Military medicine
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Review Case Reports
Adult-diagnosed Chronic Granulomatous Disease: The Need to Increase Awareness.
Chronic granulomatous disease is genetic disorder characterized by the inability of phagocytes to produce sufficient oxidative burst needed to kill intracellular organisms. Patients have recurrent, life-threatening infections involving multiple systems including the lungs, skin, lymph nodes, and liver. The majority of patients with chronic granulomatous disease are diagnosed in childhood although some may present in adulthood due to a milder phenotype. ⋯ She developed subsequent bacterial and fungal infections initially attributed to immunosuppressive drugs. Further evaluation revealed the diagnosis of chronic granulomatous disease. We review the diagnosis and treatment of chronic granulomatous disease in hopes to increase awareness of this disease in adulthood in order to initiate potential life-saving prophylactic antibiotics.
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Review
20 Years of Radiographic Imaging: Crystalline Deposits Causing Severe Arthropathy and Erosions.
Urate crystal gout arthritis and calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease (CPPD) are crystalline arthropathies seen in middle age to elderly patients, but are also seen in the active duty military population. Flares of either can be identified by acute joint pain, associated swelling, tenderness, and warmth. Definitive diagnosis involves synovial analysis from arthrocentesis. ⋯ A 20-year review of imaging in an elderly female with known gout arthropathy found that she had radiographic evidence of concomitant CPPD-associated damage to many of her joints. Clinicians should be aware of the different erosive arthropathies, their corresponding imaging findings, evaluation for underlying metabolic disorders if appropriate, and the possibility that they may occur in the same joint. Early prevention can reduce joint destruction later in life.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Core and Whole-Body Vibration Exercise Improve Military Foot March Performance in Novice Trainees: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
The purpose of the present study was to investigate core exercise training and whole-body vibration (WBV) as a training method to improve performance and recovery from an 8-km military foot march in novice trainees. ⋯ Core exercise training with or without WBV improved 8-km foot march performance time by 5-6 minutes. The improvements are likely because of an increase in trunk stability. Additionally, this study showed that completing two identical foot marches a month apart increases performance and improves recovery.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Non-pharmacological Home Therapies for Subacute Low Back Pain in Active Duty Military Personnel: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Low back pain (LBP) is a major cause of visits to ambulatory care, missed duty time, and disability discharge. The subacute phase of LBP presents an opportune time to prevent chronicity and lessen recurrence. The goal of this randomized controlled trial (RCT) was to determine the relative effectiveness of neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) training and a progressive exercise program (PEP) on improving physical performance, pain, and torso strength in U.S. service members with subacute LBP, compared to standard primary care management (PCM) alone. ⋯ In an active duty population with subacute LBP, integrating NMES strength training into the rehabilitation therapy may offer a modest benefit for increasing sit-ups and push-ups and improving torso strength.
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Scholarly activity among family medicine physicians is an important element of military medical readiness, both in terms of required scholarship during training and ongoing scholarship to address ongoing and emergent operational medical threats. Most literature on barriers to scholarly activity are limited to training programs and lack an important element in overcoming barriers-their priority to physicians. This study seeks to address these gaps by identifying prioritized research training needs of military family medicine physicians at all levels of training and practice. ⋯ Knowledge of military family medicine physicians' prioritized research training needs enables a focused approach to support an essential component of military medical readiness: primary care scholarship. Addressing these needs may begin with raising awareness of military primary care research network resources. Furthermore, a coordinated effort to develop specific training modules to address needs and ongoing research to identify, target training by audience need, and prioritize needs as they change over time are indicated to ensure that military family medicine physicians maintain and develop a flourishing culture of scholarly engagement.