Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042571 (vertigo)
7,148 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In the present study, a survey of otorhinolaryngological medical care by the general practitioner, including the relationship between general practitioners and otorhinolaryngologists in rural areas was carried out. A questionnaire for otorhinolaryngological medical care by the general practitioners was sent to 326 hospitals with less than 100 beds where non-otorhinolaryngological doctors who had graduated from Jichi Medical School were working. Of these hospitals 164 (50.4%) responded. Most respondents said that they had about 3 or 4 patients with otorhinolaryngological disease per month. The distance between most hospitals and the nearest otorhinolaryngologists was within one hour by available transportation facilities. About 70% of the respondents were provided with simple otorhinolaryngological instruments, such as an aural speculum, a nasal speculum and a head mirror. The most frequent otorhinolaryngological diseases which they treated were vertigo, allergic rhinitis and upper respiratory infection including acute tonsillitis and pharyngolaryngitis. Only 10 to 20% of the general practitioners had otorhinolaryngological training. We found several problems in otorhinolaryngological medical care in rural areas. Patients with otorhinolaryngological disease seek otorhinolaryngological care at the nearest medical facility where general practitioners with inadequate otorhinolaryngological experience examine patients with inadequate otorhinolaryngological instruments. Therefore, a close relationship between general practitioners and otorhinolaryngologists should be developed and the quality of otorhinolaryngological medical care should be raised in rural areas.
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PMID:[Otorhinolaryngological medical care by the general practitioners in rural areas]. 899 94

On March 11, 2011, Japan's northeast Pacific coast was hit by a gigantic earthquake and subsequent tsunami. Soma City in Fukushima Prefecture is situated approximately 44 km north of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. Soma General Hospital is the only hospital in Soma City that provides full-time otolaryngological medical care. We investigated the changes in new patients from one year before to three years after the disaster. We investigated 18,167 new patients treated at our department during the four years from April 1, 2010 to March 31, 2014. Of the new patients, we categorized the diagnoses into Meniere's disease, acute low-tone sensorineural hearing loss, vertigo, sudden deafness, tinnitus, and facial palsy as neuro-otologic symptoms. We also investigated the changes in the numbers of patients whom we examined at that time concerning other otolaryngological disorders, including epistaxis, infectious diseases of the laryngopharynx, and allergic rhinitis. The total number of new patients did not change remarkably on a year-to-year basis. Conversely, cases of vertigo, Meniere's disease, and acute low-tone sensorineural hearing loss increased in number immediately after the disaster, reaching a plateau in the second year and slightly decreasing in the third year. Specifically, 4.8% of patients suffering from these neuro-otologic diseases had complications from depression and other mental diseases. With regard to new patients in our department, there was no apparent increase in the number of patients suffering from diseases other than neuro-otologic diseases, including epistaxis, and allergic rhinitis. Patients suffering from vertigo and/or dizziness increased during the first few years after the disaster. These results are attributed to the continuing stress and tension of the inhabitants. This investigation of those living in the disaster area highlights the need for long-term support.
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PMID:Change in and long-term investigation of neuro-otologic disorders in disaster-stricken Fukushima prefecture: retrospective cohort study before and after the Great East Japan Earthquake. 2584 7

A 77-year-old woman born in the Dominican Republic presented with fullness of the glabella and medial eyebrows for 1 year followed by alopecia of the lateral eyebrows and frontal hairline. She stated that although she had a high hairline at baseline, it had receded in the past year. She had also noted central scalp hair thinning that started 6 years earlier. She denied all styling practices that used traction or chemical processes, although she admitted to hair dye and blow dryer use. She reported "acne" in the central face for decades and darkening of the skin on the lateral face for several years. Her medical history included hypertension, hyperlipidemia, hypothyroidism, benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, and treated breast ductal hyperplasia. Her medications were metoprolol, amlodipine, aspirin, levothyroxine, omeprazole, pravastatin, and meclizine; she denied starting any new medications within the past 2 years. Her family history was notable for androgenic pattern alopecia in a brother and a high hairline in her father. Review of systems was negative except for knee arthralgias and seasonal allergic rhinitis.
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PMID:Four Diseases, Two Associations, One Patient: A Case of Frontal Fibrosing Alopecia, Lichen Planus Pigmentosus, Acne Rosacea, and Morbihan Disease. 2750 65