Free Open-Access Medical Education (FOAMed) has transformed medical education in the past decade by complementing and substituting for traditional medical education when needed. The attractiveness of FOAMed resources is due to their inexpensive nature, wide availability, and user ability to access on demand across a variety of devices, making it easy to create, share, and participate. The subject of nephrology is complex, fascinating, and challenging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe prevalence of hypertension (HTN) among youngsters has increased recently. Often, it is underrecognized owing to a lack of routine blood pressure measurement in many health centers, partly due to the unavailability of instruments and possibly because of this perception that it is not the foremost problem in children. There is less information about the parental perception of childhood HTN from Bangladesh.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMucormycosis is a fulminant angioinvasive fungal infection that occurs in an immunocompromised condition, most commonly in diabetic patients. Rhino-cerebral and pulmonary infections are common but may also lead to disseminated disease associated with a high mortality rate (almost 100%). Here we report on an elderly diabetic lady presented with a headache and altered level of consciousness and peri-orbital swelling following coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: A lack of consensus exists as to the timing of kidney biopsy in children with steroid-dependent nephrotic syndrome (SDNS) where minimal change disease (MCD) predominates. This study aimed at examining the applicability of a biomarker-assisted risk score model to select SDNS patients at high risk of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) for biopsy.
Methods: Fifty-five patients with SDNS and biopsy-proven MCD (n = 40) or FSGS (n = 15) were studied.
Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) is a rare clinical and radiological phenomenon is encountered in children compared to adults. In our center, a 5-yearold boy with steroid-dependent nephrotic syndrome (SDNS) presented with headache and blurring of vision during relapse after a long course of immunosuppressive therapy. Evaluation by computed tomography scan of the brain showed that the child had hypodense areas throughout the occipital region of the brain.
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