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Can loratadine help in treating granulocyte-colony stimulating factor-induced bone pain?

Febrile neutropenia is an oncologic emergency with serious consequences. Granulocyte colony stimulating factors (G-CSFs), used to stimulate neutrophil production to prevent febrile neutropenia, can cause bone pain in more than 25% of patients. Severe bone pain may not respond to acetaminophen, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), opioids, or dose reduction of the G-CSF agent. A study found that patients taking loratadine had fewer treatment-associated adverse reactions and discontinuations than those on naproxen. Although more research is needed, loratadine's tolerability, ease of administration, and potential benefit mean that it should be considered for management of pegfilgrastim-associated bone pain. This article describes a patient whose G-CSF-induced bone pain was completely alleviated by loratadine.

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Renal inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor: A case report.

Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor (IMT) is an extremely rare disease composed of myofibroblast cells and inflammatory infiltrates. There are different sites of the urogenital system affected by IMT-bladder, prostate and kidney. We report a case of a 59-year-old male patient presented with abdominal pain, gross hematuria and a renal mass treated with partial nephrectomy. The final diagnosis was renal inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor. Despite recent improvements in imaging technology, preoperative diagnosis of IMT remains a dilemma. It is therefore mandatory to carry out clinical interpretation, careful histologic examination, and immunohistochemical studies which will generally determine the appropriate diagnosis and patient management.

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Apical fenestration in endodontically treated teeth: A report of two cases.

Root canal therapy in teeth with root fenestrations can present with pain on apical palpation or persistent pain. The signs and symptoms of root fenestration in the absence of mucosal fenestration may be misleading, which may be misdiagnosed as non-odontogenic pain. Although CBCT is superior to periapical radiographs for the diagnosis of root fenestration, it failed to detect the intact cortical plate in the middle third in our cases. Therefore, the type was different in CBCT from its actual size surgically. Repeated non-surgical root canal treatment would not alleviate pain in the presence of root fenestration and may lead to apical root fracture. Root-resection relieves pain, unless the fenestration is accompanied by fracture. The aim of these two case reports was to describe the diagnosis and treatment of endodontically treated teeth with a persistent pain. Also, the difference of root fenestration type between CBCT and its actual size was described.

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Letter to the Editor regarding, “Chronic low back pain, bacterial infection, and treatment with antibiotics”.

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Gender Differences in Disease Activity and Impact in Axial Spondyloarthritis.

Ankylosing spondylitis (AS), characterized by inflammatory back pain and sacroiliitis on radiography, was traditionally considered a condition predominant in men. Since the introduction of the 2009 Assessment in Spondyloarthritis international Society classification criteria aiming to facilitate earlier classification of cases without radiographic sacroiliitis, more women have been classified as having axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA).

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Public consultation for European health data space is open.

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Risk Factors for Vestibular and Oculomotor Outcomes After Sport-Related Concussion.

To investigate the association between risk factors and vestibular-oculomotor outcomes after sport-related concussion (SRC).

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Clinical presentation of inguinal hernia among adults in Uyo, Nigeria.

Inguinal hernia is a common pathology seen by the general surgeon in the outpatient clinic. Its spectrum of clinical features on presentation significantly varies from the asymptomatic to the complicated.

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Virtual reality applied to home-visit rehabilitation for hemiplegic shoulder pain in a stroke patient: a case report.

Virtual reality (VR) has been shown to facilitate rehabilitation at hospitals by distracting patients' attention from pain and by providing a virtual environment favorable for motivating the patients to continue rehabilitation. However, the application of VR in a home-visit rehabilitation remains to be validated. Here, we report a case in which home-visit rehabilitation using immersive VR was effective for post-stroke hemiplegic shoulder pain. After treatment, at a general hospital, for the hypertensive hemorrhage in the right brain capsule that resulted in the residual attention deficit disorder and left hemiplegia, a 63-year-old woman was cared for with a home-visit rehabilitation in a rural area. The patient had persistent pain in her left shoulder, which increased during activities of daily living and during rehabilitation, and the pain precluded rehabilitation. A VR relaxation program was delivered to the patient to alleviate pain during rehabilitation. Her shoulder pain was successfully alleviated using VR during training for muscle stretching and passive joint mobilization. The application of VR to home rehabilitation in rural areas may augment the effectiveness of home rehabilitation by alleviating pain during the procedure and sustaining the motivation for home rehabilitation.

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Posttraumatic Chylous Knee Effusion.

This is a very rare case of posttraumatic chylous joint effusion that has been described only a few times before in the literature. A 64-year-old White woman presented at the outpatient clinic with persistent knee pain for 5 weeks that she related to a fall.

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