Guest guest Posted February 12, 2004 Report Share Posted February 12, 2004 Oh, Lucus, I cannot begin to answer these questions without expressing my sympathy for what you and your family went through, especially your father, and without wondering whether your brother in fact did have cystic fibrosis, which seems a distinct possibility. Your English is fine, though I know well the effort involved. So, to the questions: 1)yes; 2)no;3)no;4)yes; 5)usually not with cf, but under expert care, yes; 6)isolation room; staff gloved, gowned and capped; 7)yes, but these are professional sites, the ones that I know of and I cannot forward, copy nor re-copy them to send out; Medline is good, though;8)yes, but a Medline search might be the best;9)definitely; there are many bacteria which produce toxins that are hard to control, which is why just boiling food, for example canned food, does not always make it safe. Lucas, I belong to all the lists you sent this to, and you are going to get a lot of answers, some conflicting; we are not EXPERTS here; we are just learning, too! So, may I send love and care to you and to your family, with hope that some resolution may be achieved. n Rojas, California Looking for answers! Hi all, I have started reading your messages again and discovered non-happy (very bad) news. We lost Graham in a very unfair way (justice please... justice!). My prayers and good thoughts to and husband again. As I wrote in a message some days ago, I lost my middle brother in April 2003 (thanks for your messages, I forwarded them to Argentina). was not CF, at least not ill (may be carrier). We learned about CF with my son, but my brother never tested him self. He was 25 y.o., excellent soccer player. This message is to ask you for some help, some guidance of references where to look for appropriate information. My father is a physician dedicated to psychiatrics for 25 years. He was with during his in Hospital treatment, and after day 6, he presented an anaphylactic shock and passed away in few minutes. He started with pneumonia two weeks before. A physician told him to go home and stay in bed for one week. He gave him a generic drug. After day 7 Ale felt better and walked from his bed to the kitchen to drink a glass of water. Sent me an e-mail saying he was ok and could not breathe when intended to go to the rest room. His friends called the ambulance. After two hours, they came (remember it is Argentina, there is no 911 and definitely much less appreciation for life...). When the urgency doctor saw him, they put him in the ambulance and took him to hospital. It was then when my parents found out that, he was complicated, they live in a province 12 hours away from Buenos Aires, Ale lived and worked for a Senator in the National House of Representatives there (as the bright young lawyer that he was). My father traveled that night and found him under treatment in a Hospital's general room (a place where there are several other people. About 50 or 60 beds). Near Ale was a homeless man, my brother used to give this person his sheets at night because he was cold. (My stupid/kind brother I think now... crying again, sorry!) After 3 days, they took a sample of mucus from lungs with a little gadget that allows seeing inside of lungs as well. They found out that he had tiny injures bleeding away. After this, they moved him to an intensive-care room to monitor him better. My father told me that after the second night, they gave him valium to calm down his pain. Ale coughed a lot during nights and could rest well (during all six days). This was difficult since he needed to breathe and rest to fight the infection, and he could not make it. After valium injection, Ale started to cough and had an attack. It lasted only minutes. At the beginning, my father thought it was a heart attach caused by the excessive cough. Moreover, after researching on the symptoms and thinking once and again on Ale's episode in comparison with regular heart attacks (my dad is a physician, remember) he started thinking about an anaphylactic shock. Now the trial is on the way, and we are looking for some insights about allergies, pneumonia, anaphylactic shocks and so and so forth. I apologize for this e-mail. Remember, I am an MBA student, Bachelor in Business, Spanish speaker, translating what my father told me several times with cries in the middle (both of us). I clearly understand if you just cannot do it. Here are the questions. Feel free to refer me to any sources/people for more information. 1. Can allergenic rhinitis be considered an allergy? 2. Should an allergenic person under pneumonia be treated only for pneumonia ignoring the allergenic component? 3. Do an antibiotic block antihistaminic? My brother was receiving only antibiotics since doctors said those would block the effect on antihistaminic medication anyway. Is it the other way? Antihistaminic block antibiotics? 4. My brother presented an anaphylactic reaction when he was put under valium (we estimate). It was day number six on his treatment but first time for valium. Is this possible? 5. Should a person under pneumonia be treated with analgesics? What about anti-cough medication to reduce cough excess at night and allow him to sleep and have a good rest to fight back a dangerous infection? 6. If you have an allergenic patient with pneumonia, should the patient be on a general room or in a special room to prevent other pathogen agents? 7. Do you know any sources about quality conditions on medical/nursing/intensive-care facilities? I am researching the WHO but some shortcut would be much appreciated. 8. Do you know any study about biology and physiopathology of pain, cough, and dysponea? 9. The following is very challenging (at least for me). Do you know if a non-treated pneumonia can make toxic substance and affect heart, and/or the central nervous system? Thank you very much in advance. Regards, Lucas E. Wall MBA Class 2004 College of and Virginia - USA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 13, 2004 Report Share Posted February 13, 2004 Dear Lucas, I just wanted to say I am very sorry about your brother. I am not a medical person so don't feel qualified to answer your questions. I believe you need a doctor to help you and probably a lawyer. good luck and once again I am very sorry about your brother. love, M Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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