Clin Med
-
Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) is a debilitating, painful condition in a limb associated with sensory, motor, autonomic, skin and bone abnormalities. Pain is typically the leading symptom, but is often associated with limb dysfunction and psychological distress. ⋯ The purpose of this concise guideline is to draw attention to these guidelines. Information in this article has been extracted from the main document and adapted to inform the management of CRPS as it presents to physicians in the course of their daily practice.
-
HIV is neuroinvasive with early involvement of the nervous system and has the potential to cause disease at any site of the neuro-axis during the evolution from seroconversion to late stage HIV. Disease may result from direct viral infection, indirect immune-deficiency driven opportunistic infections, AIDS-defining cancers, antiretroviral (ARV) drug therapy, or less well elucidated associations, such as vascular events (Table 1). Recognition of each of these is paramount in the prevention or attenuation of long-term morbidity. ⋯ Paradoxically, cART may also alter the way CNS disease manifests and unmask opportunistic infections or cause clinical representation of the opportunistic infections, when it represents immune reconstitution syndrome (IRS). Clinical assessment, imaging (typically magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)) and cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) sampling remain the chief diagnostic tools. This conference summary reviews these differing aspects.
-
The objective of this study was to offer HIV testing to all patients attending the acute medical admissions unit (AMU) in Newcastle upon Tyne to assess feasibility, acceptability and point prevalence in accordance with the 2008 UK National HIV testing guidelines. A prospective audit was performed offering HIV testing to all patients with the capacity to give verbal consent who attended the AMU. In total, 3,753 eligible patients were admitted during the audit period and 586 (15.6%) were considered for testing. ⋯ Offering HIV testing in an AMU setting is feasible and acceptable to patients. The high uptake rate but low proportion of admissions tested suggests a lack of confidence of medical staff in offering a test. Misconceptions regarding HIV testing remain and greater education is required for healthcare workers.