Chest
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Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
GISSI trials in acute myocardial infarction. Rationale, design, and results.
The first Gruppo Italiano per lo Studio della Streptochinasi nell'Infarto (GISSI) study showed striking evidence of the effectiveness and safety of intravenous thrombolytic treatment in acute myocardial infarction (MI). Since publication in The Lancet, the original report has become a reference work for every paper which deals with thrombolysis. In addition to GISSI's scientific value, these studies applied formal research to routine clinical practice outside of referral centers. ⋯ The package of treatments recommended after extensive discussion with all the investigators (beta-blocker, aspirin, nitrates) was widely adopted. Now, only five years after the start of the GISSI-1, the overall mortality of Italian patients with acute MI has decreased from 13.0 percent to about 9 percent, and the number of patients with acute MI arriving in hospital within 1 h of the onset of symptoms has increased 50 percent. It is the wish of the GISSI investigators that this approach to treating acute MI will be regarded and acknowledged as their major contribution to the problem.
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The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of tuberculous infection and the incidence of active tuberculosis in homeless men attending a shelter-based clinic and to examine risk factors for acquisition of infection and development of active disease. The design was a prospective cross-sectional survey. Men were evaluated by standardized interviews using a questionnaire. ⋯ Increasing age, length of stay in the shelter system, black race, and intravenous drug use were found to be independently associated with tuberculous infection. Age, length of stay in the shelter system, and intravenous drug use were independently associated with active tuberculosis. We achieved a compliance rate of 36 percent completing treatment and 13 percent receiving treatment at the conclusion of the study.
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The validity and utility of physical examination maneuvers were determined in diagnosing congestive heart failure (CHF) in patients with acute dyspnea. Fifty one patients presented to the emergency room with the chief complaint of shortness of breath. ⋯ The hepatojugular reflux and Valsalva maneuvers were valid in the diagnosis of congestive heart failure in acutely dyspneic patients. Although these maneuvers rarely added to the routine assessment of patients in this study, they may provide a useful, noninvasive adjunct to clinical diagnosis in problematic cases.