Brit J Hosp Med
-
Review
Recognising and responding to physical and mental health issues in neurodivergent girls and women.
People experience life and interact with others in many ways. The term 'neurodivergence' refers to variations from what is considered typical. ⋯ This review highlights the huge burden of cooccurring conditions carried by neurodivergent women and girls whose medical issues have largely gone under the radar. We suggest how clinicians might increase their awareness of diagnosis and management of their problems with mutual benefit.
-
Acute aortic dissection is often misdiagnosed as a result of its atypical presentations. It affects 4000 patients a year in the UK of all ages, not just older patients, with increasing numbers of cases expected in the future because of the ageing population. Dissection of the aortic wall leads to sudden, severe pain, and commonly end-organ symptoms which must be recognised. ⋯ There are several ways to improve diagnosis, including awareness campaigns, better education about patients in which to consider acute aortic dissection, and improved detection strategies including which patients should receive CTA. Clinical decision tools and biomarkers could help, but further research is required and is a research focus in emergency medicine. Once diagnosed, blood pressure control, analgesia and urgent surgery or transfer to enable this to occur with minimal delay is required.
-
A general physician's training and experience enables them to manage a variety of acute and chronic medical conditions with multi-system pathology, while specialising in one specific area of medicine. In every illness there are other problems outside the specialty, requiring the wider expertise of the generalist as patients have multiple comorbidities and the multitude of disease pathology presenting are quite complex requiring a multi-faceted approach. The horizons of general internal medicine have broadened with a wide landscape of acute illnesses that are now being admitted under general medicine which is the path of least resistance. As we strive relentlessly while working on the ward at the bedside and in acute portals, we ought to remind ourselves of what are the attractions of general internal medicine and lead by example for the undergraduates and postgraduate doctors in training who see us as role models for doing clinical medicine, teaching, training and research.