The placebo effect can be defined as any improvement of illnesses or reduction of subjective symptoms that result from interventions possessing no known physical effects. By contrast, the nocebo effect refers to undesirable symptoms or illnesses that follow interventions also lacking known physical effects. It may also play a role in chronic illnesses that lack objective confirmation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPatients complaining of pain or fatigue in the absence of known physical diseases constitute a high percentage of those seeking general medical care. Depending upon the type of physician/specialist consulted, those individuals may receive disease labels that range from an implied psychological origin such as somatoform or psychosomatic disease, or to a presumed physical disease such as fibromyalgia. Although all these conditions are regularly associated with fatigue, we have provided a new label suggesting another disease category, "systemic exertion intolerance disease," which replaces the previous "chronic fatigue syndrome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe placebo effect is defined as any improvement of symptoms or signs following a physically inert intervention. Its effects are especially profound in relieving subjective symptoms such as pain, fatigue, and depression. Present to a variable extent in all therapeutic encounters, this effect is intensified by hands-on contact with close verbal communication between caregiver and recipient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCervical bruits may signal the presence of high-grade narrowing of arterial supply to the brain. Previous small studies have suggested that severe arterial stenosis may produce bruits that persist longer and contain a greater proportion of higher-frequency sound spectral components. This study included 96 patients referred for duplex/Doppler testing after cervical bruits had been detected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiac auscultation remains an important part of clinical medicine. The standard acoustic stethoscope, which has been useful for more than a century, cannot process, store, and play back sounds or provide visual display, and teaching is hindered because there is no means to distribute the same sounds simultaneously to more than one listener. Modern portable and inexpensive tools are now available to provide, through digital electronic means, better sound quality with visual display and the ability to replay sounds of interest at either full or half speed with no loss of frequency representation or sound quality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVentricular septal defects do not typically result in a continuous murmur. The only previously reported case involved a congenital ventricular septal defect. We report a case of an acquired ventricular septal defect following a large anterior myocardial infarction resulting in a continuous murmur.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a new method to record and display heart sounds that uses a hand-held computer and stethoscopic recording device. It allows for rapid spectral and waveform displays of murmurs and provides a means for signal averaging of spectral frequency content. Compared with aortic stenosis, innocent murmurs primarily contain frequencies of <300 Hz and persist for a shorter duration at the upper-frequency levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy Objective: The accurate and inexpensive noninvasive assessment of the presence and severity of aortic stenosis remains a challenge. In this study, we performed spectral analysis on the murmurs of a group of patients with this disease in order to assess its severity.
Design: An electronic stethoscope was used to generate a spectral analysis of murmurs in patients with aortic stenosis.