Providing effective discharge instructions, appropriate dose uptitration, education regarding heart failure (HF) monitoring, and strict follow-up have all been shown to decrease readmissions for HF but are all underutilized. The authors developed and evaluated the impact of a quality-improvement HF checklist as a tool to remind physicians to improve quality of care in HF patients. The checklist was used in randomly selected patients admitted with a primary diagnosis of acute decompensated HF. It included documentation regarding medications and dose uptitration, relevant counseling, and follow-up instructions at discharge. The checklist was used in 48 patients, and this checklist group was compared with 48 patients as a randomly selected control group. Higher proportions of patients were taking angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) in the checklist group compared with the control group (40 of 48 vs 23 of 48, P<.001). Compared with the controls, the rate of dose uptitration for β-blockers and/or ACE inhibitors/ARBs was more common in the checklist group (4 of 48 vs 21 of 48, P<.001). Both 30-day (19% to 6%) and 6-month (42% to 23%) readmissions were lower in the checklist group. The use of an HF checklist was associated with better quality of care and decreased readmission rates for patients admitted with HF.
The purpose of this study is to determine the incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in patients with ulcerative colitis and patients with Crohn disease. The number of patients discharged from hospitals throughout the United States with a diagnostic code for ulcerative colitis and for Crohn disease from 1979 through 2005 was obtained from the National Hospital Discharge Survey. The incidence of VTE among medical patients with ulcerative colitis was 21 000 of 1 129 000 (1.85%) and among medical patients who had no inflammatory bowel disease, the incidence was 10 421 000 of 918 570 000 (1.13%; relative risk 1.64, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.62-1.66). The incidence of VTE among medical patients with Crohn disease was less than those with ulcerative colitis, 22 000 of 1 803 000 (1.22%). The risk, compared with patients who did not have inflammatory bowel disease, was only marginally increased (relative risk 1.08, 95% CI = 1.06-1.09).
To determine whether chest radiographs identify some abnormalities not shown as ancillary findings on computed tomography(CT) pulmonary angiograms of patients in whom pulmonary embolism (PE) was excluded. This was a retrospective study of reports of negative 64-detector CT pulmonary angiograms and chest radiographs. Among 332 patients with no PE, pulmonary parenchymal disease was shown in 60 (18%) only on standard chest radiographs, and pleural or pericardial disease was shown in 17 (5%) only on chest radiographs. Skeletal abnormalities were reported more frequently on standard chest radiographs, lymph nodes more frequently on CT angiograms. Some abnormalities on chest radiographs of patients in whom PE is excluded may not be described as ancillary findings on CT pulmonary angiograms. This suggests a need for ancillary findings on CT pulmonary angiograms to be described systematically. At present, however, plain chest radiographs in some patients show ancillary findings not reported on CT angiograms. [corrected].
Left ventricular thrombi usually occur in the setting of an acute myocardial infarction, left ventricular aneurysm, or dilated cardiomyopathy. In the absence of ventricular wall motion abnormalities, they are rare. This report describes a patient with ulcerative colitis in whom two-dimensional echocardiography revealed a left intraventricular mass. Thrombosis in ulcerative colitis is a serious condition and can occur in a very young population. This case also shows that left ventricular thrombi can occur in the active setting of ulcerative colitis.
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