Nederlands tijdschrift voor geneeskunde
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In three men, aged 81, 66 and 58 years, breast cancer was diagnosed. All three were treated by modified radical mastectomy and axillary-node dissection. They received tamoxifen and the first and the third patient also received radiotherapy. ⋯ As in women, of the known risk factors for male breast cancer, a positive family history is one of the most important ones. Modified radical mastectomy, combined with sentinel-node biopsy by experienced teams, is the standard treatment. Criteria for adjuvant systemic treatment are identical for men and women, although hormonal therapy (tamoxifen) has a more prominent place in the adjuvant setting because of the high percentage of positive hormone receptors in men.
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Palliative sedation is the intentional lowering of the level of consciousness ofa patient in the last phase of life by means of the administration of sedatives. The objective of palliative sedation is to relieve severe physical or psychological suffering that is otherwise untreatable. Sedation is used in 12% of all patients dying in the Netherlands. ⋯ Midazolam is used most often for continuous sedation, usually by subcutaneous infusion; if the response is insufficient, a combination of midazolam with levomepromazine or phenobarbital or monotreatment with propofol may be used. If continuous infusion is not desired or feasible, intermittent administration of midazolam, diazepam, lorazepam or chlorpromazine may be considered. Provided that it is used under the right circumstances, palliative sedation does not shorten life.
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Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd · Feb 2005
Case Reports[Terminal sedation: consultation with a second physician as is the case in euthanasia and assisted suicide].
In terminally-ill patients in the Netherlands deep sedation by means of a continuous subcutaneous infusion with midazolam occurs more frequently than euthanasia and assisted suicide. Deep terminal sedation is applied to relieve symptoms during the phase of dying, but in contrast to euthanasia and assisted suicide, does not hasten death. In three terminally-ill patients, a 65-year-old man suffering from pulmonary carcinoma, a 94-year-old woman with general malaise, nausea and anorexia, and a 79-year-old woman in the final stage of ovarian carcinoma, a general-practitioner advisor was consulted about an end-of-life decision--deep terminal sedation versus euthanasia or assisted suicide. ⋯ The third patient's request for euthanasia was considered to meet the legal criteria for euthanasia. Compliance with the Dutch statutory criteria for due care in euthanasia and assisted suicide might also be helpful when deciding about terminal deep sedation, but the role and responsibility of the attending physician may differ. However, the radical effects of sedation on the terminally-ill patient and the rapid changes in the clinical situation of the patient when the decision to sedate is taken, both emphasize the need for consultation with another physician.
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Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd · Feb 2005
Case Reports[Diagnostic image (229). A neonate with a sublingual swelling].
A male neonate presented with a right-sided swelling in the floor of the mouth, a congenital ranula, which disappeared spontaneously.
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Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd · Feb 2005
[Palliative sedation, the sympathetic alternative for euthanasia?].
Palliative sedation is given to relieve refractory discomfort (pain, shortness of breath, agitation) during the phase when life expectancy is estimated to be a week or less. It is a medical intervention which, although not expressly meant to shorten life, may well do so. ⋯ Figures show that in a limited number of cases palliative sedation is actually applied with the intention to hasten death. It may well be impossible to rid ourselves ofthis uncertainty conclusively.