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It's apparently not that easy to diagnose Parkinson's disease in
the community. As part of a London based prevalence study, an analysis
reveals that at least 15% of people who have been diagnosed as having
Parkinson's probably don't fulfill strict criteria for the disease. A
further 20% who have sought medical attention probably do have the
disease, but haven't been given a diagnosis (Journal of
Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 2002;73:529-534)
When people tackle their smoking habit, they obviously hope that
stopping will have an impact on their health. The findings of a Danish
population study that looked at the risk of hospital admission for
people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease show that stopping
smoking altogether can bring about a 40% reduction in morbidity.
Cutting down, even by more than 50%, however, is of questionable
benefit (Thorax 2002;57: 967-972)
Infection with Giardia lamblia predominantly causes
diarrhea. An Italian study
prompted by a local outbreak
found that
82% of people who were clinically affected also had pre-existing
symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome. In these patients the antibiotic given to eliminate the bug didn't modify the symptoms, but in those
without irritable bowel syndrome the treatment was clearly effective
(Journal of Infection 2002;45:169-172).
Here's some heartwarming news about our furry friends. Pet
ownership has been investigated one step further, this time to show
that people with pets had significantly lower resting heart rates and
blood pressures, and significantly lower heart rates and blood
pressures when performing mental arithmetic, than people without pets.
These variables also returned to their baseline measurements more
quickly. Interestingly, in pet owners the greatest increases occurred
in the presence of their spouse and the lowest in the presence of their
pet (Psychosomatic Medicine 2002;64:727-739)
Editors of medical journals are put in a difficult position if
the associations that own their journal can dictate to them. Both
JAMA and the NEJM recently lost their editors
through over exuberant owner involvement. In a survey of editors of 33 journals owned by not for profit organizations, 70% reported that they had complete editorial freedom, while the rest said they had a high
level of freedom. Despite this, 42% admitted they'd recently been
under pressure from the leaders of their owning associations over
editorial content. The authors warn editors that if they've not yet
tested their freedom, they may actually have less than they perceive
(Science and Engineering Ethics 2002;8:513-528)[ISI][Medline].
The active ingredient in cinnamon spice
cinnamaldehyde
may be
toxic to human cells, according to a report on BioMedNet
(www.bmn.com; Nov 15, 2002). Apparently cinnamaldehyde blocks
mitochondrial respiration and causes lysis of cultured liver cells.
Previous research shows cinnamaldehyde causes fetal abnormalities in
rats. Different countries allow different levels of cinnamaldehyde to be added to food, beverages, and cosmetics. What's not yet known is the
level of cinnamaldehyde likely to cause problems in humans.
When teenagers come of age, parents tend to leave them alone for
longer periods of time. Not surprisingly, there's an association between lack of supervision and risky sexual behavior, and one survey
of highschool children reported in Pediatrics found that most underage sex takes place at home. A significant number of "encounters" took place before 6 pm. Boys who were unsupervised for
more than five hours a week after school were twice as likely to have
gonorrhea or chlamydial infections
(www.pediatrics.org/cgi/content/full/110/6/e66).
A double blind crossover study of gabapentin to treat restless
legs syndrome found that it improves both sensory and motor symptoms.
In this short study it also seemed to improve sleep and reduce periodic
leg movements during sleep and to be well tolerated. Traditional drug
treatments for restless legs syndrome come with a plethora of
undesirable side effects, so gabapentin may prove to be a great step
forward (Neurology 2002;59:1573-1579)
Minerva was under the impression that it's poor pay that causes
nurses to leave the profession, but an American survey suggests it's
doctors behaving badly. More than a third of people interviewed reported that they knew of a nurse leaving an institution because of
disruptive behavior by physicians, and 90% said they'd witnessed such
behavior. Although two thirds said there were codes of conduct in
place, less than half felt these were effective (Physician Executive Nov-Dec 2002:8-11).
Ravi Gowda,
specialist registrar, Stephen T Green,
consultant, department of infection and tropical medicine,
David Gawkrodger, consultant, Kid Wan Shum, specialist
registrar, department of dermatology, David Slater,
consultant, department of pathology, Sheffield S5 7AU, UK
Northern General Hospital, Robert Townsend, specialist
registrar, department of microbiology, Royal Hallamshire
Hospital, Sheffield S10 2JF, UK

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A 73 year old woman had an isolated symptomless lesion on her
right pinna for several years. It had the appearance of a granulomatous
plaque. Urged by her son, she finally sought medical advice for it.
Histology of the lesion confirmed a granulomatous reaction without an
obvious cause. When a further biopsy was sent for microbiological
culture the true diagnosis emerged as Mycobacterium
tuberculosis infection. She had no evidence of tuberculosis
elsewhere, but gave a strong family history
her father, grandfather,
and uncle had all died of tuberculosis.
Although statins seem to be gaining credence in all manner of
ways, their alleged substantial protection against osteoporotic fractures seems to be false. After analysis of data from their retrospective cohort study, its authors say the "protection" of statins in this arena can probably be explained by previously unmeasured confounding factors (Injury Prevention
2002;8:276-279)
A hotly debated premorbid question is about the influence of
life events before the clinical manifestation of serious illness. A
longitudinal study of people with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis in Psychosomatic Medicine (2002;64:916-920)
Footnotes
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What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+