Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
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Forty specialists were asked about their management of three theoretical patients with advanced cancer of the head and neck. Reasons for variation were explored by considering the influence of perceived aims of treatment (radical or palliative), together with a number of factors relating to the tumour, the lymph nodes, and the patients' personal circumstances. The perceived aim of treatment was the most important determinant as to treatment modality but, when chances of influencing survival were small, there was disagreement as to the appropriate aim and subjective value judgements became influential. More careful analysis of the initial decision-making process is needed if new clinical trials are to significantly affect clinical practices.
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In an attempt to establish what the general practitioner expects from an accident and emergency department, and how closely the service provided correlates with that view, a 12-point questionnaire was sent to the general practitioners in the Glasgow Royal Infirmary catchment area. Out of the 61.2% of general practitioners who replied, the majority wish to have responsibility for their own patients for conditions which are neither accidents nor emergencies. There is less agreement as to how much should be done within an accident and emergency department and on the appropriate modes of referral and communication between the general practitioner and the hospital service. Further consultation and cooperation are necessary to interpret and resolve these differences.
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Bier introduced his intravenous technique of local anaesthesia to facilitate palliative surgery on the elbow or knee. He cannulated a suitably large vein in the vicinity of the joint to inject procaine after first isolating the operating site with a proximal and a distal tourniquet. This extra containment of the local anaesthetic solution made it feasible to flush out any unfixed drug with saline before release of the main tourniquet, an advantage which has been lost in the currently fashionable technique of intravenous regional anaesthesia (IVRA) involving a single tourniquet above the elbow or knee and a fine butterfly needle in a vein on the dorsum of the hand or foot. A modern version of Bier's original method is described, conveniently called an intercuff block (ICB), which reintroduces the possibility of effective flushing, offers better operating conditions and engenders new ideas for further study.