The American journal of medicine
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For patients hospitalized with serious illnesses, we identified factors associated with a stated preference to forgo cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), examined physician-patient communication about these issues, and determined the relationship of patients' preferences to intensity of care and survival. ⋯ The diagnosis, patients' perception of the prognosis, and hospital site were significantly associated with patients' resuscitation preferences after adjusting for patient demographics, severity of illness, and functional status. The rate of discussing CPR was low even for patients who did not want CPR. Patient preferences not to receive CPR were associated with a small decrease in intensity of care but no difference in hospital survival.
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Internal medicine training programs must adapt to health care systems faced with balancing the competitive priorities of patient-care responsibilities and educational needs. ⋯ Through organizational restructuring, it is possible to improve the quality of patient care and improving the efficiency of patient-care management.
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New methods of measuring and controlling glycemia in diabetes mellitus have been developed and implemented in the past 10 years. We examined whether glycemia, as measured by glycosylated hemoglobin, changed in outpatient insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) populations between 1985 and 1993 and whether contemporaneous changes in therapy could account for observed changes in glycemia. ⋯ The level of average glycemia has decreased in IDDM patients over the past 8 years, attributable, at least in part, to an increased frequency of monitoring and of insulin injections. Glycemia decreased in NIDDM, especially in the subset of patients treated with insulin. This temporal shift in glycemic control should have a salutary effect on the development of long-term microvascular and neurologic complications.
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Widespread use of improved measurements for serum thyroid hormones and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) has resulted in characterization of the syndromes of subclinical hypothyroidism, characterized by normal free T4 estimate and raised serum TSH, and subclinical hyperthyroidism, in which patients have normal serum free T4 estimate and decreased serum TSH. Therapy for these two disorders in generally recommended but must be individualized according to the patient's general medical condition. ⋯ This report reviews subclinical hypothyroidism and subclinical hyperthyroidism, describing their causes, diagnostic criteria, complications, and indications for treatment. A brief review of testing for thyroid function is presented, and each of the subclinical disorders is compared with the classic syndromes of hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism.
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To determine the demographics, clinical presentations, pathological findings, and the effectiveness of treatment in 110 patients with thoracic endometriosis syndrome (TES). ⋯ There is a significant association between the presence of pelvic endometriosis and TES, with the latter occurring approximately 5 years later. Pneumothorax is the most common manifestation. The most plausible explanation for pathogenesis involves peritoneal-pleural movement of endometrial tissue through diaphragmatic defects and microembolization through pelvic veins. Diagnosis is established on clinical grounds in most cases. Surgical pleural abrasion is superior to hormonal treatment in the long-term management of pneumothorax. Earlier diagnosis and effective therapy of TES can decrease the morbidity of this disease in women during their reproductive period.