In recent years, the role of primary care physicians (PCPs) in the diagnosis and management of gastrointestinal disorders, including screening for colorectal cancer (CRC), has been recognized as very important. The available data indicate that PCPs are not adequately following CRC screening guidelines because a number of factors have been identified as significant barriers to the proper application of CRC screening guidelines. These factors include lack of time, patient reluctance, and challenges related to scheduling colonoscopy. Further positive engagement of PCPs with CRC screening is required to overcome these barriers and reach acceptable levels in screening rates. To meet the expectations of modern medicine, PCPs should not only be able to recommend occult blood testing or colonoscopy but also, under certain conditions, able to perform colonoscopy. In this review, the authors aim to provide the current knowledge of the role of PCPs in increasing the rate and successfully implementing a screening program for CRC by applying the relevant international guidelines.
A systematic examination of the liver and biliary tree and both kidneys of specific age groups during FAST screening of hemodynamically stable blunt trauma patients may disclose a potentially unknown pathology with a positive cost-to-benefit ratio.
Reactive oxygen species have a key role in liver ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury. In the present study, the effect of the anti-oxidant compound lazaroid U-74389G in preventing liver I/R injury was investigated in a swine model. Ischemia was produced by portal vein occlusion. Two sets of experiments were performed, each with two groups (n=7 per group). In the first group, the potential protective effect of an intracaval injection of U-74389G after a 30-min ischemia, followed by a 60-min reperfusion period was assessed (biopsies at 0, 15, 30 and 90 min experimental time). In the second set, the effect of intracaval U-74389G injection after 30 min of ischemia, followed by a longer reperfusion period of 120 min was determined (biopsies at 0, 15, 30 and 150 min experimental time). Liver malondialdehyde, hepatocyte vacuolation-degeneration, venous congestion, inflammatory cell infiltration, sinus congestion-dilation and Chiu score of intestinal damage were determined at up to 150 min of reperfusion. In the second set of experiments, the Chiu score of intestinal damage was improved by the administration of U-74389G (3.17±0.40 vs. 4.33±0.21; P=0.030). However, in the two sets of experiments, the liver inflammatory reaction was more pronounced in the U-74389G groups (P=0.017 for the first set, P= 0.021 for the second set). No significant effect of U-74389G on any other parameters was detected. In conclusion, intestinal damage due to portal venous congestion
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