Nederlands tijdschrift voor geneeskunde
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Groin pain in young athletes is a common problem, accounting for significant downtime in sports participation. It can be difficult to make the correct diagnosis as groin pain has a wide differential diagnosis, which encompasses acute as well as chronic causative factors. ⋯ However, after further investigation the patients were diagnosed with three very different types of injury: sportsman's hernia; hip labral tear; and pubic osteitis. This emphasises the need for every general practitioner and medical specialist to understand that there is a wide differential diagnosis for groin pain in athletes, in order to be able to implement specific therapy targeting the actual cause of groin pain.
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Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd · Jan 2014
Review Case Reports[Resuscitation for myocardial infarction and head injury: first the heart or first the head?].
Loss of circulation in a patient results in collapse and therefore possible head injury. After percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) including anticoagulation, comatose patients are sedated for mild therapeutic hypothermia. Recognised or unrecognised head trauma may have dramatic clinical consequences. ⋯ In a 55-year-old male with neurological abnormalities after mild head trauma, the PCI was postponed for a (negative) head CT which might have increased cardiac muscle damage. Nowadays more patients reach hospital after being resuscitated for cardiac arrest and possible head trauma should be considered in all these patients. This could lead to adjustments being made in the treatment protocol.
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In 2008, approximately 1,559,000 Dutch patients consulted their GP because of back pain. One out of 20 back pain patients is ultimately referred to a specialist, most often to a neurologist. ⋯ Scientific evidence in systematic reviews is scarce for the treatments we investigated because of small patient groups and a lack of randomised research. We made an infographic to show the numbers of patients with back pain who visit their GP or a specialist.
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Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd · Jan 2014
Review[Practice guideline 'Delirium' from the Dutch College of General Practitioners].
The revised practice guideline 'Delirium' of the Dutch College of General Practitioners (NHG) provides recommendations about the prevention, early detection, diagnosis and treatment of delirium in elderly patients in general practice. The guideline now also offers tools for the treatment of delirium in terminally-ill patients. A patient with delirium can only be cared for at home if a safe environment and the continuous presence of carers can be guaranteed. ⋯ The discharge from hospital of patients with persistent symptoms of delirium to their homes requires optimal transfer from the specialist/nursing staff to the general practitioner and home carers involved. The NHG guideline therefore pays considerable attention to collaboration and transfer in the care of patients with delirium. The revised version of this guideline was developed in close collaboration with the revision of the multidisciplinary guideline on delirium produced by the Dutch Order of Medical Specialists.
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Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd · Jan 2014
Review Case Reports[Acute arthritis in sarcoidosis: Löfgren's syndrome].
Sarcoidosis is a systemic inflammatory disease usually presenting with pulmonary symptoms. However, acute arthritis could be the presenting sign of sarcoidosis. We present a 47-year-old man with bilateral arthritis of the ankles, erythema nodosum and bilateral hilar adenopathy on the chest X-ray. ⋯ Acute arthritis in patients with sarcoidosis with or without the complete Löfgren's syndrome has a good prognosis. Usually the signs and symptoms will disappear within a few months. Unlike other forms of sarcoidosis, Löfgren's syndrome does not require histological proof of non-caseating granulomas.