Revista clínica española
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Revista clínica española · Dec 2020
Characteristics of adults with Down syndrome hospitalised in Spanish internal medicine departments during 2005-2014.
The clinical problems of adults with Down syndrome seem to differ from those of the general population. To better understand these differences, we list the demographic and clinical characteristics of adults with Down syndrome admitted to Spanish internal medicine departments during 2005-2014. ⋯ The hospitalisation of adults with Down syndrome in internal medicine departments has increased in the past decade. Although the reasons for hospitalisation, mean stay and cost per episode for this population are similar to those of the general population treated by internal medicine departments, the age-adjusted hospital mortality was significantly greater.
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Most hospitalized surgical patients have significant medical comorbidity and are treated with a considerable number of drugs and/or experience significant complications. Shared care (SC) is the shared responsibility and authority in managing hospitalized patients. In this article, we discuss whether patients should be selected for SC or not. ⋯ Failure to rescue (in-hospital mortality secondary to postoperative complications) is the main factor linked to in-hospital surgical mortality and can affect any patient regardless of age, comorbidity, or type of surgery. The component that most reduces failure to rescue is the presence of internists in surgical wards. We believe that all patients hospitalized in surgery departments should receive SC.
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Porphyrias are a group of congenital errors in porphyrin metabolism and in the heme biosynthetic pathway. Accumulation of porphyrin precursors (delta-aminolaevulinic acid and porphobilinogen) is responsible for the neurovisceral crises of acute porphyria, which, when expressed clinically, start with intense abdominal pain. ⋯ A negative test rules out a current porphyric crisis. The clinical protocol for patients with acute abdominal pain of unknown origin in whom a positive Hoesch test leads to the suspicion of acute porphyria is based on the following aspects: initial clinical assessment in the emergency department, suppression of potential triggers, specific treatment for the crisis with hemin and/or glucose overload and symptomatic treatment.