Background: Delirium in elderly patients with hip fracture has a significant negative influence on the disease course. Awareness of risk factors for postoperative delirium (POD) may lead to the development of effective preventive strategies. The aims of this study were: to find patients' features that are predictors of POD, and; to develop a model predicting the risk for POD. Patients and methods: Seventy-seven elderly patients (81.9 years of age, SD 7.5 years) were non-delirious prior to surgery and enrolled in the study. Delirium was diagnosed by Confusion Assessment Method and Algorrhithm. Patients' characteristics as potential predictors of POD were analyzed by logistic regression analysis on SAS software. Results: Postoperative delirium was diagnosed in 37 patients. Use of multiple (>3) medications, lower scores on cognitive tests (<20 on Set Test and <24 on Mini-mental Status Exam), albumin level less than 3.5 g/dL, hematocrit level less than 33% and age over 81 years were predictors of POD. A logistic regression formula including these predictors weighed by their parameter estimates can be used to calculate the probability of POD. The model had a good fit and a good predictive power. A Delirium Predicting Scale was derived based on parameter estimates of these predictors. Patients can be classified as low-, intermediate-or high-risk for POD. Conclusions: A logistic regression model, which includes patients' age, medication history, cognitive performance measured by Set Test and MiniMental Status Exam, albumin and hematocrit levels, can be used to predict risk for POD after surgical repair of fractured hip in elderly patients.
The role of pulse oximetry in the evaluation of peripheral vascular disease (PVD) was investigated. In addition, the value of elevating the limb to improve the sensitivity of detection of PVD by the pulse oximeter was also determined. Pulse oximetry reading in the toes were obtained in 40 young, healthy volunteers and in 40 randomly selected patients referred to the vascular investigation laboratory over a period of two months. All 40 healthy volunteers had normal pulse oximetry readings. Normal pulse oximetry reading in the toes was defined as > 95% O2 Sat and +/-2 of finger pulse oximetry reading. In all 40 patients, pulse oximetry readings were either normal or not detected at all. Since there was no gradation in decrease in the pulse oximetry reading with severity of disease or with elevation of the patient's lower extremity, an absent or no reading was considered as an abnormal result from the test. The frequency of abnormal pulse oximetry readings increased significantly in groups with abnormal ankle-brachial pressure index (ABPI) and also varied significantly with elevation of the patients' lower limbs. In patients with no PVD detected by Doppler (ABPI > 0.9), pulse oximetry readings were normal in all. However, in patients with moderate PVD (ABPI, 0.5-0.9), 84% of the patients' lower limbs had normal pulse oximetry readings and 16% had an abnormal reading at baseline level (flat). An additional 12% of the lower limbs in this group had an abnormal reading on elevation of the limb to 12 inches. In patients with severe PVD (ABPI < 0.5), 54% of the patients' lower limbs had an abnormal reading at baseline and an additional 23% had an abnormal reading at elevation of the limb to 12 inches. In conclusion, pulse oximetry was not a sensitive test for detecting early PVD.
Use of 'Fiber 7' allowed discontinuation of laxatives in 63 of 92 nursing home residents. The fibre supplement was a safe and convenient alternative to laxatives and decreased the cost of medical care.
Background: With growing expense in chronic illness and end-of-life (EOL) care, population-based interventions are needed to reduce the health care cost and improve patients’ quality of life. The authors believe that promotion of palliative medicine is one such intervention and this promotion depends on the acceptance of palliative medicine concepts by health care professionals. Aims of the studies: Perception of palliative medicine in chronic illness and in EOL care by health care professionals was learned in two studies carried out at a teaching community hospital 14 years apart. Participants and methods: Voluntary and anonymous surveys were randomly distributed among physicians, nurses, and social workers/case managers. Participants in the two studies presented two different groups of health care providers. Results of the studies: Results of the two studies were essentially similar. On most of the issues, respondents’ perceptions were consistent with palliative medicine concepts and confidence in palliation grew over the 14-year period. The authors call this approach a “palliative attitude.” Physicians with greater experience performed better in care planning. Younger physicians were more perceptive to withdrawal of care in futile cases. Participants’ religion had no influence on perception of palliative medicine. Attendance of educational activities did not influence attitudes of health care professionals. Health care providers who favored involvement of palliative care teams in patients’ management were better in care planning, interpretation of the DNR consent, use of opioids at the EOL, use of intensive care, and evaluation of the disease trajectory. Conclusion: The authors conclude that direct interaction between palliative and interdisciplinary teams in clinical practice is the key factor in the education of health care professionals, in the development of a “palliative attitude,” and in the promotion of palliative medicine.
Coronary artery lesions were compared in 71 patients with unstable angina, 15 patients with non-Q wave myocardial infarction (MI), and 40 patients with stable angina. In the unstable angina group, 29 patients had new-onset angina, 31 had crescendo angina, and 11 had rest angina. In a subgroup of patients with unstable angina, three-vessel disease was less frequently (P < 0.05) seen in patients with new-onset angina (10.3%) than in the patients with crescendo angina (51.6%) or rest angina (54.5%). An angina-producing artery could be identified in 59 patients with unstable angina, in 11 with non-Q wave MI, and in 30 with stable angina. Type II eccentric stenosis (asymmetric narrowing with narrow neck and overhanging irregular edges) was present in 31 patients (52.5%; P < 0.01) with unstable angina, in 7 (63.6%; P < 0.01) with non-Q wave MI, and in only 2 (6.7%) with stable angina. Abrupt occlusion of a vessel was observed in 7 patients (11.9%) with unstable angina and in 2 (18.2%) with non-Q wave MI. None of the patients with stable angina had this type of occlusion. In the group of unstable angina and non-Q wave MI, angiographic evidence of intracoronary thrombi was present in 16 (27.1%) and 3 patients (27.3%), respectively, but in stable angina in only 1 patient (3.3%; P < 0.05). Intracoronary thrombi were most frequently found in rest angina (88%; P < 0.001) and crescendo angina (33.3%; P < 0.01) compared with new-onset angina (3.7%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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