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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Soft Rock – When Blasting It Doesn’T Work, Mark Schneider, Jesse Powell
Soft Rock – When Blasting It Doesn’T Work, Mark Schneider, Jesse Powell
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
Soft Rock – When Blasting It Doesn’t Work
Mark Schneider, MD
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Jesse Powell, MD
Case-History of Present Illness: 68-year-old female presents with several days of malodorous urine and fevers. Brought to the ED by her daughter who diagnosed urinary tract infection (UTI) due to the distinct urine odor. No hematuria, dysuria, retention, or incontinence.
Past Medical History: Recent hospitalization for UTI with culture that grew P.mirabilis, completed course of cefdinir, with follow-up culture ordered by PCP that grew extended-spectrum beta lactamase (ESBL) E.coli.
Physical Exam and Vital Signs: Vitals: 115/48, 101, …
Wrap It Up – Sexually Transmitted Primary Cytologmegalovirus Proctitis In Immunocompetent Host: A Case Report, Vanessa Nwaokocha, Brinton Clark, Ronald Dworkin
Wrap It Up – Sexually Transmitted Primary Cytologmegalovirus Proctitis In Immunocompetent Host: A Case Report, Vanessa Nwaokocha, Brinton Clark, Ronald Dworkin
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
Background: In persons who presents with fever, rectal pain and bleeding, CMV proctitis should be considered if other workup is negative, especially if recent unprotected anal receptive intercourse.
Case Presentation: A 26-year-old bisexual man presented with chief complaints of fever, malaise, rectal pain, and rectal bleeding after anal insertion of foreign body. He initially denied any unprotected sexual intercourse. CBC, CMP, stool pathogen, rectal gonorrhea, and rectal chlamydia were unremarkable. He returned after 1 week with the similar complaints, however admitted to unprotected anal receptive intercourse a month prior. His vitals were notable for temperature of 102 with …
Beck’S Tetrad? Adding Pocus To The Clinical Exam For Pericardial Tamponade Improves Diagnostic Accuracy In Obstructive Shock, Cody Wiench, Benjamin Pedroja
Beck’S Tetrad? Adding Pocus To The Clinical Exam For Pericardial Tamponade Improves Diagnostic Accuracy In Obstructive Shock, Cody Wiench, Benjamin Pedroja
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
Beck’s Tetrad?
Adding POCUS To The Clinical Exam For Pericardial Tamponade Improves Diagnostic Accuracy In Obstructive Shock
Cody Wiench, MD
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Benjamin Pedroja, MD
Introduction: Obstructive shock due to tamponade is an important, but rare, cause for sudden cardiovascular collapse. Accurate treatment requires prompt (and correct) diagnosis. Bedside echocardiogram can provide rapid and accurate diagnosis, however the physical exam can provide important clues to consider tamponade. In patients with conditions that predispose them to pericardial disease, such as SLE, one must have a high index of suspicion for tamponade when …
Comparative Detection Of Airway Mrsa In Patients With Community-Acquired Pneumonia (Cap), Hiromichi Park, Shirin Ferdosian Najafabadi, Lian Wang, David Gilbert
Comparative Detection Of Airway Mrsa In Patients With Community-Acquired Pneumonia (Cap), Hiromichi Park, Shirin Ferdosian Najafabadi, Lian Wang, David Gilbert
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
Comparative Detection Of Airway MRSA In Patients With Community-Acquired Pneumonia (CAP)
Hiromichi Park, DO
Providence Portland Medical Center
Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Shirin Ferdosian Najafabadi; Lian Wang, PhD; David Gilbert, MD, MACP
Introduction: Vancomycin is often included in the empiric therapy of CAP to ensure activity against MRSA. The current gold standard for detection of MRSA in the airway is a nasal swab PCR. The FilmArray sputum pneumonia panel includes PCR probes for MRSA. This study compares the detection performance of the nasal swab versus the sputum PCR detection of MRSA. Clinically, the absence of airway-detectable MRSA allows cessation …
The Dangers Of Gardening – Nocardia Infection In An Immunocompromised Patient, Gerald Hutfles, Justin Jin
The Dangers Of Gardening – Nocardia Infection In An Immunocompromised Patient, Gerald Hutfles, Justin Jin
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
The Dangers Of Gardening –
Nocardia Infection In An Immunocompromised Patient
Gerald Hutfles, DO
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Justin Jin, MD
Introduction: Nocardia is a gram-positive, partially-acid fast, aerobic, branching bacillus that can be found in soil and water. It is typically an opportunistic pathogen, with most infections occurring in the immunocompromised. Disease can be localized or disseminated, preferring pulmonary, nervous, and cutaneous tissues. Optimal antimicrobial therapy depends on speciation of the isolate, as Nocardia may exhibit variable antimicrobial susceptibility. A high clinical suspicion and appropriate empiric antimicrobial therapy is necessary. This clinical case …
Drugging Chemokine Receptors: Biased Cxcr3 Agonists Differentially Regulate Chemotaxis And Inflammation, Jeffrey Smith, Dylan Eiger, Chia-Feng Tsai, Lowell Nicholson, Rachel Glenn, Priya Alagesan, Amanda Macleod, John Jacobs, Tujin Shi, Sudarshan Rajagopal
Drugging Chemokine Receptors: Biased Cxcr3 Agonists Differentially Regulate Chemotaxis And Inflammation, Jeffrey Smith, Dylan Eiger, Chia-Feng Tsai, Lowell Nicholson, Rachel Glenn, Priya Alagesan, Amanda Macleod, John Jacobs, Tujin Shi, Sudarshan Rajagopal
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
Drugging Chemokine Receptors: Biased CXCR3 Agonists Differentially Regulate Chemotaxis And Inflammation
Jeffrey Smith, MD, PhD
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Dylan Eiger, BS; Chia-Feng Tsai, PhD; Lowell Nicholson,MD; Rachel Glenn, BS; Priya Alagesan, BS; Amanda MacLeod, MD; John Jacobs, PhD; Tujin Shi, PhD; Sudarshan Rajagopal, MD,PhD
Introduction: G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the largest class of transmembrane receptors and the target of ~30% of FDA approved drugs. It is now well established that GPCRs can signal through multiple transducers, including classical heterotrimeric G proteins but also GPCR kinases and β-arrestins (1). While these signaling pathways can …
Mixed Signals: A Case Of Hypothyroid-Induced Ogilvie’S, Brieanna Brown, Paul Wichienkeur
Mixed Signals: A Case Of Hypothyroid-Induced Ogilvie’S, Brieanna Brown, Paul Wichienkeur
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
Mixed Signals:
A Case Of Hypothyroid-Induced Ogilvie’s
Brieanna Brown, MD
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Author: Paul Wichienkeur, MD
Ogilve's syndrome, or acute colonic pseudo-obstruction (ACPO), is characterized by acute dilation of the colon, in the absence of a mechanical lesion, which obstructs the flow of intestinal contents. Pseudo-obstruction typically occurs in the critically ill, though the underlying pathophysiology is poorly understood and the etiology is often multifactorial. We present a case of a 51-year-old morbidly obese woman presenting with symptoms of severe hypothyroidism found to have massive acute colonic pseudo-obstruction.
Case presentation:
A 51-year-old African-American …
When Less-Virulent Becomes Virulent!! An Atypical Presentation Of Streptococcus Viridians., Samreen Khan, Stavan Patel, Mary Anne Nidiry
When Less-Virulent Becomes Virulent!! An Atypical Presentation Of Streptococcus Viridians., Samreen Khan, Stavan Patel, Mary Anne Nidiry
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
When Less Virulent Becomes Virulent!!
An Atypical Presentation Of Streptococcus Viridians
Samreen Kahn, MBBS
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Stavan Patel MS, MD
Introduction: There are several cardiac and non-cardiac causes and risk factors for the development of infective endocarditis (IE) in young healthy adults. Some risk factors include prior IE, history of valvular or congenital heart disease, IV drug use, indwelling intravenous lines, immunosuppression, or a recent dental or surgical procedure. Most two common sites of IE are mitral and aortic valve. We present a case of a 45-year-old man with no-known risk factors, …
A Rare Case Of Metastatic Insulinoma In A Patient With Huntington’S Disease, Olesya Petrenko, Brinton C. Clark
A Rare Case Of Metastatic Insulinoma In A Patient With Huntington’S Disease, Olesya Petrenko, Brinton C. Clark
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
A Rare Case Of Metastatic Insulinoma
In A Patient With Huntington’s Disease
Olesya Petrenko, DO
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Brinton Clark, MD, FACP
A 49-year-old female with past medical history of Huntington’s disease presents to the ED after being found unresponsive at her assisted-living facility. She was noted to be hypoglycemic with a glucose of 21 and responded to dextrose. For the past several months, patient had symptoms of dizziness, tremors. She has no history of diabetes, and only home medication is Zyprexa. Patient required D10 drip to maintain glucose levels. Given patient’s psychiatric history, …
Chronic Hepatitis B Reactivation: Deadly, But Preventable, Sarah Xie, Jesse Powell, Andrea Roast
Chronic Hepatitis B Reactivation: Deadly, But Preventable, Sarah Xie, Jesse Powell, Andrea Roast
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
Chronic Hepatitis B Reactivation:
Deadly, But Preventable
Sarah Xie, DO
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Andrea Roast, MD, FACP; Jesse Powell, MD
A 51-year-old Vietnamese male with chronic hepatitis B presents with symptoms of acute hepatitis. 2 months prior, his PCP had discontinued Tenofovir, for which he had been taking for the past decade, based on an undetectable viral load and a negative HBeAg. 1 month later, his viral load soared to 796 million so Tenofovir was restarted. On admission a few days later, the patient had scleral icterus and jaundiced skin. He had severe transaminitis, …
A Case Of Atypical Pml, Alexander Dreisin, Justin Jin
A Case Of Atypical Pml, Alexander Dreisin, Justin Jin
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
No abstract provided.
Vocal Cord Dysfunction Masquerading As Exercise-Induced Bronchoconstriction, Brandon Tempte, Meera Jain, Jason Wells
Vocal Cord Dysfunction Masquerading As Exercise-Induced Bronchoconstriction, Brandon Tempte, Meera Jain, Jason Wells
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
Vocal Cord Dysfunction Masquerading As
Exercise-Induced Bronchoconstriction
Brandon Temte, DO
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Meera Jain, MD, FACP; Jason Wells, MD
Intro: Exercise-induced bronchoconstriction (EIB), previously exercise-induced asthma, has a high prevalence in the community. Patients with these symptoms are typically diagnosed clinically and treated empirically with pre-exercise albuterol. Eucapnic voluntary hyperventilation (EVH) has been used to objectively test for EIB and can help to confirm the diagnosis, as well as rule out other causes such as exercise-induced vocal cord dysfunction (EIVCD), which may mimic EIB.
Case Description: A 42-year old female with …
A Case Of Gluten-Induced Delirium: Using Capsule Endoscopy To Diagnose Occult Gi Bleeding, Rachael Starcher, Lisa Sanders
A Case Of Gluten-Induced Delirium: Using Capsule Endoscopy To Diagnose Occult Gi Bleeding, Rachael Starcher, Lisa Sanders
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
A Case Of Gluten-Induced Delirium:
Using Capsule Endoscopy To Diagnose Occult GI Bleeding
Rachael Starcher, MD
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Lisa Sanders, MD
Introduction: Despite an increasing prevalence of celiac disease worldwide, many patients remain undiagnosed, putting them at risk for late stage complications of unidentified and untreated celiac disease. Ulcerative jejunoileitis is a rare cause of occult GI bleeding seen only in refractory celiac disease or in atypical celiac disease at the time of diagnosis. When left untreated, ulcerative jejunoileitis can lead to bowel perforation, blood loss anemia, and T-cell lymphoma.
Case Presentation …
Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia In Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia, Kelley Newton, Janan Markee
Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia In Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia, Kelley Newton, Janan Markee
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia In Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
Kelley Newton, MD
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Janan Markee, MD
Patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia have a 5-10% risk of developing autoimmune complications, the most common of which is autoimmune hemolytic anemia. Here we present a case of AIHA in a patient with suspected CLL that underscores several of the diagnostic and treatment challenges unique to this process. A 79-year old man with a history of hypertension, atrial fibrillation, type 2 diabetes and hypothyroidism was undergoing workup for suspected CLL due to a persistent leukocytosis. He then presented …
A Perplexing Case Of Episodic Abdominal Pain And The Role Of Mast Cells Gastroenteritis, Hayden Smith, Mari Kai
A Perplexing Case Of Episodic Abdominal Pain And The Role Of Mast Cells Gastroenteritis, Hayden Smith, Mari Kai
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
Here we present a case of chronic intractable vomiting and diarrhea of unknown cause, and introduce the relatively new entity of mast cell gastroenteritis.
Our patient is a 38-year old female with PMH of seronegative rheumatoid arthritis, mixed connective tissue disorder, and several recent hospitalizations over the past 4 months at outside hospitals for suspected colitis with associated vomiting and diarrhea. Current symptoms include 4 days of nausea with intractable vomiting, and 2 days of rectal fullness with mucoid rectal discharge. Previous workup at outside hospitals included multiple abdominal CT scans, flexible sigmoidoscopy, colonoscopy, and exploratory laparotomy. Prior to admission …
Be Careful What You Screen For: An Incidental Finding Of Tracheobronchial Amyloidosis, Emma White, Tricia James, Vikram Sahni, Jesse Powell
Be Careful What You Screen For: An Incidental Finding Of Tracheobronchial Amyloidosis, Emma White, Tricia James, Vikram Sahni, Jesse Powell
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
Introduction: The 2011 National Lung Screening Trial (NLST) demonstrated a reduction in morbidity and mortality with LDCT compared to CXR. In 2013 the USPSTF began recommending CT scan for lung cancer screening in appropriate patients but, the 2015 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) demonstrated that less than 5% of eligible patients received screening. The NLST also demonstrated a high rate of false positives, incidental findings, and the need for further invasive testing. When deciding to screen, patients and providers are tasked with reconciling these risks and benefits. In this case, we explore one patient’s incidental findings, and the work-up …
Hiv-Associated Burkitt Lymphoma: More Than A Starry Sky Appearance, Rahwa Ghebremichael, Amy Dechet
Hiv-Associated Burkitt Lymphoma: More Than A Starry Sky Appearance, Rahwa Ghebremichael, Amy Dechet
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
Introduction: •People with HIV infection are at least 50 times more likely to get lymphoma as compared to the general population. •25-40% of these lymphomas will be Burkitt Lymphoma (BL) – an aggressive B cell malignancy with a high proliferative rate and potentially fatal within months if not diagnosed and treated in a timely manner. •This translates to a 10-20% individual life-time risk of BL for an HIV infected person. •The incidence of BL declined after the introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), but to a lesser extent than other HIV-associated malignancies. •Epidemiologic studies suggest the incidence of BL …
A Case Of Spontaneous Intercostal Artery Hemorrhage, Chang Min Lee, Veronica Schims, Craig Riley
A Case Of Spontaneous Intercostal Artery Hemorrhage, Chang Min Lee, Veronica Schims, Craig Riley
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
A Case Of Spontaneous Intercostal Artery Hemorrhage
Chang Lee, MD
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Veronica Schims, MD; Craig Riley, MD
Introduction: Spontaneous intercostal arterial bleeding is rare and usually related to trauma. We describe a patient with a history of cirrhosis and coagulopathy admitted with sepsis who spontaneously developed an expanding extrathoracic hematoma and subsequent hypovolemic shock requiring arterial embolization.
Case Presentation: 50-year-old male with a past medical history of alcoholic liver disease, esophageal varices, chronic coagulopathy, type 2 diabetes and hypertension on lisinopril was admitted to hospital with decreased urine output, dizziness, …
A Case Of Multifactorial Orthostatic Hypotension Complicated By Chemotherapy Associated Autonomic Toxicity, Christopher Bender, Amy Dechet
A Case Of Multifactorial Orthostatic Hypotension Complicated By Chemotherapy Associated Autonomic Toxicity, Christopher Bender, Amy Dechet
Providence Portland Medical Center Internal Medicine 2020
A Case Of Multifactorial Orthostatic Hypotension Complicated By Chemotherapy Associated Autonomic Toxicity
Christopher Bender, MD
Providence Portland Medical Center – Portland, OR
Additional Authors: Amy Dechet, MD
Introduction: Autonomic neuropathy is known to occur as a side effect of some chemotherapy drugs, including cisplatin. This reports presents a patient with new onset of autonomic instability and orthostatic hypotension after receiving multiple rounds of cisplatin and gemcitabine chemotherapy.
Case Presentation: An 81-year-old man with history of stage III lung cancer presented after a fall at home that occurred while getting out of bed in the middle of the night …