MATERIALS AND METHODS: This retrospective study involved archival search of patients with GI biopsies that showed eosinophilic infiltration from January 2004 to December 2012. Patients' clinical data from computerised hospital records and clinical notes was reviewed. Diagnostic criteria for EG included presence of GI symptoms with more than 30 eosinophils/high power field on GI biopsies. Patients with secondary causes for eosinophilia were excluded.
RESULTS: Eighteen patients with EG were identified (mean age 52 years; male/female: 11/7). Fifteen patients (83%) had peripheral blood eosinophilia. Seven patients (39%) had atopic conditions. Most common symptoms were diarrhoea and abdominal pain. Small intestine was the most common site involved. Endoscopic finding was non-specific. Ten patients were treated with corticosteroids (nine prednisolone, one budesonide): eight patients (89%) responded clinically to prednisolone but four patients (50%) relapsed following tapering-off of prednisolone and required maintenance dose. One patient each responded to diet elimination and montelukast respectively. Half of the remaining six patients who were treated with proton-pump inhibitors, antispasmodic or antidiarrheal agents still remained symptomatic.
CONCLUSION: Prednisolone is an effective treatment though relapses are common. Small intestine is most commonly involved. EG should be considered in the evaluation of unexplained chronic recurrent GI symptoms.
METHODS: This is a retrospective case control study in Hospital Seri Manjung and Hospital Teluk Intan, Perak, Malaysia. P. aeruginosa bacteraemia cases that occurred between 1st January 2015 to 31st December 2019 were included, whilst E. coli bacteraemia cases that occurred within the same period were recruited successively until 1:2 case control ratio was achieved. Subjects below 12-year-old and those with polymicrobial bacteraemia were excluded. Demographic, clinical and treatment data were collected using pre-tested data collection forms by trained investigators.
RESULTS: A total of 61 patients with P. aeruginosa bacteraemia and 122 patients with E. coli bacteraemia were included. Recent admission in the earlier three months, regular haemodialysis, immunosuppressive therapy in the past 30 days, chronic wound/pressure sore at presentation and indwelling urinary catheter at presentation were identified as independent predictors of CO pseudomonal bacteraemia. Whilst older age was identified as a negative predictor of CO Pseudomonal bacteraemia (all p<0.05). The 30-day mortality rate was 34.4% in subjects with P. aeruginosa bacteraemia and 27.0% in those with E. coli bacteraemia (p=0.302). Predictors of 30-day mortality for community onset gram negative bacteraemia were as follow: older age, underlying solid tumours, neutropaenia at presentation, in-patient mechanical ventilation, and inpatient nasogastric tube insertion. Unexpectedly, receipt of inappropriate empirical antibiotics which was switched later (delayed and non-delayed switching) was identified as the negative predictors of mortality (all p<0.05).
CONCLUSION: It is prudent to restrict the usage of empirical anti-pseudomonal antibiotics among individuals at risk as liberal usage of broad-spectrum antibiotics engenders emergence of drug resistant organism, particularly in district setting where community onset pseudomonal bacteraemia remains scarce. Subjects with elevated risk of mortality should receive early escalation of care as per sepsis management guidelines.