Insulin autoimmune syndrome (IAS) is a rare cause of hypoglycaemia, characterised by recurrent hypoglycaemic episodes secondary to insulin autoantibodies in individuals who are not exposed to exogenous insulin. We are reporting a case of IAS in a 64-year-old gentleman, who presented with predominant postprandial hypoglycaemic episodes. On biochemical evaluation, he was found to have hyperinsulinemic hypoglycaemia. Localisation studies with MRI abdomen and endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) were negative for pancreatic tumour. Tests sent for insulin antibody levels were elevated. The patient was treated with frequent meals, acarbose and glucocorticoids. Patient condition improved and did not experience hypoglycaemia on follow-up.We report a case of a 68-year-old woman who presented with atypical chest pain and fluctuating neurological symptoms 4 weeks after cryoballoon ablation procedure for atrial fibrillation. Brain imaging showed multiple embolic infarcts, while the chest imaging revealed an abnormal connection between the posterior wall of the left atrium and the oesophagus. Based on her clinical presentation and the imaging findings, a diagnosis of left atrio-oesophageal fistula (AOF) was established. AOF carries a high mortality rate unless an urgent surgical repair is performed. Oesophageal instrumentation for an echocardiogram or endoscopy should be avoided as it can result in massive air embolus, causing stroke or death. The gut microbiome is involved in antitumor immunotherapy and chemotherapy responses; however, evidence-based research on the role of gut microbiome in predicting response to neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (nCRT) in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) remains scarce. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/amenamevir.html This prospective, longitudinal study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of the gut microbiome in predicting nCRT responses. We collected 167 fecal samples from 84 patients with LARC before and after nCRT and 31 specimens from healthy individuals for 16S rRNA sequencing. Patients were divided into responders and nonresponders according to pathologic response to nCRT. After identifying microbial biomarkers related to nCRT responses, we constructed a random forest classifier for nCRT response prediction of a training cohort of baseline samples from 37 patients and validated the classifier in another cohort of 47 patients. We observed significant microbiome alterations represented by a decrease in LARC-related pathogens and an increase in and during nCRT. Furthermore, a prominent microbiota difference between responders and nonresponders was noticed in the baseline samples. Microbes related with butyrate production, including , and , were overrepresented in responders, whereas and were overrepresented in nonresponders. Ten biomarkers were selected for the response-prediction classifier, including , and , which yielded an area under the curve value of 93.57% [95% confidence interval (CI), 85.76%-100%] in the training cohort and 73.53% (95% CI, 58.96%-88.11%) in the validation cohort. The gut microbiome offers novel potential biomarkers for predicting nCRT responses, which has important manifestations in the clinical management of these patients. The gut microbiome offers novel potential biomarkers for predicting nCRT responses, which has important manifestations in the clinical management of these patients. The social determinants of health are a decisive yet persistently understudied area for tackling global health challenges like antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Precarity is one determinant whose importance is increasingly recognised, which we define here as 'a form of pernicious self-dependence that undermines individuals' control over their own lives and limits their ability to flexibly respond to crises'. We aimed to assess the relationship between precarity, other forms of deprivation and healthcare-seeking behaviour by asking, 'What is the impact of precarity, marginalisation and clinical presentation on healthcare-seeking behaviour?' and 'Do patients experiencing precarious livelihoods have clinically less advisable healthcare-seeking behaviour?' We used healthcare-seeking behaviour census survey data from rural Thailand and Laos, wherein five rural communities were surveyed two times over a period of 3 months (2-month recall period). Using descriptive statistical and multivariate logistic regression t policy, we call for future research to study systematically the healthcare-seeking behaviour impact of precarious livelihoods, social policy and community development initiatives. NCT03241316. NCT03241316.To effectively tackle population health challenges, we must address the fundamental determinants of behaviour and health. Among other things, this will entail devoting more attention to the evaluation of upstream intervention strategies. However, merely increasing the supply of such studies is not enough. The pivotal link between research and policy or practice should be the cumulation of insight from multiple studies. If conventional evidence synthesis can be thought of as analogous to building a wall, then we can increase the supply of bricks (the number of studies), their similarity (statistical commensurability) or the strength of the mortar (the statistical methods for holding them together). However, many contemporary public health challenges seem akin to herding sheep in mountainous terrain, where ordinary walls are of limited use and a more flexible way of combining dissimilar stones (pieces of evidence) may be required. This would entail shifting towards generalising the functions of interventions, rather than their effects; towards inference to the best explanation, rather than relying on binary hypothesis-testing; and towards embracing divergent findings, to be resolved by testing theories across a cumulated body of work. In this way we might channel a spirit of pragmatic pluralism into making sense of complex sets of evidence, robust enough to support more plausible causal inference to guide action, while accepting and adapting to the reality of the public health landscape rather than wishing it were otherwise. The traditional art of dry stone walling can serve as a metaphor for the more 'holistic sense-making' we propose.