Background: Predicting the presence of true bacteremia based on clinical examination is unreliable.
Objective: We aimed to construct a simple algorithm for predicting true bacteremia by using food consumption and shaking chills.
Design: A prospective multicenter observational study.
To prevent death, necrotizing soft-tissue infections should be diagnosed quickly and treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics and surgical debridement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFManagement of Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia (BPSD) is a key challenge in geriatric dementia care. A multimodal comprehensive care methodology, Humanitude, with eye contact, verbal communication, and touch as its elements, was provided to three geriatric dementia patients for whom conventional nursing care failed in an acute care hospital. Each episode was evaluated by video analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Bacteremia and its complications are important causes of morbidity and mortality in hospitalized patients. However, the yield of blood cultures is relatively low, with many false-positive results from bacterial contamination.
Methods: We investigated the relationship between patient food consumption and the presence of bacteremia.
The concept of thresholds plays a vital role in decisions involving the initiation, continuation, and completion of diagnostic testing. Much research has focused on the development of explicit thresholds, in the form of practice guidelines and decision analyses. However, these tools are used infrequently; most medical decisions are made at the bedside, using implicit thresholds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of a 78-year-old man with transitional cell carcinoma and a paraneoplastic leukemoid reaction. The leukocytosis was present at the diagnosis of carcinoma. It dissipated with complete tumor resection, was absent when a surveillance computed tomography scan showed no evidence of recurrence at 6 months, and had returned with tumor recurrence at 8 months.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHemolysis presents as acute or chronic anemia, reticulocytosis, or jaundice. The diagnosis is established by reticulocytosis, increased unconjugated bilirubin and lactate dehydrogenase, decreased haptoglobin, and peripheral blood smear findings. Premature destruction of erythrocytes occurs intravascularly or extravascularly.
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