Disease-a-month : DM
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Tuberculosis has been a disease of human beings for thousands of years. In recent times it has waxed to become the feared White Plague of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and waned under the impact of effective chemotherapy until its elimination seemed possible by the early twenty-first century. The resurgence of tuberculosis in the past 10 to 15 years, caused by unanticipated events such as the appearance of the human immunodeficiency virus and deteriorating social conditions, also brought with it the problem of multiple drug resistance. ⋯ Failure of compliance can be a significant problem in patients who are homeless, or drug abusers, or who for various reasons cannot or will not complete a course of therapy. Directly observed therapy is strongly recommended for these patients, and for assistance in its administration the physician must cooperate with the local or state health department. The health department also must be notified whenever a case of tuberculosis is identified.
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Adult-onset myasthenia gravis is an acquired autoimmune disorder of neuromuscular transmission in which acetylcholine receptor antibodies attack the postsynaptic membrane of the neuromuscular junction. Although the cause of this disease is unknown, the role of immune responses in its pathogenesis is well established. Circulating acetylcholine receptor antibodies are present in 80% to 90% of patients with the generalized form of myasthenia gravis. ⋯ One should always exclude drug-induced myasthenia gravis for all patients. With the introduction of new modalities of treatment, particularly immunosuppressive or immunomodulating drugs, plasma exchange and thymectomy, the morbidity and mortality of myasthenia gravis have decreased dramatically to the point that myasthenia gravis should not be considered as serious a disease as it once was. Although the several therapeutic options are usually effective and have meant independence in daily life to many patients with myasthenia gravis, well-designed, controlled, prospective studies are still lacking.
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Chronic pain is associated with substantial psychosocial and economic stress, coupled with functional loss and various levels of vocational dysfunction. The role of a pain center is to focus on chronic pain in a multidisciplinary, comprehensive manner, providing the patient with the most effective opportunity to manage his or her chronic disease syndrome. This article focuses on methods to manage many types of chronic pain and describes a broad range of pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic interventions and options available to the patient. ⋯ This combination of therapies may provide patients with the skills and knowledge needed to increase their sense of control over pain. The integration of appropriate pharmacotherapeutic regimens, neural blockades, physical therapy, and psychologic techniques maximizes a patient's effectiveness in dealing with chronic pain. Three case studies are presented in Part II.
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The acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a serious and complex clinical problem that often threatens the lives of patients. Emerging clinical data suggest that the survival of patients with this disorder may have improved during the last two decades, presumably because of advances in supportive medical care. Among the supportive therapies used to treat patients with ARDS, none is more complex than mechanical ventilation. ⋯ Prevention and cure of ARDS have remained elusive goals because of the lack of specific therapies directed against the known pathogenic factors. Ongoing investigations are aimed at identifying specific therapies to interrupt the mechanisms of inflammation and lung injury responsible for this syndrome. Until such therapies become available, clinicians caring for patients with ARDS should attempt to minimize additional morbidity and mortality resulting from nosocomial infections and iatrogenic injuries.
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The practice of internal medicine involves daily exposure to abnormalities of acid-base balance. A wide variety of disease states either predispose patients to develop these conditions or lead to the use of medications that alter renal, gastrointestinal, or pulmonary function and secondarily alter acid-base balance. In addition, primary acid-base disease follows specific forms of renal tubular dysfunction (renal tubular acidosis). ⋯ This includes a review of whole animal and renal tubular physiologic characteristics and a discussion of the current knowledge of the molecular biology of acid-base transport. We stress an approach to diagnosis that relies on knowledge of acid-base physiologic function, and we include discussion of the appropriate treatment of each disorder considered. Finally, we include a discussion of the effects of acidosis and alkalosis on human physiologic functions.