References: Laxative
J Pain Symptom Manage. 1998 Nov;16(5):290-7.
Symptoms and functional status of patients with disseminated cancer visiting outpatient departments.
Schuit KW, Sleijfer DT, Meijler WJ, Otter R, Schakenraad J, van den Bergh FC, Meyboom-de Jong B.
Comprehensive Cancer Center North Netherlands, University Hospital Groningen, The Netherlands.
Considerable research has focused on pain and other symptoms in terminal cancer patients referred to hospices and palliative care services. These patients differ from Dutch cancer patients in the palliative stage of their disease because the latter are cared for by general practitioners at home and medical specialists in outpatient departments. To clarify the experience of these Dutch patients, a study was started to investigate the prevalence and severity of pain and other symptoms as well as the functional status of consecutive patients visiting oncology outpatient departments for follow-up. After randomization, one group (I) of patients was interviewed at home by a general practitioner using structured questionnaires. The other group (II) received the questionnaires by mail, and scored the symptoms independently. The results of the symptom assessment show that patients in groups I and II suffered 2.4 (SD = 1.7) and 2.8 (SD = 2.0) symptoms, respectively. Between 30% and 40% of all patients reported constipation, nausea, loss of appetite, coughing, and dyspnea. These percentages were 50% lower when only moderate, severe, or extremely distressing symptoms were included. Sixty percent of all patients had pain, and 20% indicated a daytime pain score of 5 or greater on a scale of 0 to 10. Functional status was measured by the COOPWONCA charts; the mean score for the charts "physical fitness" and "daily activities" was 1.5 points lower for cancer patients than a random sample from the community of the same age and gender. The findings of this study should motivate doctors to put more energy in symptom assessment and interventions in palliative care
Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol. 1998 Oct;80(2):215-20.
Pudendal canal syndrome as a cause of vulvodynia and its treatment by pudendal nerve decompression.
Shafik A.
Department of Surgery and Experimental Research, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo University, Egypt.
Notwithstanding many established causes of vulvodynia there still remains an idiopathic group with unknown etiology and variable results of treatment. We present 11 women with idiopathic vulvodynia in whom the etiology could be defined and who were successfully treated. Age varied from 28-53 years. The vulvar pain was associated with stress urinary incontinence in 6/11 patients and all had constipation. Perineal and vulvar hypoesthesia occurred in 6, weak anal reflex in 7 and diminished EMG activity of the external anal sphincter in 3, of the external urethral sphincter in 6 and of the levator ani muscle in 11. There was significant increase (P<0.05) of the pudendal nerve terminal motor latency (PNTML) in all. The motor and sensory change as well as the increased PNTML point to pudendal canal syndrome. Pudendal nerve block, as a diagnostic and therapeutic test, effected temporary pain relief. Pudendal nerve decompression was performed. The inferior rectal nerve was exposed through a para-anal incision, and followed to the pudendal nerve in the pudendal canal. Pudendal canal fasciotomy was done to release the pudendal nerve in the ischiorectal fossa. Vulvar pain disappeared in 9/11 women and stress urinary incontinence in 4/6. Anal reflex was normalized in 5/7 women, and vulvar and perineal hypoesthesia in 4/6. The EMG activity of the external urethral sphincter improved in 4/6, of the external anal sphincter in 2/3 and of the levator ani in 9/11 women. The PNTML was normalized in 9/11 women. In conclusion, pudendal nerve decompression effected relief and improvement in the sensory and motor manifestations of the pudendal nerve in 9/11 women. Two women did not improve due probably to an irreversible damage of the pudendal nerve, or to incomplete pu
Fam Pract. 1998 Oct;15(5):420-5.
Assessment of GP management of symptoms of dying patients in an Australian community hospice by chart audit.
Mitchell G.
University of Queensland, Centre for General Practice, Medical School, Herston, Australia.
BACKGROUND: With specialist palliative care services becoming widespread, and the place of the GP in palliative care being examined, audit of patient care delivered by GPs is required in order to ensure adequate standards of care. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to evaluate symptomatic care delivered to palliative care patients by GPs in an Australian community hospice with a developed quality assurance programme. METHODS: The study was set in a newly established community-based, GP-run hospice in a provincial city in Queensland, Australia. A chart audit was carried out of the first 20 patients admitted to a community-based hospice, in order to establish (i) whether attempts were made by the treating doctor to find the direct cause of symptoms before initiating management; and (ii) whether management accorded with developed consensus-based guidelines. RESULTS: Twenty patients were treated by 14 GPs; 135 new symptoms were identified in the records of these patients. Of the 125 symptoms for which guidelines could be identified in the literature, in 87 (70%) an attempt by the treating GP to find a direct cause could be demonstrated. Of the 114 symptoms with treatments defined in the guidelines, 107 (90%) treatments conformed to the guidelines. Constipation, nausea/vomiting, anorexia and back pain were the conditions for which there were the fewest attempts at establishing a direct cause before treatment. In most cases these conditions were treated in accordance with the guidelines. CONCLUSION: Quality assurance mechanisms present in an in-patient palliative care setting appear to be associated with high-quality care by GPs.
Laxative online source: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=9848427&dopt=Abstract constipation laxative colon cleansing
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