CMJ Review: Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea in adults
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The Canadian Medical Journal: Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea in adults (free full-text)
The Canadian Medical Journal: Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea in adults (free full-text)
The NEJM will publish two article on the Schiavo case in an upcoming issue. Both are online now and free without a subscription:
Perspective
Terri Schiavo — A Tragedy Compounded
T.E. Quill
Legal Issues in Medicine
"Culture of Life" Politics at the Bedside — The Case of Terri Schiavo
G.J. Annas
Boyer and Shannon's article in the NEJM The Serotonin Syndrome is an excellent review/introduction to a syndrome every anesthesiologist should be familiar with but that had not been defined when I was in training. Excess serotonergic agonism can be triggered not only by certain drug overdoses, but also by many drugs anesthesiologist give frequently (fentanyl!).
NEJM --The Risk of Cesarean Delivery with Neuraxial Analgesia Given Early versus Late in Labor
Bottom Line: Intrathecal fentanyl in women not yet at 4 cm cervical dilation does not increase C-section rate when compared to systemic opioids. Lots of great information to digest over the next several days...
The availability of references and the sponsorship of original research cited in pharmaceutical advertisements (free full text):
[Via UK Medical News Today]
We shouldn't be surprised at these findings. It is just marketing, after all.
JAMA just published Continuous positive airway pressure for treatment of postoperative hypoxemia: a randomized controlled trial and those of us giving anesthesia for open major abdominal surgery should take note. Here's the abstract:
I remember the first time someone suggested using CPAP for the struggling patient in the recovery room after major abdominal surgery. I snorted and mumbled something under my breath about how the patient needed an endotracheal tube and should have taken the offered thoracic epidural. I went back to bed, convinced that I'd be called in an hour or two to intubate the patient who would by then certainly be in extremis. You know what? They never called me that night and this paper helps me understand why.
I think I need to modify my internal algorithm for post-anesthesia management of these often difficult cases to reflect the option of CPAP as a middle ground between mask oxygen and endotracheal intubation.
I was listening to some friends talk about taking a large set of information and making it more useful to the user when I thought about a project I helped with to try to remedy this with regard to the body of published literature in medicine. PubMed is the National Library of Medicine's big online database of medical articles (no, I didn't help with that). Searching for a term on PubMed usually gets lots of results but doesn't necessarily get you any closer to finding that key reference that people consider the classic or definitive paper in the field.
As a teacher in academic anesthesia, I saw residents (note the past tense) had little hope of finding the 'right' paper to read unless I gave it to them. If I said 'read about airway management' they would no doubt find some things about airway management, but probably not the paper on airway management. Unless of course they were able to search a subset of articles in PubMed defined in advance to be especially relevant to their field of study. That's how we conceived of the idea of 'Key References'--make it easy to assemble a list of references for whatever purpose. To make it easy, we used a unique identifier for each article called the PubMed ID Number (PMID). Seth Dillingham then wrote a plugin for Conversant that could take that PMID and go to the PubMed system and (politely) request information about the reference such as title, authors, citation, and even the abstract.
'Citation classics in anesthetic journals' by Baltussen and Kindler is comprised of 'seminal advances in anesthesia' which give 'a historic perspective on the scientific progress of this specialty'. The advantage of having them available online as a compilation lies in the fact that they 1) are searchable and 2) linked to related articles in PubMed (something which even the online version of the original article even does not do).
See for yourself: Citation Classics in Anesthetic Journals
After looking up all 100 PMID's for these articles I wrote to the journal editors and suggested they require authors to include PMID's for references they cite in each article but (apparently) failed to make a convincing enough case. Sort of like in, oh, 1995 when I suggested to the editors of another journal that they could put their articles online using Highwire Press and was told that they had their hands full putting back issues on CD.
The Painful Truth: The Iraq war is a new kind of hell, with more survivors - but more maimed, shattered limbs - than ever. A revolution in battlefield medicine is helping them conquer the pain.
A great story about how military anesthesiologists are making a big difference for our wounded.
JAMA -- Quality of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation During Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest, January 19, 2005, Wik et al. 293 (3): 299 (free article)
Bottom line--it's hard to do it right. I have given chest compressions in the operating room with an arterial line in place so I can see what effect my compressions are having in terms of generating a pressure. Depressing the chest 4 to 5 cm is a lot, but that's the guideline, and that's what it takes to keep blood pumping to the brain. If you're going to the OR and know you're going to have a cardiac arrest, ask for me.
Too bad it's not free full text, but the NEJM has published a study showing that bariatric surgery results can be good:
Here's a nice graph of the weight loss over the course of the ten year follow up:
The same issue contained another article on obesity in women as it relates to increased risk of death:
[Click for larger image]
It would be interesting to know if weight loss from bariatric surgery confers the same benefit.
JAMA: Arthritis Medicines and Cardiovascular Events—"House of Coxibs" (free full text)
and the final sentence
[Via UK Medical News Today]
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