27 research outputs found

    Improving outpatient care in chronic heart failure

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    Despite advances in pharma and high-technology medicine, the rate of burdensome hospital admissions and mortality in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) remains high. Over half of all admission-entailing decompensations have been repeatedly shown to emerge from non-compliance with outpatient prescriptions. Poor adherence to medication and non-medication treatment can only be broken by improving the patient’s awareness of the disease and his closer monitoring by healthcare professionals. The power of clinical and laboratory illness monitoring in line with the recommended quality criteria of medical aid in heart failure (HF) is strongly limited today by time resources available in outpatient and midwifery clinics. Meanwhile, an international and certain domestic experience has been built up to run CHF outpatient centres with involvement of specially-trained nursing and senior medical staff. Analytic evidence on such centres suggests a reduction in mortality and hospitalisation rate among the visiting patients. To combat existing drawbacks of CHF outpatient care, the National Medical Research Center of Cardiology in alliance with the Specialist Society of Heart Failure have developed the nurses’ guidelines for CHF rooms and are launching a medical staff training programme to manage CHF rooms, registry and data analysis. Furthermore, a procedure has been developed for patient routing to regional CHF outpatient cabinets that is being actively deployed in the Tyumen Region

    The Effect of Prednisone on Tuberculin Skin Test Reaction in Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis

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    Objectives. To assess the correlation between prednisone and methotrexate (MTX) treatment duration and dosage with the TST induration diameter of the TST reaction among rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients. Method. We retrospectively analyzed consecutive cases of RA patients who were TNF-i therapy candidates. TST measurements, prednisone and methotrexate dosages, and treatment durations were recorded. A control group was randomly selected from healthy subjects. We compared TST reaction size between the following three groups: RA patients with current prednisone treatment, RA prednisone naïve patients, and healthy individuals. Results. Our study sample comprised 43 RA patients with prednisone treatment, 22 prednisone naïve patients, and 195 healthy subjects. There was no significant difference in mean TST between the groups (5.3±6.6, 7.8±6.2, and 7.6±7.0, respectively, p=0.149). No correlation was noted between TST size and prednisone u-y (r=0.229, p=0.140) or methotrexate u-y in patients with and without prednisone therapy (r=0.219, p=0.158; and r=−0.293, p=0.186, respectively). Conclusions. Our results show that the TST reaction size among RA patients may not be affected by prednisone therapy. In addition, the TST reaction of RA patients may present similarly to that of healthy individuals. Therefore, we suggest that the criterion of a TST reaction of 5 mm to define latent TB infection in our population should be reevaluated

    Gallium-67 SPECT scintigraphy may be useful in diagnosis of temporal arteritis

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    Objective: To investigate the effectiveness and usefulness of (67)Ga SPECT scintigraphy in the diagnosis of TA. Methods: Nine patients (five male, four female) and six controls were included in the study. All of them received 8–10 mCi (67)Ga intravenously 48 hours before the scan.(67)Ga uptake ratios were calculated on transaxial and coronal slices. Results: All patients showed increased uptake in the temporal area of the skull compared with controls. Conclusion: The data suggest that (67)Ga skull SPECT may be useful in the diagnosis of TA, especially if the uptake ratio in the area of interest is calculated. Further studies are needed to confirm these data
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