PBAs are feasible in clinical practice and are valued by trainees as a means of enabling focused feedback and targeted training. Commitment from trainers and trainees will be required but, with adequate planning, the assessment tool is effective with minimal impact on clinical practice.
Background-DiVuse oesophageal spasm (DOS) is a potential cause of intermittent chest pain and/or dysphagia. In the past, the diagnosis of DOS has relied on criteria obtained from standard oesophageal manometry (more than one simultaneous contraction in a series of 10 wet swallows with the rest being peristaltic). As symptoms are intermittent, however, 24 hour manometry may well be more suited to its investigation. Aims-To determine the ability of 24 hour manometry to detect the symptomatic contractions of DOS and to compare standard, laboratory based manometry with 24 hour manometry in its diagnosis. Patients-Three hundred and ninety consecutive patients referred with suspected oesophageal disorders. Methods-Standard laboratory based manometry and 24 hour outpatient manometry. Results-Sixteen patients were classified by 24 hour manometry as having DOS on the basis of painful contractions (spasms) of excessive duration and increased amplitude. Laboratory based manometry failed to detect the majority of these patients with DOS (14/16), and 53/55 were incorrectly labelled as having DOS on the basis of asymptomatic manometric findings. Conclusion-The detection of symptomatic DOS requires 24 hour manometry. (Gut 1997; 41: 151-155)
IOUS increases diagnostic yield but a significant proportion of patients with occult hepatic metastases are not detected. IOUS improves disease staging in some patients refining the indications for adjuvant therapy and enhancing the estimate of prognosis and improving decision-making.
Providers and health systems should use ethnic differences in risk of harm from
healthcare to reimagine their role in reducing health inequalities, write
Cian
Wade and colleagues
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