Publications by authors named "B Focarelli"

Recent studies suggest that the classical dichotomous classification of "active" and "latent" tuberculosis (TB) is no longer acceptable since "TB infection" encompasses a wide spectrum of conditions ranging from asymptomatic to lethal disease. In an attempt to address these issues from a pediatric clinical perspective, we describe two children with microbiologically confirmed TB but lacking any clinical and radiological evidence of disease. These two cases highlight the hypothesis that TB cannot be divided in two simple categories, but it covers a wide spectrum of manifestations ranging from asymptomatic to lethal TB.

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Children bear a substantial part of the tuberculosis (TB) epidemic worldwide, and it is estimated that there were ≅ 500.000 childhood TB cases globally in 2010, although accurate data are problematic to obtain given the many difficulties associated with TB diagnosis in children and the weaknesses of surveillance systems in countries where TB is endemic. The World Health Organization is working hard in order to reduce the TB prevalence rates and deaths by half by 2015.

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Study Design: Prospective study on local treatment of pressure sores using calcium alginate and foam dressings in spina bifida patients.

Objective: Investigate if this sequential approach is valid and safe for selected patients with neurological impairments.

Materials And Methods: Using European Pressure Ulcer Grading System, after clinical evaluation of local sore, selected patients of Spina Bifida Center of Rome were treated with sequential calcium alginate and foam dressings for 12 weeks.

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Acute inflammatory polyneuropathy is an inflammatory demyelinating disease triggered by an autoimmune mechanism. It follows an infection or an immunisation after a free interval of 2-30 days. We report a case of a 14-year-old boy who develops an acute rapidly progressive paraplegia, urine incontinence and positive Lasegue a week after a characteristic chickenpox rash.

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Parietal chest wall tuberculosis is an extremely rare manifestation of tuberculosis (TB) in children. We present the case of a 15 month-old girl presenting with a chest wall lesion initially thought to be of neoplastic origin and eventually diagnosed as chest wall TB, which was treated with surgical debridement and specific antitubercular therapy. The girl had not-measurable 25-hidroxy-vitamin D levels, an increasingly recognized risk factor for the development of active TB.

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