Clinical Characteristics, Treatment and Prognosis of Chest Tightness Variant Asthma
AsthmaChest Syndrome8 moreAsthma, abbreviation for bronchial asthma, is one of the common chronic airways disease that threatens human health. Typical symptoms of asthma are recurrent wheezing, shortness of breath, chest tightness and cough, usually occurring at night or early morning. However, there are still some patients with only persistent clinical manifestations of chest tightness. Concerned about this group of patients, we presented a subgroup of bronchial asthma, namely, chest tightness variant asthma (CTVA). This asthma subgroup usually lacks asthma-specific clinical features such as wheezing, shortness of breath, wheezing, and therefore often misdiagnosed for a long time. In order to further understand the clinical characteristics, pathogenesis, and prognosis of patients with CTVA, we conducted a national multicenter observation study to further understand CTVA. Finally, we plan to clarify whether CTVA is a relatively independent asthma phenotype. Meanwhile, reducing misdiagnosis and perform an appropriate treatment of CTVA.
Development, Validation and Evaluation of an Adult and Pediatric Eosinophilic Esophagitis Activity...
Deglutition DisordersEsophageal Diseases1 moreEosinophilic Esophagitis (EoE) is a chronic inflammatory disease of the esophagus affecting children and adults. The most frequent symptoms are swallowing difficulties and thoracic pain. The disease has first been described in the 1980s and is found with rapidly increasing frequency mainly in industrialized countries. The factors that lead to EoE are until now incompletely understood, of importance, the disease is found more frequently in men and patients suffering from allergic diseases (e.g., Asthma). So far there exists no activity index to define the severity of EoE; such an index is urgently needed for future clinical trials to determine the efficacy of current and future therapies. The investigators' 3-year project, carried out in cooperation with international EoE experts, aims at the development of an activity index for adult and pediatric EoE patients that will be used in future clinical trials as well as observational studies.
Research for Angiostrongylus Cantonensis and Costaricensis in French West Indies and French Guiana...
AngiostrongylosisHypereosinophiliaHospitals in the French West Indies (Fort-de-France (Martinique); Basse-Terre and Pointe-à-Pitre (Guadeloupe); and French Guiana (Cayenne, Saint-Laurent du Maroni)) have noted the emergence of eosinophilic meningitis cases in recent years. This finding is part os eosinophilic meningitis cases emergence and meningoencephalitis caused by the parasite Angiostrongylus cantonensis on the American continent and in the Greater Antilles. In 2013, the investigation of an eosinophilic meningitis case by the Basse-Terre hospital team with a positive specific PCR in the CSF (CDC, Atlanta, USA) showed the first case of neuromeningeal angiostrongylosis in Guadeloupe. A similar case was diagnosed by serology at Pointe-à-Pitre University Hospital a few years earlier without having been published, and another serious case diagnosed also at Pointe-à-Pitre University Hospital Center in January 2017. The team at the Martinique University Hospital Center also reported several cases of eosinophilic meningitis with positive serologies for A. cantonensis carried out in laboratories outside Martinique (Laboratory of Parasitology, Gonesse, France; Thailand; and Tropical Institute and Public Health, Switzerland) in recent years. The emergence of this parasitosis is related to the introduction of the intermediate host Achatina fulica on the American continent and the geographical evolution of the angiostrongylosis cases is intrinsically linked to that of the Achatins. To date, only two studies report the environmental presence of Angiostrongylus cantonensis in the Lesser Antilles. One proved the presence in rats (23.4%) on the island of Grenada, and the other in Guadeloupe, showing that 32.4% of Achatina fulica collected carried the parasite by specific PCR. In Martinique, where the number of cases is increasing, and in French Guiana, where there is an increase in the number of cases in neighboring countries, especially Brazil, no study has been conducted on this parasite. In parallel with this finding, several serious digestive tables associated with strong hypereosinophilia were reported in Martinique and Guadeloupe in the 90s but also in recent years, the last case in December 2016. Etiological diagnoses were established by the discovery of Angiostrongylus costaricensis parasite in ileal pathological specimens. However, these cases could never be investigated by serology or specific PCR due to lack of diagnostic tools available in the French West Indies and Guiana region, and more broadly in metropolitan France.
Severe Cutaneous Adverse Reactions in Thailand
Steven-Johnson SyndromeToxic Epidermal Necrolysis3 moreThe multicenter registry of patients with severe cutaneous adverse reactions among tertiary medical institutes in Thailand to study clinical characteristics, etiologies, therapeutic outcomes, quality of life, and the values of in vitro drug allergy diagnosis for the confirmation of the causative drugs