Cases reported "Skin Ulcer"

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1/3. Post-apopletic trigeminal trophic syndrome.

    Trigeminal trophic syndrome is an uncommon clinical entity in which cutaneous trophic ulceration develops with continuous manipulation of trigeminal dermatomes. patients spontaneously refer picking, rubbing and/or scratching at the affected areas because of hypo-anaesthesia, paraesthesia and/or pain following damage of the sensory trigeminal fibres or nuclei. We herein describe a patient who developed the syndrome as a sequela of brain stem infarction. diagnosis by scrape cytology in ruling-out basal cell carcinoma and other ulcerative skin diseases is discussed and the importance of neurological examination in disclosing hemi-anaesthesia of trigeminal dermatome(s) is emphasized.
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ranking = 1
keywords = anaesthesia
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2/3. Idiopathic necrotizing dermatitis: current management.

    OBJECTIVES: To identify and demonstrate necrotizing dermatitis in infancy; an uncommon, puzzling syndrome, in which anecdotal reporting and personal experience indicates that one third of cases may require skin grafting. Much informed discussion about the pathogenesis of this distressing syndrome centres on the role of spider envenomation; and in particular on the speculative role of the Australian White-tailed spider, Lampona cylindrata. methods: We present here six cases of necrotizing dermatitis treated surgically at the Royal Children's Hospital and Mater Children's Hospital in Brisbane over the period from 1991 to 1999. Clinical history, surgical details and pathological investigations were reviewed in each case. Microbiological investigation of necrotic ulcers included standard aerobic and anaerobic culture. RESULT: nocardia and staphylococcus were cultured in two cases, but no positive bites were witnessed and no spiders were identified by either the children or their parents. All cases were treated with silver sulphadiazine creme. Two of the infants required general anaesthesia, excision debridement and split skin grafting. The White-tailed spider, Lampona cylindrata, does not occur in queensland, but Lampona murina does; neither species has necrotizing components in its venom. Circumstantial evidence is consistent with this syndrome being due to invertebrate envenomation, possibly following arachnid bites. CONCLUSION: In our experience there is insufficient evidence to impute a specific genus as the cause, at this stage of scientific knowledge. If the offending creature is a spider, we calculate that the syndrome of necrotizing dermatitis occurs in less than 1 in 5000 spider bites.
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ranking = 0.5
keywords = anaesthesia
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3/3. Management of a patient with familial amyloid polyneuropathy type I with lumbar epidural anaesthesia.

    Familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP) type I is a rare disease characterized by sensorimotor polyneuropathy, and autonomic nervous system and cardiac conduction system dysfunction. Severe bradyarrhythmia and hypotension may occur during anaesthesia and surgery in patients with the FAP type I. Only one report has been published of a patient with FAP type I who was managed with epidural anaesthesia. The present authors report a 38-year-old Japanese man with a permanent pacemaker because of advanced FAP type I who underwent rotation flap of the gluteus maximus muscle to cover a trophic ulcer in the sacral region under lumbar epidural anaesthesia. Ten millilitres of adrenaline (1:200,000) was injected around the ulcer prior to surgical manipulation. Neither bradycardia nor hypotension developed during the procedures. The haemodynamic changes under lumbar epidural anaesthesia in FAP type I are discussed.
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ranking = 4
keywords = anaesthesia
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