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1.
Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd ; 1642020 11 12.
Artículo en Holandés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33331713

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Liquorice consumption can cause pseudohyperaldosteronism and potentially lead to life-threatening complications. Besides correcting hypokalemia and hypertension, finding the triggering factor for pseudohyperaldosteronism is essential to prevent recurrence. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 68-year-old Syrian man presented in the Emergency Department with complaints of fatigue, weakness and exercise-related shortness of breath. Blood tests revealed severe hypokalemia for which suppletion and cardiac rhythm surveillance was necessary. Talking to the patient's son, it occurred that our patient drank copious amounts of Erk Sous, a thirst-quenching drink made from liquorice. The diagnosis pseudohyperaldosteronismwas confirmed by a high level of glycyrrhetinic acid in the patient's urine. After correction of the hypokalemia, our patient recovered successfully. CONCLUSION: Erk Sous is a thirst-quenching drink that can cause pseudohyperaldosteronism. The drink is popular in the Middle East during summer and Ramadan. If a patient from the Middle East presents with hypokalemia and/or hypertension, ask for consumption of Erk Sous.


Asunto(s)
Bebidas/efectos adversos , Glycyrrhiza/efectos adversos , Hipopotasemia/inducido químicamente , Anciano , Ácido Glicirretínico/orina , Humanos , Hiperaldosteronismo/inducido químicamente , Masculino
2.
Ann Hematol ; 83(12): 764-8, 2004 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15309522

RESUMEN

The current first-line choice of treatment of idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) in adults, prednisone, is effective but has many side effects. Furthermore, reduction of the dose leads to a relapse of ITP in a majority of cases. Courses of high-dose dexamethasone (HD) aim to avoid these problems. We treated 36 patients with newly diagnosed or recurrent ITP with an 8-day course of HD, with a peak dose of 40 mg/day. The courses were repeated up to a maximum of six courses, with a 28-day interval. Acute and chronic effects of HD on platelet counts were observed, as well as side effects. HD led to an acute response (rise of platelet count to a level above 50 x 10(9)/l) in 83%. When HD was given as a first-line treatment, 59% of patients were still in remission after 31 months. When HD was given as a second-line treatment, 50% of patients were in remission after 5 months, declining to 25% after 54 months. Side effects were frequent but rarely dangerous. In conclusion, acute effects of HD were excellent. Long-term effects of HD as a first-line therapy of ITP were good, but its long-term effects as a second-line therapy were much poorer.


Asunto(s)
Dexametasona/administración & dosificación , Glucocorticoides/administración & dosificación , Púrpura Trombocitopénica Idiopática/tratamiento farmacológico , Administración Oral , Adolescente , Adulto , Anciano , Dexametasona/efectos adversos , Relación Dosis-Respuesta a Droga , Femenino , Glucocorticoides/efectos adversos , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Recuento de Plaquetas , Prednisona/efectos adversos , Prednisona/uso terapéutico , Púrpura Trombocitopénica Idiopática/sangre , Púrpura Trombocitopénica Idiopática/patología , Recurrencia , Inducción de Remisión
3.
Int J Tuberc Lung Dis ; 8(4): 500-3, 2004 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15141745

RESUMEN

To examine the bioavailability of rifampicin formulations produced in Indonesia, we conducted a single-dose, double-blind, cross-over bioavailability study. Antituberculosis drugs from three Indonesian manufacturers and one international manufacturer were compared in 12 healthy Indonesian subjects. Out of three local manufacturers, two showed equal bioavailability compared to the reference standard, and one showed slightly lower bioavailability (ratio 0.86; 90% confidence interval 0.80-0.91) and substandard rifampicin content of drug preparations. Plasma rifampicin concentrations in this study were more than three-fold higher than concentrations recently found in tuberculosis patients in Indonesia, which suggests that unknown (disease-related) determinants may reduce the bioavailability of rifampicin formulations.


Asunto(s)
Antituberculosos/farmacocinética , Rifampin/farmacocinética , Adulto , Disponibilidad Biológica , Estudios Cruzados , Método Doble Ciego , Humanos , Indonesia , Masculino , Valores de Referencia
4.
Int J Tuberc Lung Dis ; 6(6): 497-502, 2002 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12068982

RESUMEN

SETTING: Although rifampicin is a key drug in tuberculosis treatment, little is known about its quality and bioavailability in countries endemic for tuberculosis. High drug levels may lead to increased toxicity, while low drug levels may predispose to treatment failure and relapse. OBJECTIVE: To investigate possible variations in the bioavailability of plasma rifampicin in tuberculosis patients in Indonesia. DESIGN: Plasma concentrations of rifampicin and the rifampicin content of drug formulations in use were measured among 62 non-selected tuberculosis patients in Jakarta, Indonesia. RESULTS: Plasma concentrations of rifampin were generally low: 70% of patients had 2-hour plasma concentrations (Cmax) below 4 mg/L. No toxic plasma concentrations of rifampicin (>20 mg/L) were found. The strongest predictive factor for the magnitude of rifampicin concentrations was the drug manufacturer. The rifampicin content of the different drug preparations used was normal (90.5-103.6% of the reference standard). No association was found between low plasma rifampicin concentrations and delayed sputum conversion or treatment failure. CONCLUSION: The unexpectedly low plasma concentrations of rifampicin in this setting are most likely due to reduced bioavailability of local drug preparations, as the rifampicin content of the drug preparations was found to be normal. The clinical significance of these findings remains to be determined.


Asunto(s)
Antibióticos Antituberculosos/farmacocinética , Rifampin/farmacocinética , Tuberculosis Pulmonar/tratamiento farmacológico , Adolescente , Adulto , Antibióticos Antituberculosos/administración & dosificación , Antibióticos Antituberculosos/uso terapéutico , Disponibilidad Biológica , Química Farmacéutica , Femenino , Humanos , Indonesia , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Rifampin/administración & dosificación , Rifampin/uso terapéutico
5.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 84(Pt 1): 638-42, 2001.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11604815

RESUMEN

The authors present a 6 years experiment using a document- centered electronic patient record, based on a central document repository. The document management system is paragraph oriented and all documents are built automatically before editing using predefined ordered sets of para-graphs. Paragraphs can be preloaded with templates, text or images. Once edited, signed and printed, documents are again decomposed in paragraphs and permanently stored. This system, though the compositional aspect of paragraphs is limited and their semantic content wide, offers numerous advantages. The typology is easy to build and to maintain, it has been implemented widely in our hospitals without need for any natural language processing techniques and is used daily within commercially available text editors. The actual state of the system is discussed, emphasizing the structure of the documents, the various attributes and properties that have been needed in order to meet user's needs.


Asunto(s)
Documentación , Sistemas de Registros Médicos Computarizados/organización & administración , Sistemas de Información Radiológica/organización & administración , Humanos
6.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 84(Pt 2): 1239-41, 2001.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11604926

RESUMEN

Being able to link the successive hospitalizations of a given patient for epidemiological surveys together by preserving patient anonymity requires a specific procedure. For its medical hospital statistics, Switzerland has adopted anonymous record linkage procedure, ensuring an irreversible transformation of identity and allowing the linkage of anonymous files. Concepts, algorithms and organization have been developed by the Federal Statistical Office. Algorithms are closed to those developed in Dijon University Hospital.


Asunto(s)
Seguridad Computacional , Confidencialidad , Registro Médico Coordinado/métodos , Algoritmos , Humanos , Suiza
7.
Int J Med Inform ; 58-59: 167-77, 2000 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10978919

RESUMEN

The DIOGENE hospital information system has been expanded with a centralized and integrated patient clinical database recording structured patient data. The objective is to provide a standardized framework for the building of future clinical databases and for the integration of existing heterogeneous ones. The combined 'across time view' and 'across departments view' generated from the integrated clinical data will enable an evolutionary view of the patient state, both across time and across medical specialties. For this purpose and to permit the communication and exchange of data, a new controlled vocabulary for representing clinical data has been created. The construction of this vocabulary is based on the international ICD classification, already being used in DIOGENE for encoding patient diagnosis and procedures. A new extension of the ICD is proposed for medical information that goes beyond diagnosis and procedures encoding. The building of a common clinical findings dictionary, recording the definition of clinical entities, is based on this newly developed clinical vocabulary. This process is incremental, manual and substantial.


Asunto(s)
Sistemas de Información en Hospital , Gestión de la Información , Vocabulario Controlado , Sistemas de Apoyo a Decisiones Clínicas , Humanos , Programas Informáticos , Suiza , Interfaz Usuario-Computador
8.
Methods Inf Med ; 39(1): 36-43, 2000 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10786068

RESUMEN

ARCHIMED is a Network of Integrated Information Systems (NIIS). This novel concept of hospital information system has a major advantage over the currently used distributed systems. The normalized representation structure of its databases enable its Navigators to reach simultaneously not only the data coming from different hospital departments, laboratories, and other hospital facilities, but also the data from different hospitals associated in the network.


Asunto(s)
Redes de Comunicación de Computadores , Sistemas de Información en Hospital , Servicios de Información , Aplicaciones de la Informática Médica , Sistemas de Computación , Humanos , Sistemas de Registros Médicos Computarizados , Programas Informáticos
9.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 77: 637-41, 2000.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11187631

RESUMEN

Careful attention must be paid when designing the following components of a hospital-wide electronic patient record (EPR) system: the common medical controlled terminology, the semantic data model for a standardized representation of patient data and the normalized database. Requirements are detailed. Problems encountered when coordinating the development of a medical terminology with the modeling of patient medical data are analyzed. Solutions implemented in the hospital-wide DOCLIN EPR system at the University Hospital of Geneva (HUG) are presented.


Asunto(s)
Sistemas de Información en Hospital , Sistemas de Registros Médicos Computarizados , Vocabulario Controlado , Redes de Comunicación de Computadores , Hospitales Universitarios , Humanos , Suiza , Terminología como Asunto
10.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 77: 875-9, 2000.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11187679

RESUMEN

Most of the theoretical medical knowledge comes from literature. The knowledge obtained from the vast majority of patients is then lost. The vast majority of patients do not participate in the elaboration of medical knowledge, apart from the lucky few entering a clinical trial or a published case study. Moreover, locally treated patients do not always correspond to the same time, space or age context as literature patients. How can the knowledge of one patient be used for treating other patients? How can we save the knowledge of our own patients? Hospital information systems contain a lot of detailed and precise information about many patients over several years. Databases containing detailed information can provide solutions based on case analysis (Case-based reasoning or "similar case approach"). An example of a Geneva's decision system called Archimed is shown here.


Asunto(s)
Inteligencia Artificial , Sistemas de Información en Hospital , Registro Médico Coordinado , Sistemas de Registros Médicos Computarizados , Sistemas de Apoyo a Decisiones Clínicas , Humanos , Suiza
11.
Proc AMIA Symp ; : 706-10, 1999.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10566451

RESUMEN

The use of a controlled vocabulary set in a hospital-wide clinical information system is of crucial importance for many departmental database systems to communicate and exchange information. In the absence of an internationally recognized clinical controlled vocabulary set, a new extension of the International statistical Classification of Diseases (ICD) is proposed. It expands the scope of the standard ICD beyond diagnosis and procedures to clinical terminology. In addition, the common Clinical Findings Dictionary (CFD) further records the definition of clinical entities. The construction of the vocabulary set and the CFD is incremental and manual. Tools have been implemented to facilitate the tasks of defining/maintaining/publishing dictionary versions. The design of database applications in the integrated clinical information system is driven by the CFD which is part of the Medical Questionnaire Designer tool. Several integrated clinical database applications in the field of diabetes and neuro-surgery have been developed at the HUG.


Asunto(s)
Diccionarios Médicos como Asunto , Enfermedad/clasificación , Vocabulario Controlado , Bases de Datos como Asunto , Sistemas de Información en Hospital , Humanos , Encuestas y Cuestionarios , Integración de Sistemas , Interfaz Usuario-Computador
12.
Methods Inf Med ; 38(2): 140-3, 1999 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10431519

RESUMEN

Readmission rate is often used as an indicator for the quality of care. However, only unplanned readmissions may have a link with substandard quality of care. We compared two databases of the Geneva University Hospitals to determine which information is needed to distinguish planned from unplanned readmissions. All patients readmitted within 42 days after a first stay in the wards of the Department of Internal Medicine were identified. One of the databases contained encoded information needed to compute DRGs. The other database consisted of full-text discharge reports, addressed to the referring physician. Encoded reports allowed the classification of 64% of the readmissions, whereas full-text reports could classify 97% of the readmissions (p < 0.001). The concordance between encoded reports and full-text reports was fair (kappa = 0.40). We conclude that encoded reports alone are not sufficient to distinguish planned from unplanned readmissions and that the automation of detailed clinical databases seems promising.


Asunto(s)
Manejo de Caso/estadística & datos numéricos , Sistemas de Información en Hospital , Readmisión del Paciente/estadística & datos numéricos , Adulto , Recolección de Datos/métodos , Investigación sobre Servicios de Salud/estadística & datos numéricos , Humanos , Suiza
13.
Hepatogastroenterology ; 46(27): 1986-9, 1999.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10430382

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND/AIMS: Long-term outcome in surgery for chronic pancreatitis remains relatively unknown. METHODOLOGY: Between 1963 and 1993, we performed 123 pancreatic resections and 35 drainage procedures for severe chronic pancreatitis. We reviewed 131 patients with a mean follow-up of 48 months (4 months to 18 years). RESULTS: Actual 10-year survival was 82% for nonalcoholic patients and 51% for alcoholic pancreatitis. Pain was successfully treated in 71% with pancreatic resection and in 42% with drainage procedures (p<0.01). Although post-operative diabetes mellitus occurred in 56% of patients after pancreatic resection, long-term nutritional status was similar after pancreatic resection and drainage procedures. Weight gain could be observed in 75 patients (47%) and quality-of-life was good to excellent in 97 patients (74%). CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, long-term survival was mainly conditioned by the etiology of the disease. Pancreatic resections were more successful in treating intractable pain than drainage and required fewer re-interventions. As presumed, resections were associated with a higher rate of diabetes mellitus, but this, however, had no impact on long-term nutritional status and quality-of-life.


Asunto(s)
Pancreatectomía , Pancreatitis/cirugía , Adulto , Anciano , Enfermedad Crónica , Drenaje , Estudios de Seguimiento , Humanos , Persona de Mediana Edad , Estado Nutricional , Seudoquiste Pancreático/mortalidad , Seudoquiste Pancreático/cirugía , Pancreaticoduodenectomía , Pancreatitis/mortalidad , Pancreatitis Alcohólica/mortalidad , Pancreatitis Alcohólica/cirugía , Complicaciones Posoperatorias/mortalidad , Calidad de Vida , Tasa de Supervivencia , Resultado del Tratamiento
14.
Int J Med Inform ; 54(3): 157-67, 1999 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10405876

RESUMEN

Since its birth in 1978, DIOGENE, the hospital information system of Geneva University Hospital has been constantly evolving, with a major change in 1995, when migrating from a centralized to an open distributed architecture. For a few years, the hospital had to face health policy revolution with both economical constraints and opening of the healthcare network. The hospital information system DIOGENE plays a significant role by integrating four axes of knowledge: medico-economical context for better understanding and influencing resources consumption; the whole set of patient reports and documents (reports, encoded summaries, clinical findings, images, lab data, etc.), patient-dependent knowledge, in a vision integrating time and space; external knowledge bases such as Medline (patient-independent knowledge); integration of these patient-dependent and independent knowledge in a case-based reasoning format, providing on the physician desktop all relevant information for helping him to take the most appropriate adequate decision.


Asunto(s)
Sistemas de Información en Hospital , Sistemas de Computación , Bases de Datos Bibliográficas , Historia del Siglo XX , Sistemas de Información en Hospital/historia , Sistemas de Información en Hospital/organización & administración , Hospitales Universitarios , MEDLINE , Sistemas de Registros Médicos Computarizados , Innovación Organizacional , Calidad de la Atención de Salud , Suiza
15.
J Clin Epidemiol ; 52(2): 151-6, 1999 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10201657

RESUMEN

The objective of this study was to assess the respective frequency of planned and unplanned early readmissions after discharge from an internal medicine department, and to identify and compare risk factors for these two types of readmissions. Readmissions within 31 days of discharge were identified as planned or unplanned based on analysis of discharge summaries. Time-failure methods were used to describe the risk of readmissions over time and to assess relationships between patient and index stay characteristics and risk of readmission. Of 5828 patients discharged alive, 730 (12.5%) were readmitted within 31 days. There were slightly more planned than unplanned readmissions (393 vs. 337). The difference in time-to-event functions was significant (P=0.04). The risk of planned readmission was increased for men, younger patients, and for patients discharged with a diagnosis of coronary heart disease, cardiac arrhythmia, and neoplastic disease. Increased risk of unplanned readmission was associated with index length of stay longer than 3 days, an increased number of comorbidities, and with a diagnosis of neoplastic disease. Planned readmissions constitute more than half of early readmissions to our internal medicine department. Therefore, a crude readmission rate is unlikely to be a useful indicator of quality of care. Several patient characteristics influence the risk of unplanned readmission, suggesting that case-mix adjustments are necessary when readmission rates are compared between institutions or tracked over time.


Asunto(s)
Medicina Interna/estadística & datos numéricos , Readmisión del Paciente/estadística & datos numéricos , Anciano , Femenino , Departamentos de Hospitales/estadística & datos numéricos , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Riesgo , Factores de Riesgo , Suiza
16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10724982

RESUMEN

The aim of this project is to expand DIOGENE with a centralized and integrated patient clinical database system providing a standardized framework for the building of future clinical databases and for the integration of existing heterogeneous ones. The combined 'across time view' and 'across departments view' generated from the integrated clinical data will enable an evolutionary view of the patient state both across time and across medical specialties. For this purpose and to permit the communication and exchange of data, a new controlled vocabulary for representing clinical data has been created. The construction of this vocabulary is based on the international ICD classification, already being used in DIOGENE for encoding patient diagnosis and procedures. A new extension of the ICD is proposed for medical information that goes beyond diagnosis and procedures encoding. The building of a common clinical finding dictionary recording the definition of findings is based on this newly developed clinical vocabulary. This process is incremental, manual, and significant.


Asunto(s)
Sistemas de Información en Hospital , Gestión de la Información , Vocabulario Controlado , Humanos , Programas Informáticos , Suiza
17.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 68: 935-9, 1999.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10725036

RESUMEN

The choice of a nomenclature for the encoding of the medical information to be stored in an electronic patient record (EPR) is a critical issue. As we are currently developing a neurosurgical EPR, we evaluated three nomenclatures or classifications, Read, ICD-10 and Quick Medical Reference (QMR) for the capture of the detailed concepts referenced in the EPR. We scored the correspondence with 2 for a good match, 1 for a fair match and 0 for no match. The Read nomenclature ranked first with an overall score of 1.21 (max. 2.0), the ICD-10 obtained 0.88 and the QMR 0.74. Some groups of items such as the neurosurgical history and examination were fairly well represented in the three systems. On the opposite, others such as the various neurosurgical clinical and radiological scoring and grading systems and the outcome descriptors were not correctly referenced in any coding system. Although the Read coding system has been advocated to represent the clinical activity in neurosurgery, it still needs an enrichment before being able to completely cover the concepts present in a neurosurgical record. Moreover the development of an international, standardised, detailed nomenclature and classification collecting the advantages of the various coding systems currently in use should be encouraged to be able to exchange and compare medical data.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedad/clasificación , Sistemas de Registros Médicos Computarizados , Terminología como Asunto , Sistemas de Información en Hospital , Humanos , Neurocirugia , Evaluación de Procesos y Resultados en Atención de Salud , Garantía de la Calidad de Atención de Salud
18.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 68: 185-90, 1999.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10724866

RESUMEN

On one side, physicians are asked to record administrative information, such as activity measurement, case-mix of their specialty, billing, for statistical, legal or reimbursement purposes; and on the other side, they need to gather detailed information about their own patients in terms of clinical evolution, for the day-to-day care of the patients or for clinical research purposes. Many other actors are also involved with these processes, both on the administrative side, such as registration officers, administrators and on the clinical side, nurses and other care providers. Applications have been developed within hospital information systems for capturing and disseminating information according to these specific actors and dedicated purposes. But more and more appears the need to integrate these data for insuring the coherence of information and avoiding redundancy of data capture. How to conciliate these objectives? We describe the Geneva's approach for integrating the administrative and the clinical systems.


Asunto(s)
Administración Hospitalaria , Sistemas de Información en Hospital , Sistemas de Registros Médicos Computarizados , Recolección de Datos , Sistemas de Administración de Bases de Datos , Humanos , Sistemas Integrados y Avanzados de Gestión de la Información , Grupo de Atención al Paciente , Diseño de Software , Suiza
20.
Arch Intern Med ; 158(17): 1940-5, 1998 Sep 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9759692

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Pressure ulcers are a frequent complication of bed rest. We examined risk factors for hospital-acquired pressure ulcers, the use of preventive devices, and the impact of case-mix adjustments on between-ward comparisons. METHODS: We conducted 3 cross-sectional surveys in a teaching hospital of 2373 patients who had no pressure ulcer on admission. We assessed the presence of pressure ulcer, dates of admission and ulcer occurrence, hospital ward, patient age and sex, appetite and route of nutrition, surgery during stay, hospitalization for fracture, comorbidities, use of low-pressure devices (special mattresses, cushions, and pressure-reducing beds), and the Norton Pressure Ulcer Prediction score (physical condition, mental condition, activity, mobility, and incontinence). RESULTS: Two hundred forty-seven new pressure ulcers occurred (5.7 per 1000 person-days). In multivariate analysis, the risk for pressure ulcer increased with age (risk gradient across 5 categories was 1:4.5; P<.001) and Norton score (across 5 categories, risk gradient was 30-fold; P<.001); other risk factors (all relative risks, 1.5-1.8; P<.002) were hospitalization for fracture, surgical intervention, reduced appetite, and nasogastric tube or intravenous nutrition. Adjustment for case mix substantially modified differences between hospital wards. Use of preventive devices was associated with Norton score, but not all high-risk patients benefited. CONCLUSIONS: Pressure ulcers were seen in every 10th hospitalized adult. Patient age and Norton score were the strongest risk factors for pressure ulcers. Use of preventive devices was suboptimal. Adjustment for case mix is essential if pressure ulcer incidence is to be used as an indicator of quality of care.


Asunto(s)
Hospitalización , Úlcera por Presión/etiología , Úlcera por Presión/prevención & control , Adolescente , Adulto , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Factores de Confusión Epidemiológicos , Estudios Transversales , Femenino , Departamentos de Hospitales/estadística & datos numéricos , Humanos , Incidencia , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Úlcera por Presión/epidemiología , Riesgo , Factores de Riesgo , Suiza/epidemiología
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