Natl Med J India
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Fast-track surgery or 'enhanced recovery after surgery' or 'multimodal rehabilitation after surgery' is a form of protocol-based perioperative care programme. It is an amalgamation of evidence-based practices that have been proven to improve patient outcome independently and exert a synergistic effect when applied together. The philosophy is to treat the patient's pathology with minimal disturbance to the physiology. ⋯ The practice and implementation of fast-track surgery involves a multidisciplinary team approach. It requires policy formation at an institutional level and interdepartmental coordination. More research is required in areas like implementation of such protocols across India to derive the maximum benefit from them.
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Review
Intensive glycaemic control in type 2 diabetes mellitus: does it improve cardiovascular outcomes?
With growing urbanization and economic development, there is a rapid increase in the incidence of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in India. T2DM is associated with 2-4 times higher risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD), including coronary artery disease, stroke and peripheral vascular disease. Several studies have shown the benefit of intensive glycaemic control in reducing the frequency of diabetic microvascular complications such as retinopathy and nephropathy. ⋯ The aim of management of patients with established T2DM should be to achieve the goal of good glycaemic control (haemoglobin A1c<7%), with avoidance of hypoglycaemia. It is equally, if not more important, to control other risk factors of CVD by paying greater attention to lifestyle measures (weight loss if overweight or obese, regular exercise, cessation of smoking), rigorous control of blood pressure (<130/80 mmHg) and low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol (<100 mg/dl or <70 mg/dl if already diagnosed with CVD) and the prophylactic use of low dose aspirin as per current recommendations. A multifactorial approach targeting multiple cardiovascular risk factors is likely to be most effective in reducing CVD outcomes in T2DM.
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Reliable estimates of heart failure are lacking in India because of the absence of a surveillance programme to track incidence, prevalence, outcomes and key causes of heart failure. Nevertheless, we propose that the incidence and prevalence rates of heart failure are rising due to population, epidemiological and health transitions. Based on disease-specific estimates of prevalence and incidence rates of heart failure, we conservatively estimate the prevalence of heart failure in India due to coronary heart disease, hypertension, obesity, diabetes and rheumatic heart disease to range from 1.3 to 4.6 million, with an annual incidence of 491 600-1.8 million. ⋯ Staging of heart failure, introduced in 2005, provides a framework to target preventive strategies in patients at risk for heart failure (stage A), with structural disease alone (B), with heart failure symptoms (C) and with end-stage disease (D). Policy-level interventions, such as regulations to limit salt and tobacco consumption, are effective for primordial prevention and would have a wider impact on prevention of heart failure. Clinical preventive interventions and clinical quality improvement interventions, such as treatment of hypertension, atherosclerotic disease, diabetes and acute decompensated heart failure are effective for primary, secondary and even tertiary prevention.
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Multiple myeloma is a disease of malignant plasma cells in the bone marrow. Interaction of malignant plasma cells with the bone marrow microenvironment plays a key role in the pathogenesis of the disease. The Introduction of two new classes of molecules, namely immunomodulators (e.g. thalidomide, lenalidomide), and proteasome inhibitors (e.g., bortezomib) has led to improvement in the management of myeloma. ⋯ Further consolidation with intensive chemotherapy supported by autologous stem cell transplant in young, eligible patients results in complete response in 50%-70% of patients with improved survival. Simplified criteria for staging, uniform response criteria, more sensitive methods for detection of residual disease (immunofixation and free light chain assay), and recognition of potential adverse cytogenetic and genomic abnormalities have further refined the management of patients with myeloma. Along with earlier diagnosis, improved treatment and better management of complications have resulted in longer disease control and survival with a better quality of life.