8 結果
We experienced anesthetic management of two patients with hypergammaglobulinemia undergoing thoracoscopic lung biopsy, one of whom suffered from multiple cerebral infarction during anesthesia. Pathogenesis of this serious complication could not be elucidated. However, decrease in cerebral regional
Host-versus-graft (HVG) disease is the fatal result of the allogenic reaction which occurs in parental strain mice perinatally inoculated with F(1) hybrid spleen cells. The principal manifestations of the syndrome in RFM/(T(6) X RFM)F(1) mice are thrombocytopenia, intestinal hemorrhage, hepatic
The skin is one of the organs most frequently involved in vasculitides. Cutaneous vasculitis may present (1) part of a systemic vasculitis (e.g., IgA vasculitis), (2) a skin-restricted or skin-dominant variant of the corresponding systemic vasculitis without clinically apparent visceral involvement
We present the case of a 67-years-old patient which, after treatment with ciprofloxacin, developed fever, exanthema, arthralgias, polyadenopathies, hepatosplenomegaly, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, hypergammaglobulinemia and severe inversion of the CD4/CD8 ratio. Latter, he developed ischemic signs
A 77-year-old man, with a lengthy medical history of chronic dysuria, constipation, hypertension, myocardial infarction, and a submandibular lymphadenopathy that was excised 3 years ago, was hospitalized due to elevated liver enzyme levels. He demonstrated hypergammaglobulinemia, hyperproteinemia,
Blood viscosity is increased by elevated concentrations of acute phase reactants and hypergammaglobulinemia in inflammation. These increase blood viscosity by increasing plasma viscosity and fostering erythrocyte aggregation. Blood viscosity is also increased by decreased erythrocyte deformability,
METHODS
A 68 year old male with no relevant clinical history was admitted to hospital because of symptoms of cognitive impairment (attentional deficit, short term memory disorders and behavioural disorders), accompanied by apraxia of gait and rectal and urinary incontinence. Results of a general
We report a case of optic nerve involvement by multiple myeloma in which progressive visual loss heralded leukemic transformation and intracranial involvement. Imaging showed enhancing nodules in the intracranial segments of both optic nerves posterior to the optic canals and in the anterior optic