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Pancreatic Pseudocyst with Colonic Perforation Complication Pramudita, Angga; Simadibrata, Marcellus; Fauzi, Achmad; Soeheri, Nisan
The Indonesian Journal of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Digestive Endoscopy VOLUME 12, NUMBER 1, April 2011
Publisher : The Indonesian Journal of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Digestive Endoscopy

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (0.036 KB) | DOI: 10.24871/121201164-69

Abstract

Pancreatic pseudocyst is one of complications of both acute and chronic pancreatitis. It is a rare clinical condition. The incidence is low ranging between 1.6 and 4.5%, or 0.5-1 per 100,000 adults annually. The clinical manifestations range from asymptomatic to severe acute abdomen due to complications. Acute complications may include bleeding, infection, rupture and perforation of the gastrointestinal tract; while chronic complications are gastric and biliary obstruction as well as thrombosis of portal vein. We present a case report of a 38-year-old male with complaints of abdominal pain, fatigue, nausea and vomiting containing undigested food and yellow liquid. On clilnical examination, the patient was found to be fatigue, having enlarged abdomen, unpalpable liver and spleen, no signs of shifting dullness was detected. We found an abdominal mass in the left upper and lower quadrant sized 20 x 10 cm accompanied with epigastric pain on palpation. Abdominal ultrasonography revealed a cystic lesion on the head of pancreas with differential diagnosis of pseudocyst. The abdominal computed tomography (CT-scan) showed a lesion arising from pancreas, extending into abdominal cavity and part of left groint and attaching to left intestinal in the abdomen, part of gastric region and left diaphragm. A diagnosis of pancreatitis was suspected with differential diagnosis of pancreatic mass and peritonitis. It is a case report of pancreatic pseudocyst with acute complication of colonic perforation. Keywords: pseudocyst, pancreatitis, pancreatitis complication, colonic perforation
Design and Implementation Plan of Process and Team Based Organization in Information Technology Division in Bank Central Asia Pramudita, Angga; Welly, John
The Indonesian Journal of Business Administration Vol 4, No 7 (2015)
Publisher : The Indonesian Journal of Business Administration

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Abstract

Abstract – Bank Central Asia is one of the biggest private bank in Indonesia and is known for the its most innovative information technology service. Future banking competition will definitely require information technology as the main element. Branchless banking, digital channel, mobile banking are all IT related banking service which will be the next trend. In todays business, competitive advantage and technology are easily imitated by the competitors, and change happens very frequent and fast. Bank Central Asia should invest in its organization capabilities instead of gaining competitive advantage in its business model and strategies to adapt the very fast changing business environment. In the future, innovation in IT banking services will not dominantly be totally new products but in the form of process or service innovation. With the high demand of process based IT projects, more demand from business units to deliver variative, parallel, and complex IT related projects, GSIT as the IT division in Bank Central Asia has to adapt itself with the upcoming business needs and business environment. To grow and adapt itself with the process innovation environment, GSIT as an organization has to place itself in the business process level mindset, not the functional or products based organization structure. To absorb abundant IT projects with specific requirements and characteristics and to be self directed with minimal intervention from managements, GSIT needs to adopt team based organization concept with balanced and proper team and job design. The holistic framework of process and team based organization is hoped  to accommodate resources management in GSIT which is now growing into a massive IT organization. For the transformation to process and team based organization be successful and effective, strategic and sound implementation plan with short implementation duration and proper evaluation framework is designed along with skilled, competent, and experienced agent of changes such as senior IT managers, senior HCM managers, external OD consultants, business solution unit, and project management unit. The entire transformation process is covered by DICE framework and General Model Of Planned Change which are tools to guide and measure organization intervention process. Keywords: team based organization, process based organization, business process, project management, organization resources management, organization development, process innovation, process based IT projects
Pancreatic Pseudocyst with Colonic Perforation Complication Angga Pramudita; Marcellus Simadibrata; Achmad Fauzi; Nisan Soeheri
The Indonesian Journal of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Digestive Endoscopy VOLUME 12, NUMBER 1, April 2011
Publisher : The Indonesian Society for Digestive Endoscopy

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.24871/121201164-69

Abstract

Pancreatic pseudocyst is one of complications of both acute and chronic pancreatitis. It is a rare clinical condition. The incidence is low ranging between 1.6 and 4.5%, or 0.5-1 per 100,000 adults annually. The clinical manifestations range from asymptomatic to severe acute abdomen due to complications. Acute complications may include bleeding, infection, rupture and perforation of the gastrointestinal tract; while chronic complications are gastric and biliary obstruction as well as thrombosis of portal vein. We present a case report of a 38-year-old male with complaints of abdominal pain, fatigue, nausea and vomiting containing undigested food and yellow liquid. On clilnical examination, the patient was found to be fatigue, having enlarged abdomen, unpalpable liver and spleen, no signs of shifting dullness was detected. We found an abdominal mass in the left upper and lower quadrant sized 20 x 10 cm accompanied with epigastric pain on palpation. Abdominal ultrasonography revealed a cystic lesion on the head of pancreas with differential diagnosis of pseudocyst. The abdominal computed tomography (CT-scan) showed a lesion arising from pancreas, extending into abdominal cavity and part of left groint and attaching to left intestinal in the abdomen, part of gastric region and left diaphragm. A diagnosis of pancreatitis was suspected with differential diagnosis of pancreatic mass and peritonitis. It is a case report of pancreatic pseudocyst with acute complication of colonic perforation. Keywords: pseudocyst, pancreatitis, pancreatitis complication, colonic perforation
Cutaneous Adverse Drug Reaction Among HIV-Infected Patients Starting Antituberculosis Treatment Widhani, Alvina; Karjadi, Teguh Harjono; Yunihastuti, Evy; Salwani, Desi; Pramudita, Angga; Nababan, Saut Horas; Praptini, Mirna Nurasri; Mondrowinduro, Prionggo
Jurnal Penyakit Dalam Indonesia Vol. 9, No. 4
Publisher : UI Scholars Hub

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Abstract

Introduction. Treatment of tuberculosis (TB) in HIV patients is complicated due to numerous comorbidities and possible adverse effects. One of which is cutaneous adverse drug reaction (CADR). This adverse event is often difficult to manage because of multiple medications the patients get. The objective of this study was to know the prevalence and risk factors of CADR among HIV-infected patients starting anti-TB treatment. Methods. This retrospective study reviewed data from medical records of new patients at Working Group on AIDS outpatient clinic at Cipto Mangunkusumo Hospital, Indonesia in January 2008-December 2010 that had started anti-TB treatment. Risk factors of CADR among HIV patients treated with antituberculosis drugs evaluated were sex, age, route of HIV transmission, TB manifestation, and baseline CD4+ cell count. Numeric data were analyzed using independent T-test if normally distributed, otherwise Mann Whitney U test were used. Chi-square or Fisher’s exact test were used for categorical data. p-value was considered significant if below 0.05. Results. Of 454 HIV-infected patients that started anti-TB treatment, median age was 30 years. Most patients were male and intravenous drug users/IDU. Median baseline CD4+ cell count was 61 cells/ μL. There were 10.6% subjects that developed CADR. Most common manifestations were maculopapular rashes (66.7%), followed by erythema multiforme (14.6%), and Stevens Johnson Syndrome (8.3%). Anti-TB drugs were stopped and then re-challenge was conducted in 54.2% patients. Anti-TB drugs were continued and only the suspected drug was stopped in 29.2% patients. The offending drugs were cotrimoxazole (41.7%), rifampicine (41.7%), ethambutol (16.7%), pyrazinamide (14.6%), pyrimethamine (12.5%), isoniazide (10.4%), streptomycin (8.3%), efavirenz (8.3%), fixed dose combination of antituberculosis drugs (8.3%), and nevirapine (4.2%). The proportion of CADR was higher in woman than man (12% vs. 10.3%, p=0.66), non-IDU than IDU (13% vs. 9.2%, p=0.20), without extrapulmonary TB than extrapulmonary TB (11.1% vs. 9.4%, p=0.29), but the associations weren’t statistically significant. Median age was higher (31 vs. 30 years, p=0.32) and CD4 cell count (59.5 vs. 62 sel/μL, p=0.96) was lower in CADR group than non CADR group. Conclusion. The prevalence of CADR among HIV-infected patients starting anti-TB treatment was 10.6%. Sex, age, route of HIV transmission, TB manifestation, and baseline CD4+ did not have statistically significant association with CADR.