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submitted 10 months ago by otter@lemmy.ca to c/medicine@lemmy.world
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submitted 10 months ago by otter@lemmy.ca to c/medicine@lemmy.world
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submitted 10 months ago by otter@lemmy.ca to c/medicine@lemmy.world
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submitted 10 months ago by thalamus@lemmy.world to c/medicine@lemmy.world

I started a neuroscience community for anyone interested in neuroscience, feel free to join :)

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submitted 10 months ago by otter@lemmy.ca to c/medicine@lemmy.world
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submitted 10 months ago by xohshoo@lemmy.world to c/medicine@lemmy.world
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submitted 10 months ago by otter@lemmy.ca to c/medicine@lemmy.world

A decent discussion which pulls from a few recent reports. Since this is a community of healthcare professionals, you might already know most/all of this, but it's a nice place to start discussions or to share with friends/family :)

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submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by otter@lemmy.ca to c/medicine@lemmy.world

June 8, 2023 — The Commonwealth Fund’s 2022 International Health Policy Survey of Primary Care PhysiciansFootnote i focuses on the experiences of family doctors in 10 developed countries, including Canada. The 2022 survey results explore topics such as physicians’ workload, access to care, coordination of care and use of information technologies. These international comparisons provide an important perspective on the state of primary care in Canada and where improvements can still be made.

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submitted 10 months ago by Spectator@lemmy.world to c/medicine@lemmy.world

Inspired by the other post about STEMI and smartwatch. Still early results, but they found patients with Parkinson's had smaller arm swings as measured by the smartwatch compared to controls.

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Home detection of STEMI with smartwatch (www.hmpgloballearningnetwork.com)
submitted 10 months ago by xohshoo@lemmy.world to c/medicine@lemmy.world

patient was instructed to move the smartwatch around his chest and was able to get analogues of leads I, V2, V4

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submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by coys25@lemmy.world to c/medicine@lemmy.world

This seems like a great idea, just coming off of a multi year pandemic - let's cut funding for the most successful public health intervention in human history!

Claire Hannan, executive director of the Association of Immunization Managers, said Wednesday that jurisdictions are reporting that the cut amounts to 10% or more of their previous year’s award. The targeted cut will affect programs that identify communities vulnerable to disease outbreaks, said Hannan. This information is used to prevent and manage outbreaks, Hannan added.

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As I've been reading about the studies about microbiome differences in people with various mental illnesses, is there any potential for a connection regarding contagion of mental issues? Like if people are around each other for long enough, will their microbiome and therefore their mental state become similar?

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submitted 11 months ago by Spectator@lemmy.world to c/medicine@lemmy.world

I think it would be nice for the health-related fields on Lemmy to form a network, so I'm sharing the radiology/medical-imaging community I started.

For now, enjoy a nice selection of mostly my personal cases, which I'm adding at a rate of 1-2 per day. In the long term, I'm hoping to see others post and more discussion as well, similar to the subreddit of the same name.

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A video discussing the arms race in the Match, and how the increasing importance of scores, research, and other resume items doesn't have real worth beyond getting a graduate their preferred residency program.

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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by WhoRoger@lemmy.world to c/medicine@lemmy.world

Hello,

We have a community for general health topics, debates, resources: !health@lemmy.world

I could use some help with it, since I think it could be a useful resource, nobody else seemed to be interested, and I don’t really know what I’m doing.

Currently I’m compiling a list of health communities on the Lemmy network and it’s just a draft for now.

Anyone here who’d like to join?

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submitted 11 months ago by racer983@mander.xyz to c/medicine@lemmy.world

From the history of pretty crazy self experimentation in medicine, a doctor has a cutaneous branch of his own radial nerve surgically cut. He then meticulously documents the progress of nerve regrowth, initial total numbness followed by neuropathic pain, and a partial return of sensation over time

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submitted 11 months ago by patchymoose@rammy.site to c/medicine@lemmy.world

I would love to transplant (pun intended) the r/medicine community over to the Fediverse. So far this seems like the largest community, but I'm curious if there are other medical professionals here, laypersons interested in medical news, or what?

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submitted 11 months ago by LizardKing@lemmy.world to c/medicine@lemmy.world
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The standard of care first line therapy for many types of aggressive B-cell lymphoma is R-CHOP combination chemo-immunotherapy (rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone). 85% of patients with advanced stage disease are in remission after R-CHOP, and approximately 75% in remission never relapse. For those who have relapsed or primary refractory aggressive lymphoma, unfortunately things look bleaker, and prior to the era of CAR-T cell therapy, the vast majority (70-80% or more) would die of lymphoma.

CAR-T cell therapy is a radically different cancer therapy from combination chemotherapy. White cells are removed from patients with lymphoma using leukapheresis. The T cells are isolated by the manufacturing lab, and a bastardized T-cell receptor with an antibody for a business end that targets some cancer-associated antigen. In the case of B-cell lymphoma, the antigen is CD19. When the engineered T-cells are ready, they are infused back into the patient, proliferate, and start attacking CD19-positive lymphoma cells. 50-60% of patients with refractory or relapsed disease can get to a complete response by 30 days after infusion, and most of those will stay in remission. At 5 years after CAR-T infusion, 35-40% of all patients treated are still in remission. This was first studied and approved as a third line treatment, following salvage chemotherapy +/- high dose chemotherapy and stem cell rescue. The obvious next question is whether or not this treatment was better than salvage chemotherapy in the second line.

Prior to 2021, the standard of care was to administer salvage platinum-based combination chemotherapy to patients who were not remission after first line R-CHOP, or who relapsed after R-CHOP. If the tumor bulk shrank by more than half, a single high dose cycle of combination chemotherapy was given followed by stem cell rescue (autologous stem cell transplantation). For patients who get through the high dose chemotherapy, the long-term survival is in the 40% range. However, many didn't respond to second line chemotherapy. Those patients went on to CAR-T cell chemotherapy.

The ZUMA-7 trial enrolled patients with aggressive B-cell lymphoma who were refractory to first line treatment or who relapsed in under a year, predicting a poor response to second line chemotherapy. Patients were randomized to go straight to CAR T with axi-cel anti-CD19 CAR T cell therapy or to standard of care salvage chemotherapy followed by high dose chemo/ASCT for responders. Most of those who did not respond or who relapsed after second-line chemotherapy did go on to get CAR-T cell therapy, so the comparison ended up being 2nd line versus 3rd line CAR T for many patients. The initial report in December 2021 at ASH from Zuma-7 showed that 98% of patients randomized to second-line CAR T got CAR T cells infused, while a distinct minority randomized to salvage chemotherapy made it to HDCT/ASCT. There was a large progression-free survival benefit to CAR T cell therapy in the second line, but the overall survival data were immature.

Based on these data and strong biologic plausibility (patients predicted to do poorly with chemotherapy do poorly with chemotherapy, generally), second-line CAR T for refractory or early-relapsed aggressive B-cell lymphoma became standard of care. However, there were some holdouts (including insurers of course) who were waiting to see if there was an overall survival benefit. One would expect an OS benefit, because in a deadly but curable disease, PFS tends to become OS.

Last week, the 5 year update from the Zuma-7 trial was recently published, which showed that the substantial advantage in progression free survival has now become an overall survival benefit at 5 year follow-up. The 9% absolute increase in overall survival at 4 years (55% vs 46%) is even more notable in that patients given how many of the standard of care arm ended up getting CAR T cell therapy in a later line. So this trial really is comparing second-line CAR T cell therapy to third line therapy, and the survival in the "control" arm was therefore quite a bit higher than the historical expected survival in the era before CAR T. It is now inarguable that the correct treatment for patients who relapse early after R-CHOP or who are refractory is going straight to CAR T with all due haste.

As of 2023, the treatment for aggressive B cell lymphoma has changed dramatically compared to 5 years ago, with substantially increased survival in relapsed/refractory disease. The next major step forward, with bispecific T cell engaging antibody immunotherapy is already here, but that's a topic for another post.

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In patients with normal flow low gradient severe AS, AVR was associated with a significantly improved survival compared with those who received standard medical treatment.

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Low-gradient aortic stenosis (AS) [i.e. an aortic valve area (AVA) <1 cm2 with a mean transvalvular gradient <40 mmHg and/or peak jet aortic velocity <4 m/s] is a frequent finding, with up to 40% AS patients harbouring discrepant results at transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) examination.1 This discordant grading pattern raises challenges and uncertainties regarding the true severity of the valve disease. Therefore, a thorough, integrative approach including assessment of flow status has been proposed in recent guidelines

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Conclusions The nonprescription drugs loperamide and mitragynine are associated with disproportionate reports of life-threatening ventricular arrhythmia in North America.

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