You are only seeing posts authors requested be public.
Register and Login to participate in discussions with colleagues.
Medical Journal News
Auricular atrophy
This woman in her 50s presented with a three month history of swelling and pain in both ears and multiple joints, recurrent fever, and cough that was unresponsive to antibiotics. Physical examination showed bilateral auricular atrophy (fig 1, left), saddle nose deformity, and joint tenderness. Laboratory test results included raised C reactive protein levels and erythrocyte sedimentation rate, 1+ proteinuria, no UBA1 mutations, and antinuclear antibodies at 1:160 titre with negative extractable nuclear antigen, rheumatoid factor, anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide antibody, and anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody. Cartilaginous inflammation without evidence of vascular involvement or malignancy was identified on positron emission tomography-computed tomography.bmj;388/jan09_8/e081185/F1F1f1Fig 1Differential diagnoses for auricular chondritis include relapsing polychondritis, granulomatosis with polyangiitis, VEXAS (vacuoles, E1 enzyme, X-linked, autoinflammation, somatic) syndrome (an x-linked autoinflammatory disorder caused by somatic mutations in UBA1), infectious chondritis, and traumatic otohaematoma.1Based on McAdam’s criteria, relapsing polychondritis was diagnosed in this patient. Relapsing polychondritis is a rare immune...
Categories: Medical Journal News
The BMJ appeal 2024-25: Meet the vascular surgeon assisting clinicians in Gaza, where 98% of the population is in a state of humanitarian need
London based vascular surgeon Mahim Qureshi decided to join an emergency medical team trip to a Gaza hospital after reading that, every day, 10 or more children in Gaza lose one limb or more. “As a senior registrar in vascular surgery able to do an amputation quickly and safely and control bleeding, I knew I’d be able to help.”She made a 12 day trip to Al Aqsa Hospital in central Gaza in April 2024 and a two week mission to Nasser Hospital in the south of the country in November, both times supported by the International Rescue Committee (IRC), the subject of this year’s BMJ appeal.Providing healthcare safely in Gaza is both a logistical and humanitarian challenge. Israeli airstrikes, bombing, and ground level fighting have left half of its 36 hospitals out of service and killed more than 1000 Palestinian health workers, according to the United Nations, which cites figures...
Categories: Medical Journal News
The ageing process . . . and other stories
NutsThe ASPREE study, which started as a trial of low dose aspirin in healthy older adults, morphed into a longitudinal study of ageing (Age Ageing doi:10.1093/ageing/afae239). It recently reported that people who eat nuts every day tend to have a longer disability-free survival. The explanation may be nutritional, because nuts are rich in vitamins, minerals, polyphenols, phytosterols, and unsaturated fats. Another possibility is that the sort of people who choose to eat nuts are the sort of people who have a generally healthy way of life.Antiseizure medication in fathersAlthough valproate is a highly effective treatment for idiopathic generalised epilepsy, guidelines recommend restricting its use to people older than 55 because of the drug’s teratogenicity (NICE https://bnf.nice.org.uk/drugs/sodium-valproate). Where men are concerned, this may be an over-reaction. A systematic review of 10 studies of the offspring of fathers taking antiseizure medication at the time of conception found no consistent evidence of an...
Categories: Medical Journal News
Danone’s use of midwives to give branded infant feeding advice in supermarket sparks anger
The UK supermarket giant Tesco is being urged to drop an “unethical” pilot of an in-store infant feeding advice service in which midwives funded by the formula milk firm Danone are expected to wear branded uniforms and undergo training by the company.Critics said the initiative, running in a Tesco flagship store and set to be rolled out shortly,1 was a backward step and reminiscent of the “milk nurses” scandal of the 1970s, in which formula industry salespeople dressed as nurses to promote formula milk to parents.One midwife hired by Danone quit the pilot last month at the Tesco Extra store in Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, telling The BMJ that she couldn’t be associated with an “unethical” service.A spokesperson for Danone UK and Ireland said that it intended only to provide “impartial, nutritional expertise,” that the branded uniforms were optional, and that it was happy to “take on board feedback.”Tesco said it intended...
Categories: Medical Journal News
Time to nursing home admission and death in people with dementia: systematic review and meta-analysis
AbstractObjectiveTo summarise available evidence on time to nursing home admission and death among people with dementia, and to explore prognostic indicators.DesignSystematic review and meta-analysis.Data sourcesMedline, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane, and Google Scholar from inception to 4 July 2024.Eligibility criteria for selecting studiesLongitudinal studies on survival or nursing home admission in people with dementia. Studies with fewer than 150 participants, recruitment during acute hospital admission, or less than one year of follow-up were excluded.Results19 307 articles were identified and 261 eligible studies included. 235 reported on survival among 5 553 960 participants and 79 reported on nursing home admission among 352 990 participants. Median survival from diagnosis appeared to be strongly dependent on age, ranging from 8.9 years at mean age 60 for women to 2.2 years at mean age 85 for men. Women overall had shorter survival than men (mean difference 4.1 years (95% confidence interval 2.1 to 6.1)), which was attributable to later age at diagnosis in women. Median survival was 1.2 to 1.4 years longer in Asia than in the US and Europe, and 1.4 years longer for Alzheimer’s disease compared with other types of dementia. Compared with studies before 2000, survival was longer in contemporary clinic based studies (Ptrend=0.02), but not in community based studies. Taken together, variation in reported clinical characteristics and study methodology explained 51% of heterogeneity in survival. Median time to nursing home admission was 3.3 years (interquartile range 1.9 to 4.0). 13% of people were admitted in the first year after diagnosis, increasing to 57% at five years, but few studies appropriately accounted for competing mortality risk when assessing admission rates.ConclusionsThe average life expectancy of people with dementia at time of diagnosis ranged from 5.7 years at age 65 to 2.2 at age 85 in men and from 8.0 to 4.5, respectively, in women. About one third of remaining life expectancy was lived in nursing homes, with more than half of people moving to a nursing home within five years after a dementia diagnosis. Prognosis after a dementia diagnosis is highly dependent on personal and clinical characteristics, offering potential for individualised prognostic information and care planning.Systematic review registrationPROSPERO CRD42022341507.
Categories: Medical Journal News
Dementia, survival rates, and nursing home admissions
For clinicians it is an important and demanding task to inform patients with dementia and their relatives about the prognosis. As with malignant diseases, discussing remaining life expectancy and time to death is a delicate matter. But it is even more challenging to provide information about the timeline for dependency and need for nursing home care because many factors are involved, not only the type of dementia, sex, and age of patients, but also comorbidities, lifestyle, and socioeconomic and cultural factors. Some patients seek all available information about their prognosis, whereas others prefer to know less, and the emotional response to information on the dementia diagnosis and prognosis varies substantially, from catastrophic to pragmatic. Additionally, a substantial discrepancy can exist between what patients and their relatives want in terms of information.The previous reviews on dementia related survival12 and nursing home admission were published more than a decade ago,3 so the...
Categories: Medical Journal News
Ruth White: psychiatrist who pioneered the development of perinatal mental health services and had a passion for singing and antique textiles
bmj;388/jan08_7/r11/FAF1faRuth White was a woman of many passions; from antique textiles to singing opera to Aston Villa Football Club she threw herself into everything she committed to. This also translated into her professional life.In 2000 the death of a trainee psychiatrist and her baby led to a huge amount of soul searching across the NHS—the report into the deaths1 highlighted a range of contributing factors, including the lack of specialist mental health services for pregnant women and new mothers.The case prompted White, a community psychiatrist in Worcester, to set up one of the first community perinatal mental health teams in the country, using her considerable passion and drive to cajole the powers that be to give her the money to do it.White was self-taught, seeking out the advice of experts in the field to learn about perinatal mental health and then training community nurses and midwives to identify women at...
Categories: Medical Journal News
John Launer: Taking the temperature of the consultation
Most of us have favourite questions that we like to ask when consulting with patients or that we’re fond of teaching to medical students and resident doctors. One popular question many GPs teach their registrars to ask is, “What made you come today, particularly?” This can sometimes lead patients to disclose a triggering event that was just as important as the long running symptom they first presented with.Personally, I put a different question at the top of my own list for teaching: “How is this conversation going for you so far?” I like this question for several reasons. It helps you to find if you’re on the right track or have missed something important that the patient tried to say and you didn’t fully register. You can then recalibrate your response straight away, rather than finding out too late that you’ve gone badly off track. It’s also a way of...
Categories: Medical Journal News
Living with the uncertainty of Parkinson’s
Just over 10 years ago I was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. I had suffered for several years from strange bouts of cramp, stiffness, and a very painful back. A badly torn rotator cuff only confused the issue as I put much of my discomfort down to my shoulder or back problems. Before major back surgery the surgeon expressed doubts and quietly suggested a neurological rather than a musculoskeletal issue. Raising the possibility of a life changing condition with such non-alarmist tact was helpful.A colleague along the corridor was more direct but equally careful. Not everybody would have appreciated this directness, but I was relieved. Knowing what I had gave me a better chance of dealing with it.Facing the figuresDisease progression has been mercifully slow since my diagnosis. However, the intrinsic uncertainty in the condition breeds anxiety: another Parkinson’s gift. A thoughtless remark could cause me to lose confidence, leading to...
Categories: Medical Journal News
Scarlett McNally: We can do more to prevent healthcare worker suicides
This piece comes with a trigger warning. We used to avoid talking about cancer, menopause, periods, or other stigmatised topics—adding to feelings of shame and limiting our understanding. This remains true of suicide, especially among healthcare staff. The writer Adam Kay describes NHS staff suicides as being “brushed under the carpet.”1 But talking about suicide is important, as open conversation reduces its risk.2Some statistics stick in my head. One nurse dies by suicide each week in the UK.3 The suicide rate in women doctors is up to four times that of women in the general population.4 Unfortunately, most colleagues are oblivious to the pain experienced by a huge proportion of their co-workers. But each tragedy can cause guilt, shame, and higher rates of suicide in the loved ones and colleagues affected.4Clare Gerada35 started the NHS Practitioner Health service,6 and she and Ananta Dave have written3 about awareness and prevention of...
Categories: Medical Journal News
Talquetamab plus Teclistamab in Relapsed or Refractory Multiple Myeloma
New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 392, Issue 2, Page 138-149, January 9, 2025.
Categories: Medical Journal News
A Comparison of Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter Materials
New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 392, Issue 2, Page 161-172, January 9, 2025.
Categories: Medical Journal News
Clearance of Driver Mutations after Transplantation for Myelofibrosis
New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 392, Issue 2, Page 150-160, January 9, 2025.
Categories: Medical Journal News
Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy in Localized Prostate Cancer
New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 392, Issue 2, Page 206-207, January 9, 2025.
Categories: Medical Journal News
Safety of Kidney Transplantation from Donors with HIV Infection
New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 392, Issue 2, Page 204-205, January 9, 2025.
Categories: Medical Journal News
Total Hip Replacement or Resistance Training for Severe Hip Osteoarthritis
New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 392, Issue 2, Page 205-206, January 9, 2025.
Categories: Medical Journal News
Human Infection with a Novel Tickborne Orthonairovirus Species in China
New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 392, Issue 2, Page 200-202, January 9, 2025.
Categories: Medical Journal News
Neurokinin-3 Receptor Antagonism for Refractory Hot Flashes in Men
New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 392, Issue 2, Page 202-203, January 9, 2025.
Categories: Medical Journal News
Reducing the Risk of Pancreatitis by Inhibiting APOC3
New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 392, Issue 2, Page 197-199, January 9, 2025.
Categories: Medical Journal News
Argyria
New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 392, Issue 2, Page 185-185, January 9, 2025.
Categories: Medical Journal News