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Infectious Disease Clinics of North America | 2010

Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)

Dennis J. Cleri; Anthony J. Ricketti; John R. Vernaleo

This article reviews the virology, history, pathology, epidemiology, clinical presentations, complications, radiology, laboratory testing, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of severe respiratory distress syndrome, with reference to documented outbreaks of the disease.


Allergy and Asthma Proceedings | 2015

Central serous chorioretinopathy secondary to corticosteroids in patients with atopic disease.

Peter A. Ricketti; David W. Unkle; Dennis J. Cleri; Jonathan L. Prenner; Michael Coluccielo; Anthony J. Ricketti

Central serous chorioretinopathy (CSCR) is of unknown etiology and is the most common cause of retinopathy after age-related macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy, and retinal vein occlusion. Vision loss results from fluid leakage and serous detachment in the macula. Five percent of patients develop chronic CSCR. It is predominantly found in middle-aged men (age-adjusted rates per 100,000: 9.9 for men and 1.7 for women) and is usually unilateral and reversible. Three-quarters of CSCR patients resolve within 3 months but 45% have recurrences, usually with only minor visual acuity changes. Risk factors include type A personality, emotional stress, elevated catecholamines, hypertension, pregnancy, organ transplantation, increased levels of endogenous cortisol, psychopharmacologic medication, use of phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitors, obstructive sleep apnea, Helicobacter pylori infection, or treatment with corticosteroids. Five percent of patients develop chronic disease as a result of subretinal fibrin formation within the blister. CSCR is often bilateral, multifocal, and recurrent, and may be associated with subretinal fibrin formation within the blister. Permanent loss of vision may result from subretinal fibrin-fibrosis with scarring of the macula. Corticosteroid-associated CSCR occurs bilaterally in 20% of patients. Steroid-associated therapy may begin days to years after therapy with any form of drug delivery. We present three atopic patients who presented at various times after oral, inhaled, intranasal, and topical corticosteroid therapy. One patient developed CSCR after three separate types of administration of corticosteroids, which, to our knowledge, has not been observed in the literature.


Allergy and Asthma Proceedings | 2012

A 44-year-old man with bilateral eyelid swelling.

Anthony J. Ricketti; Dennis J. Cleri; Robert L. Moser; Jurij R. Bilyk; John R. Vernaleo; David W. Unkle

Swollen eyelids are commonly ascribed to allergic conjunctivitis, contact dermatitis, eczema, angioedema, or acute sinusitis. The differential diagnosis extends to thyroid eye disease; blepharitis; Sjögrens syndrome; Churg-Strauss vasculitis; Wegeners granulomatosis; Gleich syndrome; orbital and ocular lymphoid hyperplasia or adnexal lymphoma; idiopathic orbital inflammatory disease/idiopathic sclerosing orbital inflammation; rarely, orbital parasitosis; and IgG4-related diseases. The likely diagnosis proceeds from the more to the less common in patients without a history of allergy or infection. Both ocular lymphoid hyperplasia and ocular adnexal lymphoma must be considered in the differential diagnosis of persistent disease, and neither of these entities can be recognized or differentiated from one another clinically or radiologically. Early diagnosis is essential because therapy may consist of frequent follow-up and/or active intervention. Outcomes in patients treated early and appropriately are often favorable.


Allergy and Asthma Proceedings | 2011

Biological terrorism and the allergist's office practice.

Anthony J. Ricketti; Cunha Ba; Dennis J. Cleri; Shenk Sh; Vernaleo; Unkle Dw

During the anthrax outbreak and threat in Trenton (2001), our allergy practice experienced increased visits from approximately 50 of our regular patients with symptoms they believed resulted from anthrax exposure. In all cases, their symptoms were caused by a combination of an exacerbation of their underlying allergic disease and anxiety because of possible exposure to anthrax. Our objective is to present an orderly approach to the allergists outpatients presenting with possible exposure to a bioterrorists agent. The 10 precepts of approach to the management of a biological casualty (index of suspicion, protect yourself, patient assessment, decontaminate, diagnose, treat, infection control, alert authorities, assist in investigation, and maintain proficiency) and the epidemiological characteristics of a biological attack are discussed. In table form, we compared the signs and symptoms of the most common outpatient consultations to an allergists office practice (chronic rhinitis, asthma, food allergy, venom allergy, atopic dermatitis, drug allergy, chronic urticaria, acute urticaria, immunodeficiency, and anaphylaxis) with those of likely bioterrorism threats. Descriptions of smallpox, plague, tularemia, anthrax, viral hemorrhagic fevers, Q fever, brucellosis, Venezuelan equine encephalitis, glanders, and melioidosis are presented. Patients may readily mistake their allergic symptoms with those of infection with a bioterrorists agent. At the same time, the allergist may be faced with one of his own chronic patients presenting with symptoms resembling their allergic disease but actually caused by one of the aforementioned pathogens.


Allergy and Asthma Proceedings | 2010

A 41-year-old male with cough, wheeze, and dyspnea poorly responsive to asthma therapy.

Peter A. Ricketti; Anthony J. Ricketti; Dennis J. Cleri; Marc M. Seelagy; David W. Unkle; John R. Vernaleo

Reactive airway disease is often triggered by an upper respiratory viral infection and readily responds to anti-inflammatory and bronchodilator therapy. The differential diagnosis for unresponsive disease includes poorly controlled asthma, noncompliance with medical regimen, vocal cord dysfunction, rhinosinusitis, gastroesophageal reflux disease or recurrent aspiration, foreign body aspiration, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis, Churg-Strauss vasculitis, cardiac disorders such as congestive heart failure or mitral stenosis, or other pulmonary disorders such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, interstitial lung disease, bronchiectasis, sarcoidosis, hypersensitivity pneumonitis, pulmonary embolism, cystic fibrosis, airway neoplasms, or laryngotracheomalacia. As is often the case, a meticulous history can expeditiously direct the clinician to the diagnosis, especially in a patient without a smoking, asthmatic, or atopic history.


Allergy and Asthma Proceedings | 2008

Giant cell arteritis presenting as facial swelling.

Anthony J. Ricketti; Dennis J. Cleri; Janusz J. Godyn; Suzanne H. Shenk; John R. Vernaleo

Facial swelling is commonly ascribed to angioedema and a host of other causes. Temporal arteritis (TA), a disease most often diagnosed in patients over the age of 50 years, frequently presents with nonspecific and often ignored complaints (headache, symptoms of polymyalgia rheumatica, low-grade fever, fever of unknown origin, loss of appetite, depression, joint pains, weight loss, hair loss, and even respiratory symptoms). The diagnosis of TA is highly likely in the presence of new-onset headaches, polymyalgia rheumatica, and a tender, cord-like, or swollen temporal artery. Facial swelling must be appreciated as another presentation of TA, especially when accompanied by other nonspecific symptoms. High clinical suspicion, immediate treatment, and definitive diagnosis by temporal artery biopsy are necessary to prevent the most severe vascular complications of blindness and cerebrovascular accidents. Treatment with corticosteroids is most often successful. Because this treatment is fraught with all the risks of high-dose and prolonged steroid therapy, it should only be initiated in cases of significant clinical suspicion, followed by a timely temporal artery biopsy to confirm the diagnosis. Delay in therapy increases the risk of a vascular catastrophe. Delay in obtaining a temporal artery biopsy after therapy has been initiated decreases the diagnostic sensitivity of the test. Other modalities of immunosuppressive therapy remain either unsuccessful or unproven. Concomitant low-dose aspirin therapy appears to hold promise.


Journal of Asthma | 2016

Case study: Idiopathic hemothorax in a patient with status asthmaticus

Peter A. Ricketti; David W. Unkle; Richard F. Lockey; Dennis J. Cleri; Anthony J. Ricketti

Abstract Introduction: Idiopathic spontaneous hemothorax has been rarely described in the literature. Case Study: A case of status asthmaticus and spontaneous hemothorax is described in a 29-year-old female of African descent who presented to the emergency room after 2 days of severe cough productive of yellow sputum, otalgia, sore throat, subjective fevers, chills, headache, progressive wheezing, chest tightness and dyspnea. She had a history of 7 years of asthma and was non-adherent with her controller asthma medications. Prophylactic subcutaneous administration of enoxaparin 40 milligrams was initiated upon hospitalization. The patient initially had a normal chest radiograph but subsequently developed a large, left hemothorax that required tube thoracostomy placement followed by video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS). Results: The patient was transferred to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and tube thoracostomy resulted in evacuation of 1,400 milliliters of blood-like fluid, which had a pleural fluid hematocrit greater than 50% of the serum hematocrit. A contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) scan of the chest did not reveal any source for the bleeding and a technetium bone scan of the chest was normal. The patient required transfusion of 5 units of packed red blood cells. She was then taken to the operating room for VATS because of continued chest tube drainage (3,200 milliliters of fluid over a 48-hour period). Conclusion: The etiology of the hemothorax was unknown despite surgical exploration but was felt to be secondary to cough and bronchospasm associated with status asthmaticus.


Allergy and Asthma Proceedings | 2015

A 15-year old girl with asthma and lower lobe bronchiectasis.

Peter A. Ricketti; David W. Unkle; Katherine A. King; Dennis J. Cleri; Anthony J. Ricketti

Wet cough, wheeze, and sputum in an adolescent with evidence for bronchiectasis is an uncommon presentation. The differential diagnosis includes cystic fibrosis (CF), immunodeficiency disorders, complement deficiency, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis, alpha-1 antitrypsin disease, repeated aspiration pneumonia, foreign body, bronchial carcinoid, unresolved right middle lobe pneumonia, and primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD). The likely diagnosis proceeds from the more to less common in patients with these symptoms. The location of disease on computed tomography scanning, nasal and bronchial exhaled nitric oxide, identification of ultrastructural defects on electron microscopy, and specific genetic mutation help separate CF and PCD. Although differentiating these conditions is vital, the chronic management of the bronchiectasis usually includes clearance mechanisms, bronchodilators, regular exercise, appropriate vaccinations, and judicious antibiotics for airway infections.


Allergy and Asthma Proceedings | 2012

A 55-year-old man with severe persistent asthma poorly responsive to asthma therapy.

Peter A. Ricketti; Anthony J. Ricketti; Dennis J. Cleri; David W. Unkle; Vernaleo

Asthma is often triggered by allergic and nonallergic factors in atopic individuals and readily responds to anti-inflammatory and bronchodilator therapy. The differential diagnosis for poorly responsive disease includes severe persistent asthma with associated allergic rhinitis, cardiac disorders such as left ventricular failure or mitral stenosis, vocal cord dysfunction, gastroesophageal reflux disease, recurrent aspiration, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, emphysema, alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency, sarcoidosis, hypersensitivity pneumonitis, bronchiectasis, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis, airway neoplasm, and Churg-Strauss vasculitis. A careful history and physical in conjunction with appropriate screening of laboratory information will usually direct the clinician to the correct diagnosis.


Archive | 2013

Association of urinary arsenic, heavy metal, and phthalate concentrations with food allergy in adults: National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey,

Peter A. Ricketti; David W. Unkle; Dennis J. Cleri; Anthony J. Ricketti

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Peter A. Ricketti

University of South Florida

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Richard F. Lockey

University of South Florida

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