Chloroquine is a derivative of 4-aminoquinoline, which is used in the malaria prophylaxis and treatment and the therapy of some connective tissue diseases. Its narrow therapeutic index causes that the medicine is relatively toxic, especially in the case of an overdose or an acute intoxication. In the recent study two cases of the acute chloroquine poisoning, hospitalized in the Toxicology Department in Kraków, were described and one of them was fatal. The first case was 16-year-old girl who ingested 5 g of chloroquine phosphate in the suicidal attempt. After about 2 hours general seizures appeared followed by ventricular fibrillation and cardiac arrest. After near 2-hour-lasted reanimation procedures she was resuscitated, but 14 hours later another cardiac arrest appeared because of the bradyasystole. Despite the institution of advanced reanimation methods including external pacemaker and electrostimulation, spontaneous circulation did not return and the patient was declared dead. Postmortem toxicological examination of blood, vitreous humour, bile and liver revealed extremely high concentrations of chloroquine (252.15 mg/l in blood). The second case was the 15-year-old girl who ingested 7.5 g of chloroquine phosphate. She developed significant hypotension requiring intravenous infusions of fluids and catecholamines and respiratory distress positively treated with endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation. In both cases a considerable hypokalemia and prolonged QTc interval were observed. According to the literature, a clinical picture, diagnosis and recommended therapy of an acute chloroquine poisoning were reviewed.
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Int J Mol Sci
December 2024
Department of Anesthesiology & Perioperative Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
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Dermatology Department, Unidade Local de Saúde Santa Maria, Lisbon, Portugal; Dermatology University Clinic, Faculty of Medicine, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal; Dermatology Research Unit, Instituto de Medicina Molecular, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal.
Sweet's syndrome (or acute febrile dermatosis) is a neutrophilic dermatosis with a characteristic presentation encompassing specific clinical (fever and erythemato-violaceous oedematous papules, plaques and nodules), laboratory (neutrophilia and increased inflammatory markers), and histological (dermal neutrophilic infiltrate without vasculitis) features. Its pathophysiology is poorly understood but there seems to be an auto-inflammatory component related to mutations in inflammasome genes. It has been subdivided into its classic form, malignancy-associated, and drug-induced, according to its aetiology.
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Community Memorial Hospital, Ventura, CA, USA.
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Outcomes of relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) are poor, and strategies to improve outcomes are urgently needed. One important factor promoting relapse and chemoresistance is the ability of AML cells to thrive in vivo within an intrinsically hypoxic bone marrow microenvironment. Here we show that human AML cells exhibit enhanced autophagy, specifically mitophagy (i.
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School of Allied Health Sciences, Walailak University, Nakhon Si Thammarat 80160, Thailand.
Malaria remains a critical global health issue, particularly in tropical and subtropical regions. The disease, caused by parasites, is transmitted by mosquitoes and can lead to severe complications and death if untreated. The emergence of drug-resistant strains highlights the urgent need for new antimalarial agents.
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