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Lechaschi Vrach

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No 12 (2021)
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NEWS

GYNECOLOGY

10-16 186
Abstract

In spite of the significant development of modern medicine, the problem of pelvic organ prolapse does not lose its actuality nowadays. Complex of symptoms that occurs when the anatomy of the pelvic floor and pelvic organs changes greatly decrease the quality of patients lives. This circumstance is especially important to take into account in older women. Certainly increased attention is required by all patients suffering from pelvic organ prolapse, which can be diagnosed in different age categories. However, the condition of postmenopausal patients is of particular concern. This is due to the fact that at an older age, significant changes occur in a woman's body, which act as provoking or aggravating factors in the development of pelvic organ prolapse. One of the main aspects of such patients is the state of hypoestrogenism. Besides, at an older age there are a large number of other extra genital pathology somatic diseases that influence significantly on the progression of the pathological process. It is also necessary to take into account that a modern woman spends almost a third of her life in the postmenopausal period. That is why doctors face a serious challenge to achieve the proper quality of life of age-related patients. Nowadays the causes leading to the development of prolapse are known, but there is still no definitive answer regarding the etiology of this disease. This circumstance dictates the necessity for further in-depth and detailed studying the problem of prolapse, as well as the search for more advanced diagnostic and therapeutic techniques. The introduction of new methods and approaches into clinical practice will contribute to the timely diagnosis of the disease and adequate treatment, which will significantly affect the health of postmenopausal patients and will allow them to start living a full life.

17-21 190
Abstract

The article is devoted to the study of modern methods of diagnosis and treatment of benign diseases of the vulva and vagina in postmenopausal women. The analysis of the etiology, clinical picture, methods of diagnosis and treatment of vulvovaginal atrophy, as the most common  benign disease of the vulva and vagina in postmenopausal women, has been carried out. It has been established that the main factor leading to vulvovaginal atrophy in postmenopausal women is climacteric hormonal  imbalance with a gradually increasing estrogen deficiency. Postmenopausal women note such signs of vulvovaginal atrophy as vaginal dryness, burning and itching, dyspareunia, hypersensitivity to infectious diseases of the pelvic organs, which significantly aggravates the state of health, a negative effect on the general and sexual quality of life. Diagnosis of vulvovaginal atrophy is based on examination  data, laboratory and instrumental studies. The main therapeutic goal in the treatment of vulvovaginal atrophy is to relieve symptoms and restore the vaginal environment to a healthy premenopausal state. The «gold standard» for the treatment of vulvovaginal atrophy is local and systemic estrogen therapy. HRT drugs contribute to an increase in proliferative processes, an improvement in blood supply, a rapid normalization of the vaginal microflora and can be prescribed for therapeutic and prophylactic purposes. For the treatment of vulvovaginal atrophy in women for whom estrogen preparations are contraindicated, selective estrogen receptor modulators are used. The drugs in this group, ospemifen and lasofoxifene, help to alleviate the symptoms of vaginal atrophy and dyspareunia, improve vaginal epithelium and vaginal pH. Also, with mild symptoms, an improvement in the condition occurs with the use of non-hormonal vaginal lubricants. In addition,  there are experimental  options for vulvovaginal rejuvenation in women with symptoms that do not fit or tolerate local or systemic estrogen therapy: platelet-rich plasma injections, hyaluronic acid or fat implants, fractional carbon dioxide laser, diode laser and monopolar radiofrequency devices, vaginoplasty.

22-25 176
Abstract

One of the most significant risk factors for the formation  of internal  genital organs is connective  tissue diseases. The steady increase in the number of women suffering from pelvic organ prolapse has led to the fact that this pathology has become both a medical and socio-economic problem in many countries. At the same time, the data on the role of undifferentiated connective tissue dysplasias in the development of pelvic organ prolapse and in the formation of pelvic floor insufficiency and the possibility of using it to predict this pathology are contradictory.  To determine the relationship between the manifestation of undifferentiated connective tissue dysplasia and the development of pelvic organ prolapse, a retrospective analysis of 157 case histories of patients with genital prolapse was carried out. In 27,39% of patients, manifestations of connective tissue dysplasia were noted. In 39,53% of cases, a combination of the manifestation of undifferentiated  connective tissue dysplasias with birth traumatism was revealed. Severe forms of connective tissue dysplasia (varicose veins of the lower extremities, intestinal polyposis, mitral valve prolapse) were found in 16,28% of the number of cases with birth traumatism and pelvic organ prolapse, which required surgical correction  before pregnancy or after childbirth. Revealed in every third patient operated on for pelvic floor incompetence, undifferentiated connective tissue dysplasias allows us to consider it as a risk factor for pelvic organ prolapse, especially in combination with perineal trauma during childbirth. However, to assess the role and significance of connective tissue pathology in predicting the formation of prolapse and prolapse of the internal genital organs of the small pelvis in a woman, prospective randomized  studies are needed.

ENDOCRINOLOGY

26-31 218
Abstract

Liver diseases in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus occur with a higher frequency than in the general population.  Type 2 diabetes mellitus has a negative effect on the condition of the liver, disrupting the metabolism of proteins, amino acids, fats and other substances in hepatocytes, which leads to the development of its chronic diseases.The combination  of liver pathology and diabetes mellitus is a prognostic factor of complications  and death. Type 2 sodium-glucose cotransporter  inhibitors (dapagliflozin, empagliflozin, kanagliflozin) have a positive effect on reducing the degree of fatty hepatosis,  reducing the concentration of liver enzymes and the activity of the inflammatory process in the liver, improving the histological picture of steatosis and steatohepatitis.  The progression of changes in the liver in type 2 diabetes mellitus in the form of nalcohol fatty liver disease, combining non-alcoholic steatosis and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, which have common  mechanisms with insulin resistance syndrome, reflects the stages of formation of liver diseases, resulting in the development of cirrhosis of the liver. The conducted studies indicate the effectiveness of type 2 sodium-glucose transporters  in patients with cirrhosis of the liver. In patients with nnon-alcoholic fatty liver disease with type 2 diabetes mellitus, when treated with inhibitors SGLT2,  there is an improvement in histopathological characteristics during liver biopsy. In addition, these patients had a decrease in body mass index, waist circumference,  and glycemic level. in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease at increased risk of liver cirrhosis, a clinically significant decrease in serum alanine aminotransferase levels was observed during the treatment  of inhibitors SGLT2.I шn patients with liver diseases, the drugs are well tolerated, safe to use and can be successfully used in patients with liver failure.

34-39 235
Abstract

Assessment of Health Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) features frequently assesses both the child and their mothers perspectives in preschool children with diabetes mellitus type 1 (T1DM), but parent-proxy and child self-reports may differ, and knowledge of these differences are not enough. The aim was to investigate HRQoL assessed by preschool children with T1DM and by their mothers, potential differences in the children-maternal estimates and the factors influencing these discrepancies. 35 preschool children (16 girls from 4-to-6-year-old ) with T1DM underwent the self-report KINDL questionnaire for children aged 4-6 years (Kiddy-KINDL for children). Their mothers underwent the parental version (Kiddy-KINDL for parents). Both versions enable measuring child HRQoL in physical, emotional wellbeing, self-esteem, family, friends, everyday functioning, and the disease dimensions, as well as KINDL total on a 0-100 scale. Statistically significant differences were found on the scale of the total assessment of the quality of life, as well as on the scales of the impact of disease and emotional well-being on the quality of life. Lower estimates of the total quality of life, as well as the effect of the disease on it, in the opinion of mothers, compared with children with type 1 diabetes, were established. In contrast, the assessment of the impact of emotional well-being on the quality of life in type 1 diabetes was higher on the part of mothers compared to their children. The most significant modifying effect on the studied parameters was found for the factors of mother's education, marital status, method of insulin administration, and improved diabetes control. The assessment of the quality of life may differ according to the opinion of children with type 1 diabetes and their mothers. The identified features are recommended for use in planning patient-oriented diabetes treatment programs and in the work of «diabetes schools».

TOPICAL THEME

40-44 268
Abstract

Malignant diseases remain an important problem in medicine, while its solution depends on the effectiveness of detecting the early stages of cancer at the outpatient stage, including the therapeutic link in the provision of medical care. Currently existing approaches to the promotion of the foundations of a healthy lifestyle are mainly aimed only at the prevention of behavioral risk factors: tobacco smoking, unhealthy diet, insufficient physical activity and harmful use of alcohol. At the same time, according to experts, even exposure only to them will prevent at least 40% of cases of the development of malignant ovariances. A 3-tier system of medical care has been organized in Russia. It is the first level of primary health care that should ensure the prophylactic focus of health care: competent clinical examination is able to provide a significant, up to 30%, contribution to reducing the overall mortality of the population, including mortality from malignant neoplasms. The first stage in the diagnosis of oncological disease are therapists, to whom patients come with general complaints (fatigue, low-grade fever, joint pain, dysuria, etc.). The most urgent task in the work of a general practitioner is the timely detection of a tumor disease and referral of a patient for treatment to an oncologist. The article considers the possibilities of screening measures with the participation of therapists, general practitioners, and offers specially developed algorithms for the diagnosis of benign and malignant neoplasms of the prostate gland. The formation of oncological alertness skills in a primary outpatient care physician is necessary for early detection and reduction of the incidence of advanced stages of tumors and earlier initiation of specialized treatment. Identification of symptoms suspicious of malignant neoplasms using algorithmic approaches and subsequent consultation with the patient by a specialist urologist or oncologist should improve treatment outcomes.

46-54 281
Abstract

Early in 2020, the infection caused by SARS-CoV-2 emerged and caused the COVID-19 pandemic. For a long time, management of patients with the acute novel coronavirus infection was of primary importance. With accumulation of clinical information and data on the causative agents of novel coronavirus infection it became obvious that the COVID-19 consequences and post-hospital follow-up of patients are important as well. Due to the direct and mediated cardiac toxicity of SARS-CoV-2 virus, cardiovascular patients are at high risk at any stage of the disease. Therefore,  one of the priorities for healthcare  professionals is development  of the ways to improve the quality and prognosis of life for cardiovascular patients in the post-COVID period. The article discusses large-scale studies including the data from the International Register «Analysis of Chronic  Non-infectious Diseases Dynamics After COVID-19 Infection in Adult Patients» (AСTIV-SARS-CoV-2), as regards drug therapy of cardiovascular patients with a focus on beta-blockers and calcium-channel blockers. In mentioned  publications, beta-blocker therapy demonstrated favourable impact on the novel coronavirus infection severity in cardiovascular patients, reduction  in mortality rates during the hospital and post-hospital periods. Data on the use of calcium-channel blockers have been studied to a lesser extent; however, calcium-channel blockers are thought to be one of the most commonly prescribed groups in the therapy of patients with persistent complaints of high blood pressure at the post-hospital period. A study of the impact of some categories of antihypertensives on the outcome for cardiovascular patients with COVID-19 is warranted.

57-60 246
Abstract

Conjunctivitis accounts for 33% of all eye diseases. Conjunctivitis, or inflammation of the conjunctiva, is one of its most common diseases. Regardless of the etiology, the clinical manifestations are approximately the same. Patients come to the clinics with complaints of photophobia, a feeling of a foreign body, red eye, itching, pain, lacrimation, hyperemia and swelling of the eyelids. The first goal of an ophthalmologist is to differentiate between viral and bacterial conjunctivitis. The second stage is to conduct a detailed differential analysis between nosologies. To solve these problems, the doctor needs to conduct a detailed collection of complaints and anamnesis, conducting a detailed biomicroscopy of the anterior segment of the eye. Viral eye diseases are a serious medical and social problem. Viruses are one of the most common causes of infection of the outer structures of the eye with a wide range of possible manifestations - from mild transient conjunctivitis to more serious conditions in which damage to the conjunctiva and cornea can lead to scarring, which in some cases leads to blindness. Pathogens such as adenovirus, picornavirus,  herpes simplex virus and herpes zoster can cause isolated conjunctivitis,  but they often also affect the cornea and eyelids. In recent years, there has been an increase in the prevalence of adenoviral conjunctivitis. The disease has a high frequency of occurrence and affects all age groups The increase in morbidity occurs in the autumn-spring  period, when viral contagiousness is increased. In clinical practice, for local therapy of diseases such as viral (adenoviral and herpetic) conjunctivitis, keratitis, keratoconjunctivitis, uveitis, interferon preparations are used with high efficiency.

62-66 246
Abstract

Demographic aging of the population leads to a significant increase in the proportion of elderly and senile people, both at the outpatient and inpatient stages of treatment. Over the past decade, the average age of the main contingent of patients in intensive care and intensive care units is more than 65 years, with a tendency to increase, which predetermines the strategy for a more thorough assessment of approaches to treatment measures, taking into account polymorbidity and functional capabilities of patients of older age groups, as the period of stay in hospital, and at further stages of recovery and rehabilitation. It is known that, in general, the duration of stay in intensive care units for elderly patients is much longer, and the results of treatment and rehabilitation are significantly lower than that of younger patients. This is due to a combination of a number of factors: comorbidity/polymorbidity of elderly and senile patients, decreased functional reserves of the body, senile asthenia syndrome, the main components of which are sarcopenia, and malnutrition. The relationship of senile asthenia with an increase in the duration of hospitalization, a decrease in physical activity, the development of functional deficits, an increase in the risk of falls, fractures and mortality is well understood, however, in routine clinical practice, assessing nutritional status, diagnosing malnutrition and solving the problem of malnutrition in patients with senile asthenia syndrome and Insufficient attention is paid to sarcopenia, despite the known facts about the relationship of malnutrition, a decrease in skeletal muscle mass, including their strength or function, with unfavorable outcomes of the disease. In the outpatient phase, in addition to a sedentary lifestyle, the development and progression of sarcopenia is often facilitated by the presence of a severe illness accompanied by systemic inflammation, metabolic resistance, nutritional deficiency and depression characteristic of this category of patients. Modern approaches to the treatment of an elderly and senile patient imply a regular assessment of the nutritional status and counseling on rational nutrition with the introduction of nutritional support methods into a comprehensive management program for an elderly patient, along with basic treatment and rehabilitation measures in order to slow the progression of asthenia and sarcopenia syndrome.

68-72 204
Abstract

Elderly and senile patients, due to physiological reasons and comorbid pathology, have a high risk of constipation. The causes of constipation are more often nutritional factors and age-associated diseases and damage to the colon (diverticular disease, colon ischemia, rectocele, hemorrhoids, and others); metabolic, endocrine disorders and neurological diseases. Age-related anatomical, structural and functional changes in the digestive system contribute to the development of constipation in the elderly. In patients of «silver age», there was an increase in the length of the gastrointestinal tract, the progression of atrophic, sclerotic changes in the mucous and submucosa, a decrease in the number of secretory cells, replacement of muscle fibers with connective tissue, etc. All this contributes to the slowing down of transit through the gastrointestinal tract and the violation of the act of defecation. Elderly lifestyles can also contribute to constipation. The low fiber content in the diet, the use of mainly thermally processed food, the violation of the rhythm of the diet (eating 1-2 times a day) are one of the causes of constipation in the elderly, which is facilitated by difficulty in chewing due to dental problems. Colonoscopy is ordered for all elderly and senile patients with constipation, and the identification of «anxiety symptoms» should be carried out at each patient visit. Regardless of the cause of secondary constipation, all patients should take a number of non-pharmacological measures, including lifestyle changes, a diet with adequate fiber, and fluid intake. Physical therapies may include medical gymnastics, colon massage to stimulate bowel movement at specific times. If non-drug measures are ineffective, it is recommended to use osmotic laxatives, as well as agents that increase the volume of feces. Psyllium supplementation is recommended for treatment of chronic constipation in elderly patients due to its high efficacy and safety.

74-80 660
Abstract

In this article, leishmaniasis is considered in the context of HIV infection, in which this disease appears to be an opportunistic. A general characteristic  of leishmaniasis is given, and the features of the course of infection in immunodeficiency are also presented. In the example of clinical cases, issues featuring diagnostics and treatment  of leishmaniasis are reviewed, the mortality rate of which remains quite high. The accession of Crimea to Russia, the high prevalence of HIV infection in the world, as well as the annually increasing tourist flow to endemic countries, require physicians of all specialties to be aware of this disease. HIV patients deserve special attention, there are already a number of reports that people with HIV are diagnosed with visceral leishmaniasis and are at greater risk of infection than the general population. The manifestations of visceral leishmaniasis among patients with immunodeficiency, as a rule, do not differ from the classical course, however, depending on the degree of suppression of immunity, the disease can take on atypical forms, which complicates timely diagnosis and the appointment of adequate therapy. If the patient has HIV infection, prolonged fever of the wrong type, enlarged lymph nodes, spleen, liver, weight loss > 10%, progressive anemia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, hypoalbuminemia and data on stay in regions endemic for leishmaniasis, it is advisable to be tested for visceral leishmaniasis – puncture of bone marrow with staining of smears according to Romanovsky – Giemsa, staging of PCR punctate using a test system for leishmaniasis, and if positive results are obtained, the appointment of pentavalent antimony drugs, second-line  drugs – amphotericin B, liposomal amphotericin B or paromomycin.

81-84 161
Abstract

The article presents a brief review of the literature about clinical manifestations, modern methods of diagnosticsand treatment of an extremely rare disease – generalized eruptive keratoacanthomas of Grzybowski. The disease is characterized  by the appearance of hundreds or thousands of generalized itchy nodules on the skin of the face, trunk, limbs, genitals, oral mucosa and larynx within a short time. The disease develops at the age of over 40, has a recurrent  course, spontaneous  involution of individual elements with the formation of areas of depigmentation or atrophic scars is possible. The authors describe a case of their own clinical care of generalized eruptive keratoacanthomas of Grzybowski in a 50-year-old patient who consulted a dermatovenerologist at the clinic of the Ural Research Institute of Dermatovenerology and Immunopathology.The duration  of the disease at the time of visit to a doctor was 2,5 years, its occurrence was preceded by repeated visits to countries with excessive insolation,  which can be considered as an etiological factor in the development of the disease. The diagnosis was first suspected at a boarddermatovenerologists based on the clinical picture of the disease and subsequently verified by the data of a pathomorphological examination  of the biopsy of the affected skin.The effectiveness of the use of aromatic retinoids in the treatment  of generalized eruptive keratoacanthomas of Grzybowski is shown and the side effects that developed in the patient with an independent increase in the dose of acitretin to 70 mg/day are given. The article states the extremely rare occurrence of this disease, as evidenced by the above clinical case, diagnosed for the first time in more than 90 years of the institute's existence. The importance of consolidating the clinical experience of several leading dermatovenerologists for the diagnostics of generalized eruptive keratoacanthomas of Grzybowski is emphasized.

EVENT

 
85-89 193
Abstract

From 21 to 23 October 2021 in St. Petersburg under the motto «New challenges, new achievements. Cardiology of 21 years of the 21st century» was held by the Russian National Congress of Cardiology. Within its framework, on October 22, with the support of the Egis company, a symposium «Asymptomatic hyperuricemia, arterial hypertension,  cardiovascular risk: separate puzzles or a single picture?». The experts discussed whether asymptomatic  hyperuricemia  is so asymptomatic; with the development of what diseases it is most often associated; what level of uric acid should be considered the threshold value for the initiation of urate-lowering therapy and which drugs have shown the greatest efficiency in this regard, including in comorbid patients.

90-94 318
Abstract

Amyloidosis is a group of diseases characterized  by accumulation of a protein of a specific fibrillar structure in the interstitium of various organs and tissues. The concept of amyloidosis  unites more than 30 different pathophysiological conditions,  each of which is based on abnormal synthesis of 30 different precursor proteins. However, 95% of amyloid cardiomyopathies are associated with just two proteins: a protein derived from light chains of immunoglobulins and a protein called transthyretin.  Determination of the precursor protein is a cornerstone of management  of patients with amyloid cardiomyopathy. Transthyretin  is a carrier protein of thyroxine, retinol and other substances, that performs vital functions. For hereditary or age-related reasons, TTR misfolding occurs in the liver. The resulting monomers, entering blood, form toxic intermediate products and amyloid fibrils. Cardiac amyloidosis (or amyloid cardiomyopathy)  used to be considered a rare disease. In the recent past, possibilities of therapy for cardiac amyloidosis were limited by prescription of diuretics, mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists and anticoagulants, since other drugs are not tolerated well by patients or are tolerated in minimal doses. Advent of the first drug specific for treatment of transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy in Russia increased a need of awareness of ATTR-CM among general practitioners  and cardiologists, and introduction of modern diagnostic algorithms for this disease. Timely detection and competent differential diagnosis of ATTR-CM from other types of amyloid cardiomyopathy  can play a decisive role in the prognosis of this disease. Tafamidis is a treatment that was shown to reduce mortality and CV-related hospitalization in ATTR-CM patients.

ALMA MATER



ISSN 1560-5175 (Print)
ISSN 2687-1181 (Online)