Publications by authors named "Verhamme M"

Background: Hairdressers are exposed to various work-related biomechanical and organizational risk factors. To date, there has been no overview of the evidence for this occupational group. The purpose of this scoping review is to gain insight into the current state of research on work-related musculoskeletal disorders (MSD) in hairdressing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A Toothpick is a dreaded offender when ingested, as it is risky to cause impaction, obstruction or perforation of the gut. When ingestion of a toothpick leads to one of these complications, it clinically mimics an acute abdomen. Often the patient doesn't recall the ingestion, leading to misdiagnosis as inflammatory bowel disease, appendicitis/diverticulitis, etc.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A 35-year-old man with a medical history of myocardial infarction, presenting with fever, general malaise and vague abdominal discomfort, was diagnosed with a portomesenteric venous thrombosis and acute cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection. Thrombophilia screening resulted in detection of heterozygosity for factor II G20210A gene mutation. Low molecular weight heparin in therapeutic dose was started, followed by disappearance of thrombus on imaging CT two months after diagnosis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In a review of the literature concerning autoimmune pancreatitis we had special interest for the concept of IgG4-related pathology as a systemic disease with several clinical manifestations. In general, IgG4-positivity can not only be found in the pancreas, but also at the level of the kidneys, extrahepatic biliary ducts, gallbladder, lungs, salivary glands, lacrimal glands, retroperitoneal tissue, ureters, prostate, meninges and lymph nodes. IgG4 seems to be a central key player in the pathophysiology of this disease.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A 74-year-old male patient presented with progressive anorexia, cholestatic liver function tests, and a diffuse enlarged pancreas suggestive of a pancreatic carcinoma. There was a marked elevation of total immunoglobulin G4 (IgG4) in serum. Further investigation led to the diagnosis of IgG4-related sclerosing disease with involvement of the pancreas, retroperitoneal fibrosis, and bilateral focal nephritis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A 56-year-old patient, first diagnosed with an acute cytomegalovirus infection, presented with progressive abdominal pain because of a superior mesenteric vein thrombosis for which he was treated with systemic thrombolysis and heparin in continuous infusion. As this therapy did not have the intended success after 5 days, an interventional radiological procedure was performed with local thrombolysis in the superior mesenteric artery resulting in recanalisation of the vein. Oral anticoagulation was initiated and continued for a period of 6 months.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Iron deficiency anaemia (IDA) in men and postmenopausal women is mostly due to chronic gastrointestinal blood loss. One of the most common missed lesions while performing upper endoscopy in the work-up of IDA, are Cameron lesions, located at the neck of a large hiatal hernia.

Aims: Description of the bio-clinical and endoscopic findings of a large hiatal hernia, diagnosed in patients presenting with iron deficiency anaemia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Three patients with carcinoid tumors of the ileum are presented; two had severe intestinal ischemia, one with infarction of the small intestine. In all three cases, histopathological examination revealed elastic vascular sclerosis (EVS) in the mesenteric blood vessels. Intestinal ischemia in the presence of a carcinoid tumor is probably due to a combination of tumoral secretion products, vascular changes, mesenterial retraction and nodal involvement.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Two cases of reversible cholestatic hepatitis after treatment with an amoxycillin/clavulanic acid preparation (Augmentin) are described.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A patient on treatment with D-penicillamine developed aphthoid ulcers of the oesophagus, which healed rapidly after withdrawal of this drug. The mechanism of these probably drug-induced oesophageal ulcerations is discussed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Six cases of intestinal anisakiasis, or herring worm disease, diagnosed over a two year period in a Belgian gastroenterology unit are described. They presented mainly as intestinal obstructions and larvae of this marine nematode were found in the intestinal wall of two of the four patients who were operated on. In two other patients awareness of the diagnosis permitted conservative treatment and spontaneous healing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The underlying mechanism of the occurrence of a downward phase V at the end of a bolus washout curve was investigated in three healthy subjects. Phase V appeared not to originate from apical zones with low concentration of tracer gas but from dependent lung zones, which were not pathological. Indeed: 1) a reversed, upward, terminal slope was obtained when the bolus had been directed to the lung base by imposing a transition of the body through 180 degrees between inspiration and expiration or by inhaling a bolus close to TLC; 2) phase V was also present on N2 washout curves and, thus, originated from zones with smaller RV/TLC than the apical ones.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The gravity dependence of phases III (IIIa and IIIb), IV, and V of simultaneously performed He-bolus and N2-resident gas single-breath washout curves was studied in different body positions by the technique of 180 degrees body inversion between inspiration and expiration. Phase IIIa was mainly determined by nongravitational factors. Phase IIIb was influenced by gravitational, as well as nongravitational, factors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Regional distributions of inspired 133Xe and single-breath washout curves were compared in six young healthy subjects for the upright and the head-down positions. The regional distributions of volumes (at 0, 25, 50, and 75% vital capacity, VC) and of 133Xe boluses inhaled at residual volume (RV) were inverted in the head-down position, thus behaving as if they were determined by gravity acting via the weight of the lung rather than by thoracicoabdominal shape adaptations. Nevertheless no mirror image was obtained.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF