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Archive for February, 2008

Leave appendiceal masses alone.

27 Feb, 08 | by Bob Phillips

Acute appendicitisA 5 year old boy was admitted to a rural New Zealand hospital with 10 day history of abdominal pain. The pain was localised to the RIF with guarding and examination revealed a palpable mass in the RIF. He had previously presented with a 1 day history of severe abdominal pain and fever and had been discharged the following day with a diagnosis of gastroenteritis. He was transferred to the tertiary hospital and a diagnosis was made on ultrasound scan of appendiceal mass with abscess. His condition was stable. He was commenced on conservative management and supportive care with intravenous (iv) antibiotics followed by a 2 week course of oral antibiotics. He responded well to conservative management and was scheduled for appendectomy after an interval of 6-8 weeks. You wonder whether it is necessary, now he is well, for him to have an appendectomy.

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Q: FRAX testing for Autistic Boys?

19 Feb, 08 | by Bob Phillips

FMR1 geneYou diagnose a 5-year-old with Autistic spectrum disorder. His examination is unremarkable and there is no family history of learning difficulties. Should you perform a molecular genetic screen for FMR1 mutations (fragile X)?

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No dental antibiotic prophylaxis for VP shunts.

12 Feb, 08 | by Bob Phillips

During a routine clinic follow-up, a patient with an indwelling ventriculo-peritoneal shunt enquires whether prophylactic antibiotics are necessary prior to routine dental hygiene work. He produces a letter from his dentist enquiring the same.

Dr Max Nathan of Morriston Hospital, Swansea, UK has had this happen … has it happened to you? And what did you do?

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Disease spectrum vs disease prevalence

5 Feb, 08 | by Bob Phillips

Unrinalysis setIn examining a diagnostic test, we make the assumption that the characteristics of the test - its sensitivity and specificity (or likelihood ratios, the way I prefer to think) - will stay constant across different populations, although the positive and negative predictive values will change * . This is sort of true, and sort of false.

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