Publications by authors named "Ebor Jacob"

Objective: Acute encephalitis syndrome (AES) in children results in significant neurocognitive deficits or mortality. It is pertinent to study the AES patterns periodically to identify the changes in the etiological trends and outcomes. Our objective was to find the etiological agents of AES, mode of diagnosis, treatment given, and outcomes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (iDILI) causing acute liver failure (ALF) carries high short-term mortality and patients who meet King's College criteria for liver transplantation have 1-month survival of 34% without liver transplantation (PMID: 20949552). We present our experience with low-volume plasma exchange (PLEX-LV, 50% of estimated plasma volume exchanged per session) and low-dose steroid to treat iDILI ALF.

Methods: We retrospectively analysed data of patients with iDILI (diagnosed as per RUCAM score), treated with PLEX-LV and low-dose steroid (prednisolone: 10 mg OD, with rapid taper) in our department from 2016 to 2022.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: In a prior report, no patient with rodenticidal hepatotoxicity who met Kochi criteria (MELD score ≥36 or baseline INR ≥6 with hepatic encephalopathy) (PMID: 26310868) for urgent liver transplantation survived with medical management alone. Plasma exchange (PLEX) may improve survival in these patients.

Objectives: We describe our experience with low-volume PLEX (PLEX-LV) in treating rodenticide ingestion induced hepatotoxicity in children.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Antimicrobial-resistant HAI (Healthcare associated infection) are a global challenge due to their impact on patient outcome. Implementation of antimicrobial stewardship programmes (AMSP) is needed at institutional and national levels. Assessment of core capacities for AMSP is an important starting point to initiate nationwide AMSP.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Data on the prehospital interventions received by critically ill children at arrival to Paediatric Emergency Services (PES) is limited in developing countries. This study aims to describe the pre-hospital care scenario, transport and their impact on outcome in non-traumatic, acutely ill children presenting in PES with agonal breathing.

Methods: Prospective observational study done on children aged below 15 years arriving in PES with agonal breathing due to non-trauma related causes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF