Clinical medicine (London, England)
-
The role of the future physician in the NHS is of interest to current doctors, patients, policymakers and the wider public. Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, it has never been more clear that the healthcare needs of the population, and the technical and scientific advances with which to solve them, are rapidly evolving and the medical workforce must adapt to these changes to deliver personalised healthcare. This article considers the current challenges that need to be addressed to deliver a future physician-led healthcare service that works for its patients. ⋯ The impact and challenges of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic on these factors are highlighted. Avenues for development are suggested, both in postgraduate medical training and the health service as a whole. These changes will be required to deliver the physicians of the future, imbued with the skills and attributes they will need to provide a high standard of care in the mid-21st century.
-
Rheumatology teams care for patients with diverse, systemic autoimmune diseases who are often immunosuppressed and at high risk of infections. The current COVID-19 pandemic has presented particular challenges in caring for and managing this patient group. ⋯ This involves the patients being asked to strictly self-isolate for at least 12 weeks with additional funded support provided for them to remain at home. A group of rheumatologists (the authors) have devised a pragmatic guide to identifying the very highest risk group using a rapidly developed scoring system which went live simultaneous with the Government announcement on shielding and was cascaded to all rheumatologists working in England.
-
Spontaneous intracranial hypotension is uncommon and results from a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak. We describe the case of a marathon runner who presented with postural headache attributable to CSF venous fistulation originating from a lower thoracic nerve root cyst. ⋯ With unmitigated CSF loss over the following 3 months, the patient became bedbound and developed rapidly progressive behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia. Behavioural changes were somewhat reversible on restoration of CSF volume after surgical intervention.
-
Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) is a rare inflammatory disorder of the nervous system which can be potentially debilitating. Its prevalence is estimated to be around 0.5-10 per 100,000 population with predilection towards Asians and females. ⋯ It is important to pick up the diagnosis of NMOSD as the treatment is different from other demyelinating disease. Here, we illustrate a case of NMOSD presented with intractable vomiting.
-
Starvation ketoacidosis (SKA) represents one of three metabolic acidoses caused by the accumulation of ketone bodies within the bloodstream. While easily treated, it is a diagnosis that can be easily missed in patients with an unexplained metabolic acidosis. ⋯ Furthermore, the patient cohort described here have higher rates of alcohol dependence and are therefore at risk of alcoholic ketoacidosis. It is important to recognise that these conditions may coexist and should be managed as such, with thiamine prior to carbohydrate replacement in all at-risk patients.