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Query: UMLS:C0018099 (gout)
5,192 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To understand the content of ambulatory family practice and find effective ways to improve clinical service, education and research in the Department of Family Medicine of Kaohsiung Medical College Hospital, we surveyed 14,064 patients from Jan. 1984 to Feb. 1991 and analysed (a) their basic demographic data including sex, age, insurance type, source and residential district and (b) clinical health problems covering 25,679 diagnoses and 148,994 diagnostic visits. Clinical health problems were recorded by the ICHPPC-2 code system. Results of basic demographic survey were as follow: 49.1% of patients was male and 50.9% female; 58.9% fell in the age group of 16-40 years and 22.4%, 12.0% and 6.7% of patients fell into the age groups of 41-65, under 16 and over 65 years respectively; 62.8% was insured usually by labor insurance and 26.9% had no insurance; the commonest referrals were other patients, colleagues, company personnel, doctors, media ... etc.; 58.8% lived in Kaohsiung City and 19.6% in Kaohsiung county. As for clinical health problems, the data showed that the commonest thirty diagnoses encountered at our clinic accounted for 69.3% of 25,679 diagnoses and the commonest ten diagnoses in descending order were medical health examination, acute URI, abdominal pain, uncomplicated hypertension, prophylactic immunization, hepatitis B carrier, back pain, anxiety disorder, viral hepatitis and irritable bowel syndrome. By calculating the average value of each diagnosis in a sample of 148,994 diagnostic visits to evaluate the habits of practice, we found that the commonest ten diagnostic visits at clinic in descending order were diabetes mellitus, hypertension involving target organ, uncomplicated hypertension, gout, hyperthyroidism, duodenal ulcer, tuberculosis, lipid metabolism disorder, other peptic ulcer and depressive disorders; all were chronic diseases. We concluded it was very important and helpful for the development of family medicine program and primary care unit to understand the content of their own ambulatory practice.
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PMID:[The content of ambulatory family practice in Kaohsiung Medical College Hospital]. 156 Apr 75

Careful consideration of all relevant scientific evidence and a critical assessment of data quality show that thiazide diuretics are not cardiotoxic. Of 12 reported trials only two recorded more coronary heart disease events in thiazide-treated patients than in controls. One of these two was a subgroup of a larger study (Heart Attack Prevention in Primary Hypertension, HAPPHY) which found no difference between thiazide-treated and beta-blocker-treated patients. The other, the Oslo study, was too small to allow valid conclusions. Results from a subgroup in the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial (MRFIT) that appeared to supply evidence for thiazide-related cardiotoxicity are suspect when examined critically. Further evidence from 24- to 28-h ECG monitoring does not support the hypothesis that thiazide diuretics, either in the presence or absence of hypokalemia, increase the frequency or severity of ventricular arrhythmias. Reports of a thiazide-induced intracellular magnesium deficiency as a cause of ventricular arrhythmias have also not been confirmed; the development of arrhythmias in acute myocardial infarction appears to be due to an increase in catecholamine levels rather than hypokalemia. There appears to be little evidence to support the assumption that long-term use of thiazide diuretics aggravates or accelerates atherosclerosis of the coronary arteries; any fall in serum cholesterol appears to be transient. For the great majority of patients with uncomplicated hypertension, without a previous myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, diabetes mellitus or gout, thiazide diuretics appear to be both safe and effective antihypertensive agents.
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PMID:The cardiotoxicity of thiazide diuretics: review of the evidence. 221 84

The treatment of hypertension in the elderly has to take into account co-existing pathology. However, the benefit from treatment are large in terms owing to the frequency of cardiovascular events in the elderly. The benefits observed in randomised controlled trials are reviewed together with the adverse effects of the individual treatments. The optimal use of anti-hypertensive treatment is considered in light of any concomitant disease; for example beta-blockers or calcium channel blockers when angina is present and the avoidance of diuretics in the presence of gout. Important hazardous drug interactions are also discussed. It is concluded that diuretics are still the first choice in uncomplicated hypertension and the least expensive. However the place of anti-hypertensive treatment is not established in those over the age of 80 years.
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PMID:Tailoring anti-hypertensive treatment in the elderly. 978 90