Background: In venous leg ulcers (VLU), risk factors and comorbidities may affect prognosis and recurrence. Aim of this paper was to assess risk factors and most frequent medical conditions in venous ulcers.
Methods: This a single center retrospective study from January 2017 to December 2020 on 172 patients with VLU admitted at our Center for Ulcer therapy in San Filippo Neri Hospital in Rome; data about medical history, Duplex scanning results and lifestyle questionnaire were collected in an Excel database and evaluated with Fisher test.
Venous ulcers (VUs) of lower limbs affect 1% of Western population. In most cases, ultrasounds show only superficial venous insufficiency (SVI), but a deep venous insufficiency (DVI) may also be present without a history of deep vein thrombosis (DVT). To assess SVI and DVI in DVT-positive and DVT-negative patients with VU, a retrospective cohort of 123 patients entered the study (50 male and 73 female, minimum age 29 years and maximum age 90 years, and mean 70.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Gastrointestinal metastases from pulmonary neoplasm represent a rare but potentially fatal pathology that can complicate the disease in most advanced stages; this is a rare but well-known phenomenon in Literature and small intestine is the most common metastatic site. Generally these are patients with a known or surgically treated pulmonary neoplasm; the onset of pulmonary neoplastic disease with a symptomatic intestinal metastasis is to be considered extremely rare.
Presentation Of Cases: We report two cases of small intestine perforation from pulmonary metastasis; diagnosis was made at the time of exploratory laparotomy and the operation was in one patient the resection of the perforated bowel and in the second a resection and an intestinal bypass to overcome the stenosis caused by the metastatic masses.
Unlabelled: There is no consensus in the medical literature about the impact of depressive symptoms on the evolution of Alzheimer's disease (AD).
Objective: To compare the evolution of AD patients, with and without depressive symptoms, in terms of cognition, functionality and caregiver stress.
Methods: The study entailed 2 stages: an initial retrospective stage involving review of medical charts of patients with mild and moderate AD.