7 results match your criteria: "St. Francis Hospital of Evanston[Affiliation]"
J Am Board Fam Pract
November 2002
St Francis Hospital of Evanston Family Practice Residency Program, Ill, USA.
Background: Pseudotumor cerebri, or idiopathic intracranial hypertension, is a condition most commonly affecting women of childbearing age who are obese or who have experienced recent weight gain. Frequently the patient complains of headache accompanied by dizziness, nausea, or visual defects, and it is characterized by elevated intracranial pressure in the absence of a space-occupying lesion or infection
Methods: A patient had been prescribed minocycline and subsequently developed symptoms 6 weeks after an increase in the original dosage. She was initially examined by an ophthalmologist, then was sent to the Emergency Department, and finally admitted under the family practice service.
J Am Osteopath Assoc
August 2000
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, St Francis Hospital of Evanston, IL 60202, USA.
A retrospective analysis of 1- and 5-minute Apgar scores of patients at term gestation (37 to 42 weeks) with evidence of clinical intra-amniotic infection and meconium-stained amniotic fluid was performed. The patients were selected from the labor and delivery records of two Detroit hospitals during the study period from January 1988 through May 1994. The author suggests that the presence of clinical intra-amniotic infection with meconium-stained fluid does not affect Apgar scores of term infants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngiology
October 1998
Department of Cardiology, St. Francis Hospital of Evanston, Illinois 60202, USA.
This report concerns an apparently healthy woman who presented simultaneously with acute massive bilateral pulmonary embolism and mitral regurgitation, subsequently, a month later, resulting in pulmonary edema secondary to chordae rupture of the mitral valve. The authors believe that massive pulmonary embolism predisposed to chordal rupture in this case. It is suggested that increased awareness of ruptured chordae tendineae as a cause of mitral regurgitation and the prompt use of transesophageal echocardiography will facilitate the early recognition of this potentially fatal, but treatable, cause of mitral regurgitation in patients with pulmonary embolism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngiology
April 1998
Department of Cardiology, St. Francis Hospital of Evanston, Illinois 60202, USA.
Women with coronary artery disease are less likely to undergo coronary artery bypass surgery, and this may represent a potential referral bias in favor of men. A higher in-hospital mortality rate in women compared with men has been reported earlier. Accumulating evidence currently suggests, however, that variables other than gender, such as advanced age, late referral, angina classification, diabetes mellitus, concurrent medical conditions, the number of diseased vessels, the caliber of coronary arteries, and the decreased body surface area in women may have accounted for this difference.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngiology
February 1998
Department of Cardiology, St. Francis Hospital of Evanston, Illinois 60202, USA.
The authors report a very unusual and unique case of pancardiac tuberculosis in a 25-year-old man who presented initially with atrial flutter with 1:1 conduction. Echocardiographic findings, computerized tomography images, and pathology specimens are presented. After initiation of antituberculous therapy, the patient converted to normal sinus rhythm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm Heart J
October 1997
Department of Cardiology, St. Francis Hospital of Evanston, Ill., USA.
Women with coronary artery disease are less likely to undergo percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) because of the potential referral bias in favor of men with coronary artery disease in the use of invasive diagnostic procedures and interventions. This difference may represent a sex bias in the delivery of medical care. The apparent sex difference in short-term success of PTCA seen in the early 1980s has not persisted in subsequent studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Infect Dis
September 1996
Department of Internal Medicine, St. Francis Hospital of Evanston, Illinois, USA.