Arch Intern Med
-
When patients are examined for possible cobalamin deficiency, great stress is often placed on the presence or absence of macrocytosis and anemia and on how low the serum cobalamin level is. The present study, however, shows that only 45 (64%) of 70 consecutively diagnosed patients with pernicious anemia, the most common cause of cobalamin deficiency, had very low cobalamin levels (less than 74 pmol/L [or less than 100 ng/L]). Anemia was absent in 13 (19%) of the patients, and macrocytosis was absent in 23 (33%) of the patients; such absence was particularly common when cobalamin levels were only slightly or moderately low (74 to 184 pmol/L). ⋯ These observations indicate that macrocytosis and anemia, two classic features of pernicious anemia, may be overstressed in our diagnostic approach. All subnormal serum cobalamin results are best viewed as pathological until proved otherwise. Emphasis on only very low cobalamin levels risks delaying the diagnosis of pernicious anemia in a substantial proportion of cases, particularly in those without anemia or macrocytosis.
-
There is a growing effort to formalize ethics teaching for medical residents. Currently, this effort is overemphasizing a single approach--the clinical ethics consultation or ethics case conference--at the expense of several other important options. While the clinical ethics approach has many benefits, it also has harmful side effects when it is made the single method for residency ethics teaching: it constricts ethics teaching within too narrow a view of medical ethics, and it forfeits an opportunity for ethics to challenge some problematic features of residency education itself.