Introduction: Among the persistent conditions affecting patients in the post-acute COVID-19 period, sarcopenia is increasingly emphasized. In this study, we aimed to determine the incidence of sarcopenia and to reveal the risk factors predicting it in hospitalized survivors of COVID-19.
Methodology: This is a retrospective cohort study conducted between December 2021 and May 2022 in the post-COVID follow-up center of a tertiary hospital in Turkey.
We present a case of a 70-year-old male who was brought to the hospital with altered mental status and was found to have 2 serious complications of cocaine use which are Cerebellar Hippocampal and Basal Nuclei Transient Edema with Restricted diffusion (CHANTER) syndrome and mesenteric ischemia. CHANTER syndrome is a recently described constellation of radiologic and clinical findings and has a strong association with opiates, and/or other drugs of abuse, including cocaine. Even though CHANTER has many similarities with other ischemic, anoxic, and/or toxic injuries related to substance abuse such as clinical presentation and restricted diffusion on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); the typical distribution of affected regions in the brain is helpful in differentiating from other injuries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMale breast lesions are relatively less common. The most encountered malignant lesion in the male breast is ductal adenocarcinoma; and benign lesions are gynecomastia, fibrocystic disease, intramammary lymph node, fibroadenoma, lipoma and epidermal inclusion cyst (EIC), respectively [5,6]. To date, there had been published only a few cases of EIC of the male breast in literature [3,5,6].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPararectal splenosis is an extremely rare lesion caused by ectopic auto-transplantation of splenic tissue after splenic trauma or splenectomy. It is often asymptomatic and detected incidentally during radiologic evaluation. We present a 24-year-old male with pararectal splenosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF