Publications by authors named "Are M Holm"

Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) is a human neurotropic virus which commonly causes infection during childhood, presenting as chickenpox. Later in life it may reactivate as herpes zoster. We report a rare manifestation of reactivation of VZV infection presenting as cutaneous vasculitis and varicella pneumonia in a lung transplant recipient.

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Xenotransplant covers a broad ethical territory and there are several ethical questions that have arisen in parallel with the technological advances that have allowed the first porcine transplants to occur. This brief communication highlights ethical considerations regarding heart and lung xenotransplantation, with an emphasis on unresolved value-based concerns in the field. The aim of this text is therefore to encourage the readers to consider the vast potential of this emerging technique to do good, but also the risk of doing harm, and to participate in a discussion.

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Purpose Of Review: The scarcity of organs available for lung transplantation makes it necessary to develop consistent practices for candidate selection and organ allocation. Such policies are mainly built on prognostic estimations, which are again built on medical evidence. In addition, however, other factors also guide these practices.

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Purpose: Antimicrobial misuse contributes to antimicrobial resistance in thoracic transplant (TTx) and mechanical circulatory support (MCS) recipients. This study uses a modified Delphi method to define the expected appropriate antimicrobial prescribing for the common clinical scenarios encountered in TTx and MCS recipients.

Methods: An online questionnaire on managing 10 common infectious disease syndromes was submitted to a multidisciplinary Delphi panel of 25 experts from various disciplines.

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Background: Since 2009, patients with a rapidly progressing lung disease have been given a higher priority on the waiting list for a lung transplant. The purpose of our study was to examine diagnosis distribution, waiting list times, mortality and survival for patients on the waiting list in the period 1999-2020.

Material And Method: We conducted a descriptive, retrospective study of patients on the waiting list for a lung transplant in the periods 1999-2008 and 2009-2020.

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Background: Health care services are being challenged by an increasing number of patients and limited resources. Hence, research investigating options to reduce costs and increase effectiveness is warranted. Digital outpatient services can provide flexible and tailored follow-up, improve patients' health literacy, and facilitate the identification of adverse courses of disease.

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Background: In pneumococcal community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), bacteremia is associated with increased mortality, but initial clinical severity scores frequently fail to identify bacteremic patients at risk. We have previously shown that gastrointestinal symptoms are common among patients admitted to the hospital with pneumococcal bacteremia. The aim of this study was to examine gastrointestinal symptoms and inflammatory responses in bacteremic and non-bacteremic pneumococcal CAP in a prospective cohort of immunocompromised and immunocompetent patients hospitalized with CAP.

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Purpose: This study aimed to examine reclassification rates among classes of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients based on their distinct symptom experiences and to assess how these subgroups differed in symptom scores and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) outcomes over one year. Moreover, we wished to assess how these subgroups differed in demographic and clinical characteristics at 12 months.

Patients And Methods: This is a follow-up study of 267 patients with moderate, severe, and very severe COPD.

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Article Synopsis
  • About 20-30% of patients with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) develop a lung disease called granulomatous-lymphocytic interstitial lung disease (GLILD), which complicates their condition.
  • The study aimed to identify specific serum biomarkers that can differentiate GLILD from other non-infectious complications in CVID.
  • Findings showed that GLILD patients had elevated markers indicating T cell activation, lung tissue damage, and extracellular matrix remodeling, suggesting important pathways for treatment and potential clinical biomarkers for patient evaluation.
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Controlled organ donation after circulatory determination of death is increasingly being used for the donation of organs also in thoracic transplantation. This document outlines the position of the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation on thoracic organ transplantation in circulatory determination of death. The document also includes a position regarding some of the methods applied to ensure the viability of Donation after Circulatory Death organs retrieved after certification of death.

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Tens of thousands of patients with advanced lung diseases may be eligible to be considered as potential candidates for lung transplant around the world each year. The timing of referral, evaluation, determination of candidacy, and listing of candidates continues to pose challenges and even ethical dilemmas. To address these challenges, the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation appointed an international group of members to review the literature, to consider recent advances in the management of advanced lung diseases, and to update prior consensus documents on the selection of lung transplant candidates.

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Study Question: In patients with sarcoidosis, past and ongoing immunosuppressive regimens, recurrent disease in the transplant and extrapulmonary involvement may affect outcomes of lung transplantation. We asked whether sarcoidosis lung phenotypes can be differentiated and, if so, how they relate to outcomes in patients with pulmonary sarcoidosis treated by lung transplantation.

Patients And Methods: We retrospectively reviewed data from 112 patients who met international diagnostic criteria for sarcoidosis and underwent lung or heart-lung transplantation between 2006 and 2019 at 16 European centres.

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Chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD) is a serious complication after lung transplantation (LuTx) and is associated with elevated proportions of neutrophils in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL). Induced sputum is a less-invasive sampling method than BAL and assesses markers of inflammation on the surfaces of large central airways. We wanted to examine whether % neutrophil levels in induced sputum were elevated prior to CLAD diagnosis among LuTx recipients, and whether sputum markers of inflammation can be used as a tool for predicting the development of CLAD.

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Background: While expected need for intensive care after lung transplantation (LTx) does not normally affect organ allocation, it would be useful to estimate whether intensive care capacity is limited. The aim of this study was to assess factors available before LTx to identify predictors of prolonged intensive care unit (ICU) length of stay (LOS) after LTx.

Methods: All bilateral LTx recipients excluding re-transplantation and multi-organ transplantation at Oslo University Hospital from 2000 to 2013 were included (n = 277).

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This longitudinal study of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) aimed to investigate changes in pain characteristics (i.e., occurrence, intensity, and interference) and covariates associated with pain from study enrollment to 12 months, and to investigate if the different pain characteristics were associated with 5-year mortality.

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Background: The study aimed to assess whether gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms at admission are associated with increased short-term mortality in patients with invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD).

Methods: We included all patients with IPD at Aker University Hospital in Oslo, Norway, from 1993 to 2008. Clinical data were registered.

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To understand the challenges for thoracic transplantation and mechanical circulatory support during the current coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, we propose separating the effects of the pandemic into 5 distinct stages from a healthcare system perspective. We discuss how the classical ethical principles of utility, justice, and efficiency may need to be adapted, and we give specific recommendations for thoracic transplantation and mechanical circulatory support centers to balance their clinical decisions and strategies for advanced heart and lung disease during the current pandemic.

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Introduction: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) may, in some patients, be characterized by recurring acute exacerbations. Often these exacerbations are associated with airway infections. As immunoglobulins (Ig) are important parts of the immune defence against airway infections, the aim of this study was to relate the levels of circulating immunoglobulins to clinical features in unselected patients with COPD included in a Norwegian multicenter study.

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The advent of therapies for successful treatment of hepatitis C virus has allowed the heart and lung transplant community to re-explore the use of hepatitis C virus-positive donors for organ transplantation, with a benefit for many terminally ill patients. The consensus statements provided herein represent the current state of knowledge and expertise in this area, which we expect will continue to rapidly evolve over the next few years.

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Since the first successful lung transplants in humans were done in the 1980s, lung transplantation has become an established treatment for end-stage pulmonary disease. Because the access to transplantable organs is limited and unpredictable, rules that guide the allocation of lungs for transplants have emerged. Such rules are governed not only by medical and bioethical necessities, but also by local traditions, legislation, and practical circumstances.

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Background: Pulmonary alveolar microlithiasis (PAM) is caused by genetic variants in the gene, which encodes the sodium-dependent phosphate transport protein 2B (NaPi-2b). PAM is characterised by deposition of calcium phosphate concretions (microliths) in the alveoli leading to pulmonary dysfunction. The variant spectrum of has not been well investigated and it is not yet known whether a genotype-phenotype correlation exists.

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