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BALANCE AND GAIT TESTS

October 28, 2008



Several easy-to-administer tests are validated for evaluating balance problems and fall risks. These tests can be administered in the examination room or at the bedside. They provide additional information on the extent of the patient’s balance problems. The equipment needed to administer these tests are a timing device (a watch with a second hand will do; a stopwatch is better), a line on the floor, and a standard chair with arms.

The sharpened Romberg’s test (tandem stance) assesses lateral stability. In the tandem stance, the patient places one foot in front of the other, heel touching toe, with his or her eyes closed. A patient who is not able to maintain this position for more than 10 seconds is at increased risk for falls.

The unipedal balance test is used to detect subtle balance impairments. The patient is asked to stand on one foot with the other foot raised 2 inches off the floor and not touching the other ankle or foot. Increased fall risk is associated with an inability to remain in that position for at least 5 seconds.

The timed 360-degree turn test assesses dynamic balance. The patient is asked to turn in a circle while taking steps. An inability to complete the maneuver in less than 4 seconds indicates an increased risk of falling. A similar test is the 180-degree turn test, where the number of steps the patient needs to turn halfway around is counted. Staggering during the turn, an inability to pivot during the turn, using five or more steps to complete the turn, or taking 3 seconds or longer to accomplish the turn are indicative of problems in turning while walking.

The five times sit to stand test is used to assess lower extremity strength. The patient is asked to rise from a standard chair, with arms folded across the chest, five times consecutively. The ability to rise from a chair requires vision, proprioception, balance, and sensorimotor skills. An inability to complete the maneuver, standing and sitting back down in less than 14 seconds, indicates an increased level of disability.

The tandem walk test can be administered if space allows. The patient walks heel-to-toe in a straight line and the number of missed steps is counted. Typically a measured distance is used, varying from 3 to 10 meters. A missed step is defined as heel not touching toe, stepping off the line, loss of balance, or requiring support. Fall risk increases with a higher number of missed steps or an inability to complete the test.

Gait tests should be administered to test slow and fast gait speed. The patient is asked to walk a measured distance at his or her usual pace, using a cane or walker if necessary. The patient is then asked to walk the same distance as fast as he or she can. The patient’s ability to increase gait speed indicates an ability to respond to environmental changes and task demands such as crossing the street or reacting to the sudden appearance of an obstacle.


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Hemochromtosis






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Music for CPR

October 27, 2008

This may get you a bit more excited for your next ACLS recertification. And if you lived in the 1970s or are a fan of disco, you really will like what you’re about to read. True to its name, it seems that the catchy and well-known Bee Gees tune, “Stayin Alive” might actually help save lives! In a small study from the University of Illinois medical school, doctors and students maintained close to the ideal number of chest compressions (100 per minute) doing CPR while listening to this song. In this study, 15 students and doctors first performed CPR on mannequins while listening to the song on iPods. They were asked to time chest compressions with the song’s beat. Five weeks later, the drill was repeated without the music but the study subjects were told to think of the song while doing compressions. The average number of compressions the first time was 109 per minute; the second time it was 113. The study’s author, Dr. David Matlock, points out that a few extra compressions per minute is better than too few. He notes that using this song may provide a useful CPR training tool as this life-saving measure is often wrongly performed because people tend to administer compressions too slowly and because people are afraid of not keeping the proper rhythm. This study will be presented at the American College of Emergency Physicians meeting in Chicago this month. What’s likely to follow are larger, more definitive studies with real patients or untrained people. Yes, my friends, just one more reason to love those Gibb brothers.


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T2DM Management Update

October 25, 2008

This Update is published on line in Diabetic Care..Read more.



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Water hammaer Pulse

October 23, 2008



This clinical sign is very interesting and we have been practicing to do this sign since we started learning clinical cardiology.This type of pulse was likened to a water hammer, a Victorian toy consisting of a glass tube filled partly with water or mercury in a vacuum. The water or mercury produced a slapping impact when the glass tube was turned over.This is an interesting review of this clinical sign. Read more..



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Cruveilhier Baumgarten (CB) syndrome

Cruveilhier Baumgarten (CB) syndrome comprises spontaneous portosystemic collateralization between the paraumbilical vein, the periumbilical veins of the anterior abdominal wall and the superficial and deep epigastric veins reaching the external iliac veins in a patient with portal hypertension. In classic CB syndrome, the umbilical portion of the left portal vein feeds a paraumbilical vein which leaves the liver and then heads towards the umbilicus.
Multidetector computed tomography is a noninvasive method of diagnosis, which expeditiously evaluates the overall status of portosystemic collaterals in patients with portal hypertension.On CT the paraumbilical vein is seen as a tubular structure arising in the fatty falciform ligament between the left lobe of the liver, leading from the left portal vein to veins of the anterior abdominal wall.
The network of dilated veins around the umbilicus gives a "Caput medusae" appearance.
Click on CBS...See images
..



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Medical records like Facebook?

As some one who is slowly getting hooked to Face book this statement sounds funny. But you should read this article because it is funny but interesting..
Read more..



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Headache a Review

Headache
This useful review of causes and management of headaches reminds us that:

  • Headache affects 95% of people in their lifetime
  • Headache affects 75% of people in any one year
  • One in 10 people have migraine
  • One in 30 people have headache more often than not, for 6 months or more
  • At least 90% of patients seen in a neurology outpatient clinic with headache will have migraine, tension type headache, or a chronic daily headache syndrome
  • Sinister causes of headache are rare, perhaps 0.1% of all headaches in primary care

Source: Practical Neurology 2008;8:335-343




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GI bleed and Anti Platelet Therapy

October 11, 2008

There is increased risk of bleeding due anti platelet therapy. Prophylactic gastro protection is recommended in patients with history of ulcers and bleeds. 
This consensus document published by ACC/ACG. The recommendations made in the document:

  • All NSAIDs, including COX-2 inhibitors, raise the risk of GI ulcers and bleeding when combined with ASA taken chronically for cardioprotection.
  • Even on its own, chronic ASA for cardioprotection increases the risk of upper-GI events and should generally be limited to 81 mg/day.
  • Patients at increased GI bleeding risk should go on a PPI; those with a history of ulcers should be evaluated and, as appropriate, treated for Helicobacter pylori infection before starting antiplatelet therapy.
  • Substituting clopidogrel for ASA doesn't cut the risk of GI bleeding and isn't as effective as the combination of ASA and a PPI.
  • PPIs such as lansoprazole and omeprazole are preferred over misoprostol, sucralfate, or histamine 2 (H2)-receptor antagonists for both the prevention and treatment of gastroduodenal lesions associated with ASA and other NSAIDs.
  • "Communication between cardiologists, gastroenterologists, and primary-care physicians is critical to weigh the ischemic and bleeding risks in an individual patient who needs antiplatelet therapy but who is at risk for or develops significant GI bleeding."


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Surgical Cure for T2DM

October 10, 2008

Time has coe to consider surgery as cure for T2DM and metabolic syndrome. This is called Metabolic Surgery borrowed from Bariatric Surgery.This surgery is kind of "Neuroendocrine Break" This is done laproscopically and involves creating a sleeve gastrectomy and then linked to Ileum. This procedure promotes reduced secretion of Gastric Ghrelin and reduced appetite. GLP1 and GIP levels increase and this causes increased Insulin levels with reduced Glucagon levels.Success rate is over 90% and patients with BML less than 30 can be operated..
Read published articles..




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Assessment of Diabetic Foot- Foot Protocol

A simple protocol can be used to assess the diabetic foot for the presence of predisposing factors for ulcerations and amputation, and can be used to guide treatment, according to recommendations developed by an American Diabetes Association task force.

The protocol consists of a history, general examination, and an assessment of dermatologic, musculoskeletal, neurologic, and vascular factors. Details of the protocol were issued by the American Diabetes Association, with the endorsement of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, in a report by Dr. Andrew J.M. Boulton and his colleagues in a task force of the ADA's Foot Care Interest Group.

The history should explore previous foot ulceration or amputation, neuropathic or peripheral vascular symptoms, impaired vision, renal replacement therapy, and tobacco use.

Key components of the diabetic foot exam include dermatologic inspection for skin status, sweating, infection, ulceration, and calluses, as well as musculoskeletal inspection for deformity (claw toes, prominent metatarsal heads, Charcot's joint) or muscle wasting.

Neurologic assessment for loss of protective sensation (LOPS) should include the use of a 10-g monofilament test, with the device placed at specific points on the bottom of the foot while the patient's eyes are closed, as well as one of these additional tests:

▸ Vibration using a 128-Hz tuning fork.

▸ Pinprick sensation.

▸ Ankle reflexes.

▸ Vibration perception threshold testing.

Vascular assessment using ankle brachial pressure index testing should be performed to determine the presence of peripheral arterial disease (PAD) in two groups of patients: those who are symptomatic (claudication, rest pain, or nonhealing ulcer) and those who have absent posterior tibial or dorsalis pedis pulses (Diabetes Care 2008;31:1679–85).

Patients assessed using the protocol should be assigned to a foot risk category from 0 to 3, with 0 being no LOPS, no PAD, and no deformity, 1 being LOPS with or without deformity, 2 being PAD with or without LOPS, and 3 being a history of ulcer or amputation.

Subsequent therapy and follow-up care should be provided according to the category assigned: Primary care monitoring is appropriate for risk categories 0 and 1, and specialist care is indicated for risk categories 2 and 3.



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Melamine Milk poisoning

White Rabbit candies are being pulled from the shelves for failing to have less than 2.5 mg/kg melamine.

The Chinese press reported another 380 sick children in Beijing at the same time as they are declaring the milk safe. Though this seems to be a contradiction, my feeling is that stones in children will be showing up for months after the milk supply is clean as kidney stones can lie asymptomatic for months (years?) in the renal pelvis before spontaneously moving into the ureters where they cause pain, obstruction and hematuria.

The Taiwanese press provides a shockingly sophisticated article on the problems with our current toxicity knowledge of melamine and the associated debate on limits of safety. In addition to discuss limits of tolerability it goes into the differing methods of detection including high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The LC-MS/MS method is apparently the most sensitive assay. One confusing aspect of the article is they swithc freely between mg/kg and ppm. One mg/kg is equal to 1 ppm.



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Recognition of Inflammatory Back Pain and Ankylosing Spondylitis in Primary Care

October 7, 2008

Diagnosis of AS is delayed for many years and these criteria can be used to make an earlier diagnosis.
Calin's criteria have been advocated to define Inflammatory Back Pain. These require the presence of four of the following five criteria:
  1. age at onset <40>
  2. duration of back pain >3 months,
  3. insidious onset,
  4. morning stiffness
  5. improvement with exercise
The specificity of Calin's screening criteria is ~75% but the sensitivity is low (23-38%).

Rudwaleit criteria proposed a new candidate set of criteria for IBP, which consisted of
  1. morning stiffness of >30 min duration,
  2. improvement in back pain with exercise but not with rest,
  3. nocturnal awakening (second half of the night only)
  4. alternating buttock pain.
The sensitivity was about 70%, specificity 81% and likelihood ratio (LR) for disease presence was 3.7 if two of the four criteria were fulfilled. The LR further increased to 12.4 if three of the four criteria were fulfilled.




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OCTOBER QUIZ-2008

October 4, 2008

A gentleman presents with shortness of breath and leg edema for 2 months that has become worse during the last 2 days. He has a history of diarrhea & protein wasting due to prior gastric bypass surgery, but is otherwise healthy. He denies fever, chest pain and cough.

On exam vitals are notable for tachypnea and tachycardia. Pulse ox is 95% on room air. The oropharynx is moist and his lungs are clear without wheezing or rales. His legs have 1-2+ bilateral edema with a negative Homan’s sign and no erythema.
EKG: atrial fibrillation at a rate of 158 and nonspecific ST abnormalities.

CBC: white count of 11, platelet count 137,000.

Chemistry: sodium 150, chloride 128, carbon dioxide 11, anion gap 11, creatinine 1.7, magnesium low at 1.2, albumin 1.7.

Troponin undetectable. BNP normal.

ABG on 2L O2: pH 7.36, pCO2 15, pO2 102.

Below is his chest x-ray
Click on cxr..

What diagnostic findings are shown? What is the treatment?
CLICK HERE FOR ANSWER..




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Glucosamine for OA

October 2, 2008

Users and prescribers of these two supplements take heed. The Glucosamine/chondroitin Arthritis Intervention Trial (GAIT), which followed about 570 patients with osteoarthritis of the knee for two years, has found that none of the treatment groups showed a significant benefit in influencing progressive loss of joint space.

Ref: Sawitzke AD et al. The effect of glucosamine and/or chondroitin sulfate on the progression of knee osteoarthritis: A report from the Glucosamine/chondroitin Arthritis Intervention Trial. Arthritis & Rheumatism 58:3183-3191, 2008




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