In the GISSI trial, 11,712 patients with acute myocardial infarction were randomized to receive either standard care or standard care with 1.5 million units streptokinase intravenously. A highly significant reduction in mortality during hospitalization in streptokinase-treated patients was observed. The mortality at 1 year was determined in 98.3% of the patients who had been originally randomized; the 1 year mortality of patients discharged alive was similar in those patients treated with streptokinase and those who were not; that is, the beneficial effects of streptokinase treatment on survival that were observed in the hospital phase of the study persisted unchanged and with comparable statistical significance for 1 year. However, a higher incidence of reinfarction occurred in the treated versus the control groups both during the hospital phase and at the 6 month follow-up. Streptokinase treatment had no detectable effect in patients with a history of previous infarction.
In coronary artery disease the patients usually manifest both anxiety and depression disturbances. A controlled clinical study was conducted to test the efficacy of a new antidepressant agent, maprotiline, in the early stages of acute myocardial infarction. The sample consisted of 126 patients, sixty-three receiving orally 25 mg of maprotiline twice daily and the remainder 5 mg of diazepam twice daily. Treatment lasted on an average two weeks (ten days to eight weeks). The depressive and/or anxiety conditions were rated on the basis of a questionnaire administered before and after treatment. Depression improved markedly in patients receiving maprotiline, while the two drugs developed a comparable anxiolytic action. Tolerability was good. No clinical or ECG evidence of cardiotoxic signs was detected. The importance of a drug with these characteristics in the management of emotional disturbances in the early stages of coronary artery disease is emphasized.
A brief account is given of the personal experience collected taking part in two Balint groups for five years running. Some significant insight was acquired about the following topics: (a) Meeting the patient: first the personal relationship, then the diagnosis, (b) What type of relationship? (c) When the patient denies that he has any personal problems and refuses psychological help, (d) Doctor-patient interactions: act or react, (e) Verbal and nonverbal communication, (f) What is explicit and what is implicit, (g) Allways listen to the patient’s answer, (h) An easy way of helping: listen, restate, clarify, (i) Being chosen by the patient: a request for a personal relationship, (j) Know yourself and learn new ways of interacting.
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