circular normal distribution. RESULTS: Suicide seasonality appeared significant during 2008–2010 (relative risk, RR=1.36) and strengthened in the years 2011–2012 (RR=1.69), when the impact of the austerity measures was increasingly being felt by the Greek society. Regarding the latter sub-period, seasonality was established for males (RR=1.75), individuals aged 45 years or more (RR=1.75) and suicide by hanging (RR=1.96). CONCLUSION: The economic crisis in Greece, especially in the period during its effects had a significant impact on the population's economic condition, seems to have strengthened the seasonality of suicides, while a noteworthy suicide risk of 96% was revealed for suicides by hanging (peak in early June).
Forensic Medicine
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Greece*
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Humans
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Male
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Seasons*
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Suicide*