The New England journal of medicine
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The question of suffering and its relation to organic illness has rarely been addressed in the medical literature. This article offers a description of the nature and causes of suffering in patients undergoing medical treatment. A distinction based on clinical observations is made between suffering and physical distress. ⋯ Suffering can include physical pain but is by no means limited to it. The relief of suffering and the cure of disease must be seen as twin obligations of a medical profession that is truly dedicated to the care of the sick. Physicians' failure to understand the nature of suffering can result in medical intervention that (though technically adequate) not only fails to relieve suffering but becomes a source of suffering itself.
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We studied seven patients with idiopathic Bence Jones proteinuria (excretion greater than 1.0 g per 24 hours) who did not have acquired Fanconi's syndrome or an intact monoclonal immunoglobulin in the serum. None had evidence of overt multiple myeloma, of its variants, of systemic amyloidosis, or of malignant lymphoproliferative diseases when the proteinuria was recognized. In three of the seven patients, symptomatic multiple myeloma (associated with systemic amyloidosis in one) developed 8.8 to 21.1 years later. ⋯ The remaining two patients still have apparently benign Bence Jones proteinuria after 7.7 and 12 years. Plasma-cell labeling indexes were low in all cases tested. This experience shows that although idiopathic Bence Jones proteinuria may remain stable for years, multiple myeloma or amyloidosis often develops, and consequently these patients must be kept under observation indefinitely.