Internal medicine journal
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Internal medicine journal · Nov 2023
Functional outcomes of ischaemic stroke patients with known Atrial Fibrillation not on therapeutic anticoagulation.
Anticoagulation significantly reduces the risk of ischaemic stroke in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). There are a proportion of patients with known AF who remain off anticoagulation. Aims This study aims to retrospectively compare the baseline characteristics, treatments and functional outcomes between patients with ischaemic stroke and known AF based on their anticoagulation status. ⋯ Baseline anticoagulation was associated with milder stroke severity in ischaemic stroke patients with known AF. There was no significant difference in functional outcomes at 90 days between groups. Larger observational studies are required to further assess this cohort.
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Internal medicine journal · Nov 2023
A Survey of Hospital Practitioners: Common Understanding of CPR Definition and Outcomes.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is internationally defined as chest compressions and rescue breaths, and is a subset of resuscitation. First used for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, CPR is now frequently used for in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) with different causes and outcomes. ⋯ The common use of CPR in hospital reflects the broader definition of resuscitation. Recapturing the CPR definition for clinicians and patients as only chest compressions and rescue breaths may allow clinicians to better discuss individualised resuscitation care to aide meaningful shared decision-making around patient deterioration. This may involve reframing current in-hospital algorithms and uncoupling CPR from wider resuscitative measures.
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Internal medicine journal · Nov 2023
No relationship between socioeconomic status, education level and development and progression of diabetic retinopathy in type 2 diabetes: a FIELD trial substudy.
In 6002 Australian adults with type 2 diabetes and a median 5-year follow-up in the FIELD (Fenofibrate Intervention and Event Lowering in Diabetes) trial, baseline socioeconomic status (SES) and self-reported education level were not related to development of on-trial sight-threatening diabetic retinopathy. Similarly, in a retinal photography substudy (n = 549), two-step diabetic retinopathy progression was not related to SES or education.
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Internal medicine journal · Nov 2023
Tunnelled central venous catheters for incident haemodialysis patients - a Victorian survey exploring reasons for use.
Tunnelled central venous catheters (T-CVCs) are used globally as vascular access for patients on haemodialysis (HD) but are associated with increased sepsis, mortality, cost and length of hospitalisation compared with more permanent HD vascular access. The reasons for using T-CVC are varied and poorly understood. A significant and increasing proportion of incident HD patients in Victoria, Australia, have required T-CVC over the last decade. ⋯ These survey results provide an opportunity for quality improvement initiatives with respect to dialysis access planning and care.
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Internal medicine journal · Nov 2023
The United Airways Clinic: roadmap of a patient-centred multidisciplinary approach to the complex airways patient: the Sydney model.
Severe asthma is a subset of difficult-to-treat asthma which requires a systematic and multidimensional approach including the need to manage multiple comorbidities that mimic asthma. Multidisciplinary care is becoming the standard for the assessment of such patients. Multidisciplinary team (MDT) clinics are virtually nonexistent in the private space. We developed an MDT clinic to handle needs in the private space and found it was an invaluable tool for assessment, reflective practice and professional development.