Arch Intern Med
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To test whether, in patients with chronic dyspnea, a diagnostic approach based on objective confirmation of suspected diagnoses would be superior to one based on clinical impression alone, we prospectively studied 85 patients with a primary complaint of dyspnea seen in a pulmonary subspecialty clinic. We achieved 100% success in determining the causes of dyspnea compared with only 66% accuracy based on clinical impression alone. Four groups of disorders, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, interstitial lung diseases, and cardiomyopathy accounted for two thirds of the cases. ⋯ Chest roentgenogram was most useful for interstitial lung disease, and comprehensive exercise testing for dyspnea due to psychogenic factors or deconditioning. Specific therapy was effective in reducing or eliminating dyspnea in the majority of cases. We conclude that a diagnostic approach to chronic dyspnea based on objective findings and verification, rather than clinical impression alone, will consistently lead to an accurate diagnosis and an improved therapeutic outcome.
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Comment Letter Comparative Study
Use of fiberoptic vs conventional pulmonary artery catheters.
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Comparative Study
Evaluation of the do not resuscitate orders at a community hospital.
Demographic, medical, and outcome characteristics for 821 do not resuscitate (DNR) patients were compared with 300 age- and sex-matched control patients, and with 230 patients for whom cardiopulmonary resuscitation had been performed. Do not resuscitate patients were more likely to be female and older than cardiopulmonary resuscitation patients and to have a child as next of kin. Although DNR patients in intensive care units had comparable illness levels before and at the time of the order, treatment levels were reduced when the order was written. ⋯ We identified diagnosis, prior activity, hospital unit, and employment status as predictors of DNR. According to documentation, 20% of patients participated in the DNR decision. Introduction of a DNR progress note form significantly improved documentation of the DNR process, but further efforts to improve DNR practice and patient participation are recommended.
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We report a case of Lyme myocarditis presenting solely as complete heart block in a previously healthy 32-year-old white man. Indium cardiac antimyosin scan showed diffuse uptake (2+, on a scale of 0 to 4+) during the acute phase of the illness. The electrocardiogram and the indium cardiac antimyosin scan were normal 6 weeks after completion of tetracycline and prednisone treatment. Lyme carditis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of complete heart block of unclear origins, even in patients presenting without other signs or symptoms suggestive of Lyme disease.
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We studied five patients with hemophilia A in the age range of 18 to 64 years who were infected with human immunodeficiency virus and who developed immune thrombocytopenia. The clinical course of immune thrombocytopenia in relation to human immunodeficiency virus infection and the patients' responses to splenectomy and immune variables were determined. All five patients developed antibody to human immunodeficiency virus 6 to 60 months (median, 24 months) before the onset of thrombocytopenia, and two patients became human immunodeficiency virus antigenemic (one patient at the onset of immune thrombocytopenia and the other 60 months after the onset of immune thrombocytopenia [24 months after splenectomy]). ⋯ Because of the progression of immune thrombocytopenia, four of the five patients underwent splenectomy with preoperative high-dose intravenous immune globulin. All four had an excellent immediate response to splenectomy, with a rise in platelet count to more than 300 x 10(9)/L and sustained remission during postsplenectomy follow-up of 6 to 45 months. There was no significant drop in CD4 and CD8 counts after splenectomy, and all four patients remained clinically well.