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Open Access
September 09, 2025
Biopsy-Negative Giant Cell Arteritis Presenting as Stroke Mimic with Vision Loss and Complex Vascular Disease
Mohamed M. Khamis
,
Daniel Goering
Global Journal of Medical Case Reports
2025
,
5(1),
29-35.
DOI:
10.31586/gjmcr.2025.6177
Views
352
Downloads
26
Abstract
A man in his 60s with multiple vascular comorbidities presented with sudden, painless vision loss in one eye. Although he had a high risk for atherosclerotic events, initial evaluation for stroke was negative for acute ischemia, but found to have markedly elevated inflammatory markers. Accordingly, giant cell arteritis was investigated and Ophthalmologic findings and fulfillment of the 2022
[...] Read more.
A man in his 60s with multiple vascular comorbidities presented with sudden, painless vision loss in one eye. Although he had a high risk for atherosclerotic events, initial evaluation for stroke was negative for acute ischemia, but found to have markedly elevated inflammatory markers. Accordingly, giant cell arteritis was investigated and Ophthalmologic findings and fulfillment of the 2022 American College of Rheumatology/European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology classification criteria supported the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis, despite a negative temporal artery biopsy. Management included high-dose glucocorticoids and delayed tocilizumab initiation due to the need for multiple vascular surgeries. Vision loss was irreversible, but systemic symptoms resolved and vascular interventions were successful. This case highlights the diagnostic and management complexities of biopsy-negative giant cell arteritis in patients with severe atherosclerotic vascular disease, emphasizing the importance of clinical judgment and established classification criteria when imaging and biopsy results are inconclusive.
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Open Access
June 26, 2025
The Relationship Between Lymphocyte Count and Mortality in Patients with Dysphagia
Min Wei
,
Chengming Ke
,
Sumin Wu
World Journal of Clinical Medicine Research
2025
,
5(1),
40-51.
DOI:
10.31586/wjcmr.2025.6128
Views
389
Downloads
50
Abstract
Background:
Dysphagia is a common functional impairment in elderly populations, often leading to severe complications such as malnutrition and aspiration pneumonia, significantly increasing healthcare burdens. Currently, effective prognostic assessment tools are lacking. The absolute lymphocyte count (ALC), a biomarker reflecting immune-nutritional status, has potential predictive value in this context, though its role in dysphagia prognosis remains unclear.
Methods:
This retrospective cohort study included 253 dysphagic patients who received percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) or total parenteral nutrition (TPN) between 2014 and 2017. Five patients with missing ALC were excluded. Cox regression models assessed the association between ALC and mortality. ALC was analyzed as both continuous variable (using restriocted cubic splines) and categorical tertiles, with additional threshold analyses to assess non-linearity. Kaplan–Meier survival curves and subgroup analyses were also performed.
Results:
Lower ALC was associated with poorer nutritional status, higher inflammatory markers, and greater comorbidity burden. Higher ALC was independently associated with reduced mortality (adjusted HR: 0.60; 95% CI: 0.44–0.83;
p
= 0.002). Patients in the highest tertile had significantly better survival than those in the lowest (HR: 0.37; 95% CI: 0.23–0.59;
P
< 0.001). A non-linear threshold effect was identified at ALC = 1.899×10
9
/L (
p
for non-linearity = 0.009). Kaplan–Meier analysis confirmed improved survival with higher ALC (
p
[...] Read more.
Background:
Dysphagia is a common functional impairment in elderly populations, often leading to severe complications such as malnutrition and aspiration pneumonia, significantly increasing healthcare burdens. Currently, effective prognostic assessment tools are lacking. The absolute lymphocyte count (ALC), a biomarker reflecting immune-nutritional status, has potential predictive value in this context, though its role in dysphagia prognosis remains unclear.
Methods:
This retrospective cohort study included 253 dysphagic patients who received percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) or total parenteral nutrition (TPN) between 2014 and 2017. Five patients with missing ALC were excluded. Cox regression models assessed the association between ALC and mortality. ALC was analyzed as both continuous variable (using restriocted cubic splines) and categorical tertiles, with additional threshold analyses to assess non-linearity. Kaplan–Meier survival curves and subgroup analyses were also performed.
Results:
Lower ALC was associated with poorer nutritional status, higher inflammatory markers, and greater comorbidity burden. Higher ALC was independently associated with reduced mortality (adjusted HR: 0.60; 95% CI: 0.44–0.83;
p
= 0.002). Patients in the highest tertile had significantly better survival than those in the lowest (HR: 0.37; 95% CI: 0.23–0.59;
P
< 0.001). A non-linear threshold effect was identified at ALC = 1.899×10
9
/L (
p
for non-linearity = 0.009). Kaplan–Meier analysis confirmed improved survival with higher ALC (
p
< 0.0001). Subgroup analyses showed the protective effect of higher ALC was consistent across age, sex, BMI, PEG use, and comorbidity strata, with no significant interactions.
Conclusions:
ALC is an independent, non-linear predictor of mortality in older dysphagic patients and may aid clinical risk stratification across diverse patient subgroups.
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Open Access
June 06, 2025
Food security, dietary diversity, and age as determinants of nutritional status among adolescent girls in coastal Bangladesh
Tanzina Akter
,
Taslima Akter
,
Sharmin Shilpy Nokshi
,
Sujit Kumar Banik
,
Abu Ansar Md Rizwan
Journal of Biomedical and Life Sciences
2025
,
5(2),
110-121.
DOI:
10.31586/jbls.2025.6112
Views
561
Downloads
85
Abstract
Background:
Adolescent girls living in disaster-prone coastal regions of Bangladesh face heightened nutritional vulnerability due to limited food access, poor dietary diversity, and environmental stressors. Despite growing concerns about adolescent malnutrition, few studies have examined the combined influence of food security, dietary diversity, and age on nutritional outcomes in these
[...] Read more.
Background:
Adolescent girls living in disaster-prone coastal regions of Bangladesh face heightened nutritional vulnerability due to limited food access, poor dietary diversity, and environmental stressors. Despite growing concerns about adolescent malnutrition, few studies have examined the combined influence of food security, dietary diversity, and age on nutritional outcomes in these settings.
Objectives:
This study aimed to assess the association between dietary diversity, food security, and age with the nutritional status of adolescent girls in coastal Bangladesh.
Methods:
A cross-sectional survey was conducted among 345 adolescent girls aged 10–19 in Chattogram and Cox’s Bazar. Data on dietary intake were collected using a 24-hour dietary recall and a food frequency questionnaire. Household food security was assessed using a validated scale. Nutritional status was determined using BMI-for-age classifications. Bivariate and multivariate analyses explored associations between dietary diversity, food security, age, and nutritional status.
Results:
Among participants, 10.14% were underweight, and 29.85% were either overweight or obese. While 17.39% demonstrated high dietary diversity (≥7 food groups), the majority had moderate diversity (5 or 6 food groups) (59.42%). Food-insecure households were significantly more likely to have overweight or obese adolescents (p < 0.05). Although dietary diversity was associated with BMI in bivariate analysis, it was not a significant predictor in the multivariate model. Age showed a significant relationship with both dietary diversity and nutritional status.
Conclusion:
The findings emphasize the importance of addressing household food security and age-related nutritional vulnerabilities in coastal areas. Interventions should prioritize age-sensitive, culturally appropriate strategies to improve dietary quality and prevent the double burden of malnutrition among adolescent girls.
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Open Access
June 02, 2025
Residual Sets and the Density of Binary Goldbach Representations
Daniel Sankei
,
Loyford Njagi
,
Josephine Mutembei
,
Grace Gakii
Journal of Mathematics Letters
2025
,
3(1),
1-21.
DOI:
10.31586/jml.2025.6091
Views
770
Downloads
69
Abstract
A residual-set framework is introduced for analyzing additive prime conjectures, with particular emphasis on the Strong Goldbach Conjecture (SGC). For each even integer
E
n
≥
4
, the residual set
[...] Read more.
A residual-set framework is introduced for analyzing additive prime conjectures, with particular emphasis on the Strong Goldbach Conjecture (SGC). For each even integer
E
n
≥
4
, the residual set
ℛ
(
E
n
)
=
{
E
n
−
p
∣
p
<
E
n
,
p
∈
ℙ
}
is defined, and the universal residual set
ℛ
E
=
∪
E
n
ℛ
(
E
n
)
is constructed. It is shown that
ℛ
E
contains infinitely many primes. A nontrivial constructive lower bound is derived, establishing that the number of Goldbach partitions satisfies
G
(
E
)
≥
2
for all
E
≥
8
, and that the cumulative partition count satisfies
∑
E
≤
N
G
(
E
)
≫
N
2
log
4
N
. An optimized deterministic algorithm is implemented to verify the SGC for even integers up to 16,000 digits. Each computed partition
E
n
=
p
+
q
is validated using elliptic curve primality testing, and no exceptions are observed. Runtime variability observed in the empirical tests corresponds with known fluctuations in prime density and modular residue distribution. A recursive construction is formulated for generating Goldbach partitions, using residual descent and leveraging properties of the residual sets. The method extends naturally to Lemoine's Conjecture, asserting that every odd integer
n
≥
7
can be expressed as
n
=
p
+
2
q
, where
p
,
q
∈
ℙ
. A corresponding residual formulation is developed, and it is proven that at least two valid partitions exist for all
n
≥
9
. Comparative analysis with the Hardy-Littlewood and Chen estimates is provided to contextualize the cumulative growth rate. The residual-set methodology offers a deterministic, scalable, and structurally grounded approach to additive problems in prime number theory, supported by both theoretical results and large-scale computational evidence.
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