Importance: General medicine rounds by attending physicians provide the foundation for patient care and education in teaching hospitals. However, the detailed activities of these rounds in the current era are not well characterized. Objective: To describe the characteristics of attending rounds for internal medicine inpatients in a large teaching hospital system. Design: A cross-sectional observational study of attending rounds in internal medicine. Rounds were observed directly by research assistants. Setting: Four teaching hospitals associated with a large public medical school. Participants: Fifty-six attending physicians and 279 trainees treating 807 general medicine inpatients. Main Outcomes and Measures: Duration and location of rounds, composition of teams, and frequency of 19 potential activities during rounds. Results: We observed 90 days of rounds. A typical rounding day consisted of 1 attending with 3 trainees visiting a median of 9 (range, 2-18 [SD, 2.9]) patients for a median of 2.0 hours (range, 25-241 [SD, 2.7] minutes). On rounds, teams most frequently discussed the patient care plan (96.7% of patients), reviewed diagnostic studies (90.7%), communicated with patients (73.4%), and discussed the medication list (68.8%). Teams infrequently discussed invasive lines or tubes (9.3%) or nursing notes (6.2%) and rarely communicated with nurses (12.0%) or taught physical examination skills (14.6%), evidencebased medicine topics (7.2%), or learner-identified topics (3.2%). Many commonly performed activities occurred infrequently at the bedside. Conclusions and Relevance: Most activities on attending rounds do not take place at the bedside. The teams discuss patient care plans and test results most of the time but fail to include many items that may be of significant value, including specific aspects of patient care, interprofessional communication, and learner-centered education. Future studies are needed to further assess the implications of these observations.
The ankle-brachial index (ABI) is the standard test used in clinical practice to detect peripheral artery disease (PAD) and is a powerful predictor of adverse cardiovascular outcomes. This study sought to measure the baseline knowledge of the ABI test among a sample of internal medicine residents and to examine the impact of an educational intervention on performance of the test. A total of 29 residents were asked to perform three tasks, with the performance of each task being assessed using a point-based scoring system: measure an ABI on a normal volunteer (15 points), calculate the ABI based on data from a hypothetical patient (3 points), and interpret a range of ABI values (6 points). A standardized educational intervention was then provided and post-education performance was assessed for each task using the same scoring system. At baseline, 4% of residents correctly measured the ABI, 10% correctly calculated the ABI, and 45% correctly interpreted the ABI. Baseline performance was unaffected by year of residency training. Following the educational intervention, 50% of residents correctly measured the ABI, 75% correctly calculated the ABI, and 88% correctly interpreted the ABI. The mean score for the tasks of ABI measurement, calculation and interpretation between baseline and post-education were 4.6 +/- 3 and 13.9 +/- 1.6 (p < 0.0001), 1 +/- 0.9 and 2.3 +/- 1.2 (p = 0.002), and 4.9 +/- 1.6 and 5.9 +/- 0.3 (p = 0.008), respectively. In conclusion, baseline knowledge of the ABI test was poor among a sample of internal medicine residents. These results suggest that instruction regarding the ABI test is deficient in medical school and residency programs and requires action by those responsible for the education of medical students and residents.
Chemotherapy-induced cell death is linked to apoptosis, and there is increasing evidence that multidrug-resistance in cancer cells may be the result of a decrease in the ability of a cell to initiate apoptosis in response to cytotoxic agents. In previous studies, we synthesized two classes of electrophilic tocopheryl quinones (TQ), nonarylating alpha-TQ and arylating gamma- and delta-TQ, and found that gamma- and delta-TQ, but not alpha-TQ, were highly cytotoxic in human acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells (CEM) and multidrug-resistant (MDR) CEM/VLB100. We have now extended these studies on tumor biology with CEM, HL60 and MDR HL60/MX2 human promyelocytic leukemia, U937 human monocytic leukemia, and ZR-75-1 breast adenocarcinoma cells. gamma-TQ, but not alpha-TQ or tocopherols, showed concentration and incubation time-dependent effects on loss of plasma membrane integrity, diminished viable cell number, and stimulation of apoptosis. Its cytotoxicity exceeded that of doxorubicin in HL60/MX2 cells, which express MRP, an MDR-associated protein. Apoptosis was confirmed by TEM, TUNEL, and DNA gel electrophoresis. Kinetic studies showed that an induction period was required to initiate an irreversible multiphase process. Gamma-TQ released mitochondrial cytochrome c to the cytosol, induced the cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase, and depleted intracellular glutathione. Unlike xenobiotic electrophiles, gamma-TQ is a highly cytotoxic arylating electrophile that stimulates apoptosis in several cancer cell lines including cells that express MDR through both P-glycoprotein and MRP-associated proteins. The biological properties of arylating TQ electrophiles are closely associated with cytotoxicity and may contribute to other biological effects of these highly active agents.
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