Gastric antral vascular ectasia (GAVE) is a rare condition causing chronic GI blood loss that often proves difficult to treat. Many patients require repeated transfusions despite best efforts made with endoscopic and pharmacological therapies. We attempted to manage a patient with endoscopic resistant GAVE with Thalidomide. Within 3 months the patient became transfusion independent and has maintained an adequate haemoglobin for 9 months on the Thalidomide therapy.
Many deaths from myocardial infarction occur before medical help is sought. A campaign was mounted in Nottingham ("Nottingham Heartwatch") to encourage early reporting. A total of 13 828 men and women aged 40 and over registered with three general practices were asked to telephone a hospital-based number if they developed chest pain lasting for more than 10 minutes. Patients from study practices reported chest pain earlier after our invitation than they had before and also earlier than patients from control practices. While accepting the advice to call early some patients from the study practices ignored our special number and telephoned their general practitioner. The calls received on the Heartwatch line yielded a lower percentage of definite and probable infarcts than the calls received by the patients' own doctors.The way in which the characteristics of the study practices might have influenced this difference is discussed since it has considerable implications for largerscale attempts to bring patients with suspected myocardial infarction under medical care at the earliest opportunity.
During a 32-month period 2047 patients suspected of having heart attacks were admitted to hospital and were followed up prospectively. Out of 1480 eventually found to have definite or probable myocardial infarction, 483 had initially been admitted to an ordinary medical ward because of the shortage of coronary care unit (CCU) beds. More patients aged over 65 had been admitted to a ward than to a CCU, and more patients aged 65 or less had been admitted initially to a CCU. Within each age group, however, patients admitted initially to a CCU were clinically similar to those admitted initially to a ward. There was a higher proportion of successful resuscitations among patients admitted to a CCU, but there was no significant difference in mortality in either age group between patients admitted to a CCU and a ward.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.