Internal medicine journal
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Anger in patients and families is a common problem in the care of persons with advanced disease. Whereas it is widely accepted that anger may be a justifiable reaction to significant illness and loss, it frequently creates difficulties for the doctors involved in care. In particular, there is often a personal impact on the doctor at whom anger is directed. ⋯ The ability to interact effectively with angry patients is a skill that is often learned with experience and is extremely useful in both transforming the patients' reaction into a more creative emotion and in developing a therapeutic relationship. Despite conscientious efforts, however, a few patients continue to be angry. A practical approach to anger, useful for the clinician directly involved in care, is outlined along with some strategies to adopt in the face of persistent anger.
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Patients suffering from neuropathic pain continue to pose challenges in clinical practice. This descriptive review discusses the continuing debate on the definition and concerns about increasing incidence of neuropathic pain. The clinical features of neuropathic pain are outlined, and the current understanding of the possible mechanisms of neuropathic pain is highlighted. Current management strategies are reviewed, and future advances in our understanding of the mechanisms, accurate clinical diagnosis and more effective treatment strategies are eagerly awaited.
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Internal medicine journal · Dec 2005
ReviewEpidemiology, clinical features and management of infections due to community methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (cMRSA).
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) was initially confined to hospitals, but in the late 1970s appeared in the community in the USA, primarily among intravenous drug users. In the 1990s, community MRSA (cMRSA) strains appeared in multiple areas of the world, and spread extensively. Initially, there were problems with the definition of 'community-acquired', which was exacerbated by the fact that if a time-based definition was used without stratification for risk factors, patients with healthcare-associated MRSA would be counted. ⋯ While cMRSA strains are usually susceptible to most non-beta-lactam antimicrobials, there is a lack of clinical trial data indicating which drugs have superior clinical efficacy. DNA fingerprinting methods have become more sophisticated over the last decade, and have determined that cMRSA strains have probably arisen from virulent methicillin-susceptible strains, most likely by horizontal transfer of methicillin-resistance genes from coagulase negative staphylococci to S. aureus on a limited number of occasions, and these clones have spread extensively throughout the world by person-to-person transmission. In Australia, the dominant cMRSA clones are the Western Australia, Oceania and Queensland strains.
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Internal medicine journal · Dec 2005
ReviewDiagnosis and management of Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia.
Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia (SAB) is common. Around 8000 cases occur per year in Australia, of which 60% are hospital- or healthcare-associated. Risk factors for SAB include injectable drug use, haemodialysis, indwelling vascular catheters and immunosuppression. ⋯ However, vancomycin remains the therapy of choice for SAB due to methicillin-resistant strains. Combination therapy with gentamicin may be useful for the first few days of treatment in selected patients, but otherwise there are few data to support the use of combination regimens in SAB. Newer agents such as linezolid and quinupristin/dalfopristin may have a role in selected patients, especially in SAB due to S. aureus strains with reduced susceptibility to vancomycin.
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Internal medicine journal · Dec 2005
ReviewRecognition and management of Staphylococcus aureus toxin-mediated disease.
The ubiquitous human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus is capable of producing a formidable range of extracellular toxins that can have significant deleterious effects on the host. Toxic shock syndrome (TSS) results from infection or colonization with a strain of S. aureus that produces staphylococcal enterotoxin(s). The key features of TSS are widespread erythroderma occurring in association with profound hypotension and multiple organ dysfunction. ⋯ Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome (SSSS) results from colonization or infection with a strain of S. aureus that produces epidermolytic toxin(s). SSSS ranges in severity from trivial focal skin blistering to extensive, life-threatening exfoliation. This review discusses the epidemiology, pathogenesis, diagnosis, and management of TSS, SFD and SSSS.