The etiology of chylous ascites is multifactorial. Malignant diseases, cirrhosis, trauma, lymphomatic abnormalities and mycobacteriosis are the most common causes. In NSCLC, chylous ascites is observed with peritoneal metastasis or abdominal lymph node metastases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetapopulation models have been a popular tool for the study of epidemic spread over a network of highly populated nodes (cities, provinces, countries) and have been extensively used in the context of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. In the present work, we revisit such a model, bearing a particular case example in mind, namely that of the region of Andalusia in Spain during the period of the summer-fall of 2020 (i.e.
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December 2022
It is widely accepted that the number of reported cases during the first stages of the COVID-19 pandemic severely underestimates the number of actual cases. We leverage delay embedding theorems of Whitney and Takens and use Gaussian process regression to estimate the number of cases during the first 2020 wave based on the second wave of the epidemic in several European countries, South Korea and Brazil. We assume that the second wave was more accurately monitored, even though we acknowledge that behavioural changes occurred during the pandemic and region- (or country-) specific monitoring protocols evolved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe etiology of hyperventilation is multifactorial. When excluding somatic causes, neurogenic hyperventilation must always be considered. Since hyperventilation itself causes neuromuscular symptoms such as paresthesia, vertigo, cephalgia, and nausea, the differential diagnosis of viral meningitis in the presence of hyperventilation is not always obvious and can easily be overlooked.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 1864, the worldwide oldest journal in an area of the later established specialty of otorhinolaryngology was founded as the German Archiv für Ohrenheilkunde ("Archive of Otology") by its first editors Anton von Tröltsch (Würzburg), Adam Politzer (Vienna), and Hermann Schwartze (Halle/S.). Ear, nose, and throat (ENT) topics had previously been published in universal medical journals.
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