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Autor Beitrag 91 - 101
naamaFr 7.12.07, 16:13
1 mal bearbeitet, zuletzt Do 16.4.09, 00:13
Lars92Fr 7.12.07, 18:58
Epilepsie isch au sau hart
Lars92Sa 8.12.07, 18:00
.............................................
dä bitrag isch übrigens immer no offä um no inä schribä!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
CrazymüüsliDo 3.1.08, 18:28
ich finds tourette syndrom schlimm het e kolleg vo mir und wenn me mit ihm an match isc hen en immmer alli usglache will er wörter gseit het oder sich gschlage het...
marciDo 3.1.08, 18:36
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourette-Syndrom

has mol gläse, dasch scho huere bitter!
d0mEDo 3.1.08, 18:37
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourette-Syndrom

wenn me so Tics het, körperzuckige, luts usriefe (oft vo schimpfwörter) wo me nid ka kontrolliere..

ok too late
1 mal bearbeitet, zuletzt Do 3.1.08, 18:37
Minchen84So 6.1.08, 20:24
Eine Eierstock- bzw. Ovarialzyste ist eine mit dünn- oder dickflüssigem Inhalt gefüllte Blase. Solche Zystenbildungen an den Eierstöcken können jede geschlechtsreife Frau betreffen. Am häufigsten zu beobachten sind sie auf Grund von hormonellen Veränderungen bei jungen Frauen, kurz nach der Pubertät, und bei Frauen vor den Wechseljahren. In etwa 98% der Fälle handelt es sich um gutartiges Zystengewebe, das sich spontan wieder zurückbildet. Bei Frauen ab dem 40. Lebensjahr sollte jedoch auch an eine mögliche bösartige Entwicklung gedacht werden.

mega übli sach
YelinaSo 6.1.08, 20:39
Ich ha en Eisenmangelanämie, wo bi mier fascht en Depression usglöst hed. Etz darfi Tablette näh und hoffe, dass es nützt.
Minchen84So 6.1.08, 20:40
iisemangel cha rächt gföhrlich si...
zxySo 6.1.08, 23:00
1 mal bearbeitet, zuletzt Mo 21.4.08, 21:00
NilsBaselMi 2.4.08, 14:58
do wär mol mini Gschicht vom Summer 2006

isch inere britischi Zytschrift (Lancet) veröffentlich worde, dorum in änglisch.


Back pain from a burger

In August, 2006, a 26-year-old man presented to the
emergency department at our hospital, with lower-back
pain of acute onset. He was sent home with painkillers.
He returned 3 days later, with gradually worsening pain
in the right buttock, radiating to the thigh. He also had
mild shortness of breath on exertion. 2 weeks before the
pain started, the patient had travelled to Spain with his
girlfriend, where they had enjoyed an unremarkable
week’s holiday.
On examination, the patient’s temperature was 39°C,
and the arterial oxygen saturation only 88%. Blood
pressure and heart rate were normal; chest radiography
showed nothing of note. Blood tests revealed a
leucocytosis (11×10⁹ cells per L), and increased
concentrations of C-reactive protein (350 mg/L) and liver
enzymes (nearly three times the upper limit of the
normal range); the albumin concentration was only
25 g/L, but the total-protein concentration was 65 g/L
(normal range 60–80 g/L). There was no evidence of
renal or thyroid dysfunction. CT of the pelvis showed an
abscess, measuring 15×18 mm, in the right iliac and
psoas muscles, close to the sacroiliac joint (fi gure). The
joint itself had features of sacroiliitis: a fl uid collection,
and a peripherally enhancing capsule. We used CT
guidance to take a sample from the abscess—which was
found, on microscopy, to contain gram-negative rods: we
therefore prescribed ceftriaxone. We cultured eight blood
samples, and a sample of abscess fl uid—all of which, by
the next day, were found to contain Salmonella enteritidis,
sensitive to ceftriaxone and ciprofl oxacin. Meanwhile,
the patient had become increasingly short of breath. CT
showed bilateral pulmonary infi ltrates and pleural
eff usions, confi rming the provisional diagnosis of
pneumonia. A pleural tap showed a transudate (protein
concen tration 17 g/L). Echocardiography and abdominal
CT showed nothing of note; and specifi cally, no evidence
of endocarditis or mycotic aneurysm. Further exploration
of the history revealed only one additional detail—the
patient had eaten a badly cooked hamburger in Spain,
although without any subsequent gastrointestinal
symptoms. We found no evidence of immunodefi ciency:
an HIV test was negative; lymphocyte subpopulations
and immuno globulin concentrations were normal. We
treated the patient for 3 weeks with intravenous
ceftriaxone, and for another 3 weeks with ciprofl oxacin.
His pain slowly subsided. After treatment, CT showed
complete resolution of the pulmonary infi ltrates and the
abscess, but extensive erosions of the sacroiliac joint.
3 months after discharge, the patient still had mild back
pain, radiating to the right thigh, on exercise. However,
when last seen, in July, 2007, he was well.
Non-typhoidal species of salmonella typically cause
gastroenteritis. However, up to 5% of patients also
develop bacteraemia,1 which can lead to secondary focal
infections, of which pneumonia is the commonest. By
contrast, infection of muscles or large joints is rare1—
although the muscle most often aff ected is the psoas
muscle.2 People with bacteraemia do not necessarily have
symptoms of gastroenteritis, especially if they are
immunocompromised; notably, salmonella can be
transported from the gut to the bloodstream by
CD18-expressing phagocytes, without triggering an
immune response from the gut mucosa.3 Non-typhoidal
salmonella infections are an increasing public-health
problem in many countries—probably because of
changes in food preparation and consumption, and the
rapid growth of international trade in food products.4
Nosocomial outbreaks have been reported: in April 2007,
more than 250 patients and staff were infected by a
hospital kitchen in Germany.

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