Publications by authors named "Omar Siddiqi"

Background: Tuberculous meningitis (TBM) mortality is high and current diagnostics perform suboptimally. We evaluated the diagnostic performance of a DNA-based assay (GeneXpert Ultra) against a new same-day immunodiagnostic assay that detects unstimulated interferon-gamma (IRISA-TB).

Methods: In a stage 1 evaluation, IRISA-TB was evaluated in biobanked samples from Zambia (n = 82; tuberculosis [TB] and non-TBM), and specificity in a South African biobank (n = 291; non-TBM only).

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Background: Propofol is often used for sedation during colonoscopy. We assessed the impact of propofol sedation on colonoscopy related quality metrics and cost in a population-based cohort study.

Methods: All colonoscopies performed at 21 hospitals in the province of Ontario, Canada, during an 18-month period, from April 1, 2017 to October 31, 2018, using either propofol or conscious sedation were evaluated.

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Objective: To determine the long-term outcomes, including mortality and recurrent seizures, among children living with HIV (CLWH) who present with new onset seizure.

Methods: Zambian CLWH and new onset seizure were enrolled prospectively to determine the risk of and risk factors for recurrent seizures. Demographic data, clinical profiles, index seizure etiology, and 30-day mortality outcomes were previously reported.

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Background: Seizures are relatively common among children with HIV in low- and middle-income countries and are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Early treatment with antiretroviral therapy (ART) may reduce this risk by decreasing rates of central nervous system infections and HIV encephalopathy.

Methods: We conducted a prospective, unmatched case-control study.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examined the presence of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 470 adults living with HIV in Zambia who showed neurological symptoms, finding that 28.9% tested positive for EBV DNA.
  • Key associations with EBV positivity included younger age, shorter HIV duration, and specific CSF findings like low glucose and high protein and white blood cell levels.
  • Despite the high EBV detection rate, the study concluded that EBV DNA load in CSF and blood had limited clinical significance and was not linked to patient mortality.
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Unlabelled: Cardiac amyloidosis is a restrictive cardiomyopathy for which diuretics are frequently used, but vasodilators have classically been relatively contraindicated due to side effects of hypotension. In the setting of decompensated heart failure, this may not be the case. We report a man with advanced cardiac amyloidosis who presented to the hospital with decompensated heart failure, in part, due to elevated systemic vascular resistance.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Key factors linked to shorter survival include a delay of over 6 months from symptom onset to diagnosis, high bone marrow plasmacytosis, elevated troponin levels, and advanced heart failure classifications.
  • * Early responses to treatment—both hematologic and cardiac—are crucial for improving survival rates, with significant boosts in overall survival observed for patients achieving these responses within specific timeframes.
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MAS825, a bispecific IL-1β/IL-18 monoclonal antibody, could improve clinical outcomes in COVID-19 pneumonia by reducing inflammasome-mediated inflammation. Hospitalized non-ventilated patients with COVID-19 pneumonia (n = 138) were randomized (1:1) to receive MAS825 (10 mg/kg single i.v.

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Background And Objectives: Use a modified Delphi approach to develop competencies for neurologists completing ≥1 year of advanced global neurology training.

Methods: An expert panel of 19 United States-based neurologists involved in global health was recruited from the American Academy of Neurology Global Health Section and the American Neurological Association International Outreach Committee. An extensive list of global health competencies was generated from review of global health curricula and adapted for global neurology training.

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Lumbar puncture (LP) and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) diagnostics are critical for evaluating central nervous system infections but are often not conducted, resulting in the "Tap Gap." To investigate patient, provider, and health systems factors contributing to the Tap Gap in Zambia, we conducted focus group discussions with adult caregivers of hospitalized inpatients and in-depth interviews with nurses, clinicians, pharmacy workers, and laboratory staff. Transcripts were independently thematically categorized by two investigators using inductive coding.

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Simply detecting Epstein-Barr virus deoxyribonucleic acid (EBV-DNA) is insufficient to diagnose EBV-associated diseases. The current literature around EBV-DNA detection from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive non-lymphoma patients was systematically reviewed and a meta-analysis reporting the estimated pooled prevalence in this population when PCR methods are employed, targeting different sequence segments within the EBV genome, was conducted. Using a combination of three key concepts-Epstein-Barr virus detection, central nervous system disease, and human cerebrospinal fluid-and their MeSH terms, the PubMed database was searched.

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Background: Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) is associated with renal dysfunction, inflammation, and increased cardiovascular mortality, but the cardiovascular risks are not fully understood.

Objectives: The authors explored the association of MGUS with a spectrum of cardiovascular diseases using the Danish nationwide databases.

Methods: Between 1995 and 2018, patients 18 years and older with MGUS were age- and sex-matched (1:10) with control patients and followed prospectively until December 31, 2018, for the occurrence of cardiovascular diseases.

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Background: Few studies exist to describe the characteristics of symptomatic syphilitic meningitis, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, despite a global resurgence.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of a cohort of adults with meningitis presenting to Zambia's largest referral hospital between April 2014 and December 2017. Individuals with pyogenic bacterial and cryptococcal meningitis were excluded from this cohort.

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Importance: Trainees routinely participate in colonoscopy procedures, yet whether their involvement is positively or negatively associated with procedural quality is unknown because prior studies involved small number of trainees and/or supervisors, lacked generalizability, and/or failed to adjust for potential confounders.

Objective: To assess the association between trainee participation and colonoscopy quality metrics.

Design, Setting, And Participants: This multicenter population-based cohort study was conducted at 21 academic and community hospitals between April 1, 2017, and October 31, 2018, among consecutive adult patients undergoing colonoscopy.

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  • A study analyzed 378 patients suspected of having transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM) who were referred for noninvasive technetium-99m pyrophosphate (PYP) imaging, focusing on the prevalence of light chain abnormalities.
  • Out of these, 26% showed abnormal plasma cell dyscrasia (PCD) markers, and after excluding other conditions, 82 patients were assessed, with 76% having positive PYP scans.
  • The findings indicated that 69% of confirmed ATTR-CM cases exhibited a free light chain (FLC) ratio between 1.65 and 3.1, suggesting that ATTR-CM may be diagnosed without needing a cardiac biopsy when
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Encephalopathy, a common condition among patients hospitalized with COVID-19, can be a challenge to manage and negatively affect prognosis. While encephalopathy may present clinically as delirium, subsyndromal delirium, or coma and may be a result of systemic causes such as hypoxia, COVID-19 has also been associated with more prolonged encephalopathy due to less common but nevertheless severe complications, such as inflammation of the brain parenchyma (with or without cerebrovascular involvement), demyelination, or seizures, which may be disproportionate to COVID-19 severity and require specific management. Given the large number of patients hospitalized with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 infection, even these relatively unlikely complications are increasingly recognized and are particularly important because they require specific management.

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  • High-dose melphalan and stem cell transplantation (HDM/SCT) shows long-term effectiveness in treating AL amyloidosis, with 39% of patients achieving complete hematologic response (CR).
  • The median CR duration is 12.3 years, while overall survival (OS) for patients with CR is impressive, reaching up to 15 years for some.
  • Factors such as elevated dFLC levels and plasma cell percentages are linked to shorter event-free survival (EFS), allowing the development of a risk score to better predict outcomes.
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  • β2-microglobulin amyloidosis is a protein deposition disease first noted in the 1980s, with recent identification of inherited mutations in the β2-microglobulin gene, including a novel variant known as P32L linked to hereditary cases.
  • The study involved a Portuguese family with multiple members affected by cardiomyopathy and other systemic issues, highlighting the impact of the P32L variant through biochemical comparisons with other β2-microglobulin mutations.
  • Findings revealed that the P32L mutation was due to a specific dinucleotide alteration, leading to its exclusive accumulation in amyloid deposits and demonstrating its instability and tendency to form harmful oligomeric structures, emphasizing its central role in amyloid disease development.
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  • Diflunisal is an anti-inflammatory drug that helps stabilize transthyretin and may slow down neurological decline in patients with hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis.
  • A study at the Boston University Amyloidosis Centre analyzed 104 patients with wild-type transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis, focusing on the effects of diflunisal over one year, with a total of 35 receiving the treatment.
  • Results indicated that diflunisal was linked to improved survival rates compared to those not on the drug, even after adjusting for other health factors, though it had no significant impact on cardiac biomarkers during the observation period.
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Background And Objectives: The utility of the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) in intubated patients is limited due to reliance on language function evaluation. The Full Outline of Unresponsiveness (FOUR) Score was designed to circumvent this shortcoming, instead adding evaluations of brainstem reflexes (FOUR B) and specific respiratory patterns (FOUR R). We aimed to determine whether the verbal component of the GCS (GCS V) among nonintubated patients with encephalopathy significantly contributes to mortality prediction and to assess GCS vs FOUR Score performance.

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Cardiac amyloidosis (CA) is an increasingly recognized cause of heart failure, characterized by extracellular deposition of insoluble protein fibrils leading to progressive myocardial dysfunction. The most common types of cardiac amyloidosis are immunoglobin light-chain (AL) and transthyretin (ATTR). Conduction abnormalities are commonly encountered among patients with cardiac amyloidosis and are an important cause of morbidity and mortality.

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