Publications by authors named "Amit Kj Mandal"

Polypharmacotherapy is an ever-increasing issue with an ageing patient population. Anticholinergic medications make up a large proportion of patient medication but cause significant side effects, contributing to well-documented issues within the older population and in hospital medicine. This review explores the documented impact of anticholinergic burden in older surgical patients on postoperative delirium, infection, length of stay and readmission, urinary retention, ileus and mortality.

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Background: The variability of Covid-19 severity between patients has driven efforts to identify prognosticating laboratory markers that could aid clinical decision-making. Procalcitonin is classically used as a diagnostic marker in bacterial infections, but its role in predicting Covid-19 disease severity is emerging. We aimed to identify the association between procalcitonin and Covid-19 disease severity in a critical care setting and whether bacterial co-infection is implicated.

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Haemolysis is a rare but serious complication of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection, described mostly in immunocompromised patients, the pathogenesis of which is yet to be fully elucidated. We describe a case of Coombs-positive haemolytic anaemia in an older Caucasian immunocompetent woman after polytrauma, resulting from suspected reactivation of CMV infection and secondary cold agglutinin disease. Clinicians should consider CMV infection in the differential diagnosis of haemolytic anaemia in immunocompetent older adults who are admitted with significant musculoskeletal trauma.

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Spontaneous intracranial hypotension is uncommon and results from a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak. We describe the case of a marathon runner who presented with postural headache attributable to CSF venous fistulation originating from a lower thoracic nerve root cyst. Subsequent investigations confirmed a unifying diagnosis of human leukocyte antigen B27-associated syndrome.

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is the most frequently implicated microbial agent in community acquired bacterial pneumonia and meningitis. It is also responsible for between 1 and 3% of cases of native valve infective endocarditis, with mortality rates up to 60%. Osler first described the association between pneumococcal pneumonia, endocarditis, and meningitis secondary to bacteria that he described as 'micrococci', subsequently elucidated to be by Robert Austrian, and the syndrome bears his name.

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In patients with progressive bulbar palsy without an obvious cause, there should be a high index of suspicion for the potential diagnosis of Neuro-Behçet's Disease, even in the absence of the acute classical peripheral manifestations of Bechet's Disease, with emphasis in prompt diagnosis using 'The International Criteria for Behçet's Disease' and rapid, effective treatment in order to improve outcome.

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