The Journal of the Kentucky Medical Association
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The hypotheses that data, available at the time when a medical school admission decision is made, can be used to predict generalist specialty choice and rural practice location were tested. Applicant data, available to admissions committee members at the University of Louisville in 1986 and 1987 about the classes of 1990 and 1991 respectively, were correlated with specialty choice and practice location in a retrospective cohort study. ⋯ We conclude that applicant data, available at the time admission decisions are made, are of limited value for identifying those who will eventually become generalist physicians or practice in a rural area. However, the data are useful for identifying those who will not.
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Pancoast's syndrome is almost exclusively caused by a malignant apical lung tumor invading the structures of the thoracic outlet. We report a case of thoracic actinomycosis as a cause of Pancoast's syndrome. A 65 y/o bm presented with a 6 month history of nonproductive cough, weight loss, a left upper lobe infiltrate, and a positive PPD of 20 mm. ⋯ Patient was clinically cured following a 6-month course of penicillin with resolution of the left upper lobe mass. Although rare, thoracic actinomycosis must be considered in the differential diagnosis of Pancoast's syndrome. This case emphasizes the importance of obtaining a precise etiologic diagnosis before a treatment decision is made.
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The purpose of this study was to identify the characteristics of physicians who chose academic medicine as a career. A questionnaire was sent to all graduates of the University of Kentucky College of Medicine who held full-time positions in academic medical centers (n = 143). Ninety graduates (63%) returned usable questionnaires. ⋯ Respondents also indicated why they chose their particular specialty. The two most important factors were the content of the specialty and intellectual stimulation. Most of these physicians (64%) were very satisfied with their careers in academic medicine.
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With the diagnosis of the adult immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), a patient's risk of sustaining a nontraumatic pneumothorax increases to 450 times that of the general population. The approach to pneumothorax that occurs in the patient with AIDS differs from the strategy that is used for spontaneous pneumothorax in immunocompetent young adults. The modifications in treatment are predicated on understanding the etiology of spontaneous lung collapse in the patient with AIDS.