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This baby was born with an extremely proptopic left eye and a non-reactive midpoint pupil. The midwife and I thought he looked a little garish and decided to patch the eye. When using a dressing to hold the patch in place the midwife felt something give. She thought she might have popped the eye, but when we took off the patch the eye had been squeezed back into the orbit. Orbital ultrasound scans and radiographs were normal, and the baby is now aged 6 with normal eyes and normal vision. This was an ocular prolapse rather than an extreme case of lid retraction, and the treatment is gentle pressure.

J C Dearlove,
consultant paediatrician,
Yeovil District Hospital,
Somerset BA21 4AT.


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Primary angioplasty for acute myocardial infarction gives better results than thrombolytic treatment, and a group of articles in the current issue of Heart (1997;78:323-36) presents strong arguments for immediate angioplasty to be made more widely available. Patients who should be given priority for angioplasty include those with cardiogenic shock and those with contraindications to thrombolytic treatment. As with medical thrombolysis, time is of the essence.

Data from 10 AIDS reference centres in France looking after 7749 patients have shown that since the introduction of protease inhibitors and highly active antiretroviral treatment (HAART) the costs of treatment have risen but expenditure on admission to hospital has fallen (AIDS 1997;11:F101-5). The cost of the drugs has risen by around $12 per patient each month, but the total costs of the health care have fallen by $101 per patient each month.

Outbreaks of Lassa fever continue to occur in Nigeria, and a recent study there has found that 12.3% of 552 health workers tested had antibodies to the Lassa virus (Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 1997;91:379-81). Rates were highest in locations where there had been recent outbreaks. The authors comment that even simple barrier techniques are little used in primary and secondary health centres.

Cocaine is dangerous stuff: the Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry (1997;63:531-3) describes two young men who had spinal ischaemic infarcts shortly after injecting the drug and a third case of a spinal transient ischaemic attack. One patient was left with permanent tetraparesis. Cocaine should be included among the possible causes of acute non-traumatic myelopathy, especially in young patients.

Telephone calls to accident and emergency departments asking for advice have become much more common recently; a study at one department in London recorded 597 calls in three months (Quality in Health Care 1997;6:140-5). Questioning of the callers found high levels of satisfaction, but about one fifth were dissatisfied in some ways. The staff who answer these calls need further training, the report concludes, both to improve their telephone skills and to ensure that the advice given is reliable and consistent.

A pilot study of the use of induced moderate hypothermia in patients who remained unconscious after recovery from a cardiac arrest is reported in Annals of Emergency Medicine 1997;30:146-53). Eleven of the 22 patients treated by cooling had a good outcome as compared with only three of 22 historical controls. The authors claim that these data warrant the setting up of a formal controlled trial.

Minerva likes clinical rarities. Metastatic cancer deposits in the appendix is one example. A case report in the American Surgeon (1997;63:778-80) describes a man aged 54 who had been treated for lung cancer and later developed pain in the right lower quadrant and a fever. He was thought to have appendicitis, but at operation the appendix was found to be infiltrated with cells histologically similar to his lung primary.

The stents used to maintain patency of biological passageways such as the coronary arteries or the oesophagus probably take their name from an English dentist born in 1807 (European Heart Journal 1997;18:1536-47). Stent and his dentist sons used a special apparatus to support poorly aligned teeth. The term was first used with its current meaning in 1954.

The selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor sertraline proved superior to placebo in a randomised trial of treatment for women with premenstrual dysphoric disorder (Journal of the American Medical Association 1997;278:983-8). This is the currently accepted term for the psychological features of the premenstrual syndrome, including depressed mood, mood swings, and anxiety. The proportion of patients who were much improved when taking sertraline was 62% - but 34% were much improved when taking placebo.

Do sexually transmitted diseases such as gonorrhoea and chlamydial urethritis make men infertile? A review article in Fertility and Sterility (1997;68:205-13) says that the link between the infections and epididymo-orchitis provides a plausible mechanism, but the epidemiological evidence is "inconsistent." Once again, more research is needed.

Further evidence that Alzheimer's disease is more common in people with low educational attainments has come from a study in the Netherlands (Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 1997;50:1025-33). Earlier research with this result has been criticised because the tests used might have been easier for people with better educations. The tests used in this study were said to be free of educational bias. Why better education should protect against dementia is still being debated.

Among the accepted AIDS defining disorders are Kaposi's sarcoma, carcinoma of the cervix, and several types of lymphoma. Many clinicians believe that some other tumours may be more common in patients with HIV infection, and a report in the Mayo Clinic Proceedings (1997;72:761-4) suggests that breast cancer (in both men and women) may be among these. It should at least be considered in the differential diagnosis of a mass in the axilla.

How should the clinician decide whether a patient has ulcerative colitis or Crohn's colitis? A review in the American Journal of Gastroenterology (1997;92:1247-51) concludes that most patients with ulcerative colitis have disease that begins in the rectum and spreads proximally in a contiguous fashion, but some have patchy disease. The final decision in such cases has to be based on "clinical judgment."

Splenectomy has been used for many years as a treatment for some of the complications of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia such as autoimmune haemolytic anaemia and thrombocytopenia as well as for symptomatic splenomegaly. The evidence for benefit is, however, only anecdotal. An observational study at the University of Texas (Journal of the American College of Surgeons 1997;185:237-43) found that the operation had been useful in patients who were anaemic or thrombocytopenic, but (as is so often the case) the authors recommended more research.


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