Hypereosinophilic syndrome secondary to strongyloides infection: a case of recurrent asthma exacerbations.

Hypereosinophilic syndrome secondary to strongyloides infection: a case of recurrent asthma exacerbations.

BMJ Case Rep. 2013;2013

Authors: Khan WA, Santhanakrishnan K

Abstract
Hypereosinophilic syndrome is a disease characterised by a persistently elevated eosinophil count. The syndrome can be reactive to infections, autoimmune disease, cancers, etc. Multiple organ involvement can occur including cardiomyopathies, pulmonary involvement and neuropathies. We describe a case of a patient who presented with signs and symptoms of asthma with recurrent asthma exacerbations, but in fact proved to be hypereosinophilic syndrome secondary to strongyloides infection.

PMID: 23964035 [PubMed – in process]

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Asthma medicine shows promise for Down syndrome in mice tests [Updated] – Los Angeles Times


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Asthma medicine shows promise for Down syndrome in mice tests [Updated]
Los Angeles Times
A federally approved drug already being inhaled by asthma patients may make mice with Down syndrome smarter, according to a new study. Researchers chose to test the widely manufactured bronchodilator, Formoterol, because it also acts on a brain 
Using Asthma Medication, Scientists Improve Cognitive Function in Mouse Medical Daily
Asthma Meds May Boost Cognition in Down Syndrome PatientsCounsel & Heal
Drug improves cognitive function in mouse model of Down syndrome, study saysScope (blog)

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Asthma medicine shows promise for Down syndrome in mice tests – Los Angeles Times

Asthma medicine shows promise for Down syndrome in mice tests
Los Angeles Times
The dose was far above the quantity deemed safe for asthma use in humans. Before even considering human trials, researchers will have to reduce that dosage and see if its positive effects remain. Still, the path to prescription could be shorter because
Drug improves cognitive function in mouse model of Down syndrome, Stanford Science Codex

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A case of type?I?variant Kounis syndrome with Samter-Beer triad.

Related Articles

A case of type?I?variant Kounis syndrome with Samter-Beer triad.

World J Cardiol. 2013 Apr 26;5(4):112-114

Authors: Prajapati JS, Virpariya KM, Thakkar AS, Abhyankar AD

Abstract
Kounis syndrome is defined as the coexistence of acute coronary syndromes with situations associated with allergy or hypersensitivity, as well as anaphylactic or anaphylactoid reactions, to a variety of medical conditions, environmental and medication exposures. We report a case of Kounis-Zavras syndrome type?I?variant in the setting of aspirin-induced asthma, or the Samter-Beer triad of asthma, nasal polyps and aspirin allergy. When there is a young individual with no predisposing factors of atherosclerosis and apparent coronary lesion, with or without electrocardiography and biochemical markers of infarction, the possibility of Kounis syndrome should be kept in mind.

PMID: 23675559 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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Churg-strauss syndrome: clinical symptoms, complementary investigations, prognosis and outcome, and treatment.

Churg-strauss syndrome: clinical symptoms, complementary investigations, prognosis and outcome, and treatment.

Semin Respir Crit Care Med. 2011 Jun;32(3):298-309

Authors: Dunogué B, Pagnoux C, Guillevin L

Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS), first described in 1951, is a rare vasculitis of small- and medium-sized vessels. It is characterized by a constant association with asthma and eosinophilia, and by the presence of anti-myeloperoxidase (MPO) anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) in ~40% of the patients. Vasculitis typically develops in a previously asthmatic and eosinophilic middle-aged patient and most frequently involves the peripheral nerves and skin. Other organs, however, may be affected and must be screened for vasculitis, especially those associated with a poorer prognosis, such as the heart, kidney, and gastrointestinal tract, as assessed by the recently revised Five-Factor Score (FFS). Overall survival of CSS patients is excellent, but relapses are not uncommon and require maintenance or steroid-sparing therapies, depending on the original FFS-based prognosis at diagnosis. All patients require corticosteroids, often for prolonged periods, combined with immunosuppressants [e.g., induction (cyclophosphamide) and maintenance therapy (azathioprine)], for those with poorer prognoses. Recent insights, especially concerning clinical differences associated with ANCA status, showed that CSS patients might constitute a heterogeneous group, both clinically and pathogenically. Future therapies might reflect these differences more strongly.

PMID: 21674415 [PubMed – in process]

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