therapeutic action: supportive care

Avian toxicoses: a review

Pet and wild birds can be poisoned by many common substances including metals found in cage materials, kitchen cookware fumes, toxic plants, chocolate, salt, and rodent poison. Symptoms vary by toxin but can include difficulty breathing, weakness, seizures, and bleeding. Treatment focuses on removing the source, supportive care, and specific antidotes when available, though diagnosis is often challenging due to the small size of birds.

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Catastrophic Cerebral Infarctions in a Pediatric Patient with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Due to Mucorales Infection

An 11-year-old girl with leukemia undergoing chemotherapy developed a severe fungal infection called mucormycosis caused by Lichtheimia ramosa. The infection spread rapidly from her sinuses to her eyes and brain, causing multiple blood clots in brain arteries and a massive stroke within just five days. Despite emergency surgery to remove the clots, the infection had progressed too far and the patient sadly did not survive, highlighting how dangerous this fungal infection can be in children with weakened immune systems.

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Weaving birth: interdependence and the fungal turn

This paper explores childbirth through an innovative lens, comparing it to how fungal networks operate—through connection and interdependence rather than isolation. Using real birth stories, the authors show how supportive, trusting care environments allow mothers to surrender to the birthing process, whereas medical systems focused on control and isolation can be traumatic. The paper argues that positive birth experiences happen when pregnant people feel safe, supported, and connected to their care providers, communities, and their own bodies.

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Weaving birth: interdependence and the fungal turn

This paper explores how childbirth can be understood through the metaphor of fungal networks, which interconnect and support life through relationships rather than individual independence. The authors share personal birth experiences—one traumatic and controlled, one trusting and flowing—to illustrate how care models fundamentally shape birthing experiences. Using phenomenological philosophy, they argue that positive birth experiences emerge when caregivers create environments that allow the birthing person to feel safe, supported, and interconnected with others, similar to how fungi thrive through collaborative relationships.

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