Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
This article originally appeared in BMJ USA
There is now consistent evidence that weight loss reduces blood
pressure in people who are heavier than they should be and have high or
"high normal" blood pressure. In one American study, participants'
diastolic blood pressure went down 1.4 mm Hg for every 2 pounds (4.4 kg) they lost (Annals of Internal Medicine 2001;134:1-11)
It seems likely that children who were breast fed as babies have
a small but detectable cognitive advantage over children who were
bottle fed. The latest study in a long line of inquiry, which began in
1929, looks at the IQ of children age 7-8 years who were born very
prematurely (Archives of Diseases in Childhood Fetal and Neonatal
Edition 2001;84:F23-27). Nearly three quarters of mothers provided
expressed breast milk for feeding. Their children ended up with a
verbal IQ score six points higher than the rest, independent of social class.
A letter to the Canadian Medical Association Journal
suggests that hospital specialists should wear colour coded lab coats to help patients identify them (2000;163:1553). For example,
hepatologists might wear yellow, haematologists could wear red, and
obstetricians should wear pink (or blue depending). The idea is
unlikely to appeal to gastroenterologists or infectious disease
specialists, however, who the author imagines wearing brown and mouldy
green respectively.
Thiazide diuretics are one of those really useful treatments
that, like aspirin, cost next to nothing. In a comparative study of
different antihypertensive agents they come out on top again, this time
for reducing the incidence of stroke in people with treated
hypertension (Archives of Internal Medicine 2001;161:37-43)
When neonatal screening for cystic fibrosis began in Wisconsin,
USA, the authorities had the foresight to launch the programme in the
context of a randomised trial. The results, after five to 14 years of
follow up, show that children who were diagnosed early through neonatal
screening ended up taller and less malnourished than children who were
diagnosed only after they developed symptoms (Pediatrics
2001;107:1-13)
Minerva is often sent pictures of people impaled on fish hooks,
so she has a heightened awareness of the dangers of fishing. Orthopaedic surgeons in one hospital in Israel treated 33 such injuries
in 1995-1997 (British Journal of Sports Medicine
2000;34:459-462)
or inflict tissue damage
when pulled, so a quick tug is unlikely
to do the trick. Even if the hook looks superficial, always find out
what shape it is and where it goes before attempting extraction. A
plain radiograph is usually enough.
For 10 years researchers have been studying the link between
gallbladder disease and drinking coffee. Some of them find that drinking coffee prevents gall stones, and some find that it doesn't. The latest study, which is large but cross sectional, is also negative
(American Journal of Epidemiology 2000;152:1034-1038)
Minerva's hunch that children's diets would improve overnight
if the Teletubbies ate broccoli instead of tubby custard is supported
by research showing that meal time television may influence what
children eat (www.pediatrics.org/cgi/content/full/107/1/e7). In a survey of
91 families, those who watched television at meal times ate more pizza
and salty snacks and less fruit and vegetables than other families.
They also drank more caffeine and fizzy drinks. The findings were
independent of social class.
Teaching medical students and doctors to practice evidence based
medicine may be popular, but ironically there is no evidence that such
teaching works (Academic Medicine 2000;75:1184-1185)[ISI][Medline]. One
review concludes that programmes teaching evidence based medicine are
themselves poorly evaluated. Those that are evaluated rarely manage to
change students' or doctors' behaviour or improve patient care. At
least part of the problem must be that most teaching on evidence based
medicine goes on in the journal club and not at the
bedside.
M N A Khalek, consultant
ophthalmologist, R F Refaat, staff grade, eye
department, Pilgrim Hospital, Boston, Lincolnshire PE21 9QS, UK.

View larger version (115K):
[in a new window]
A 67 year old man presented with poor vision,
blurring, and glare 16 months after bilateral cataract operations. To
describe his symptoms more clearly he took this picture, scanned it
into his computer, and drew the cross lines to represent the glare in
his right eye. His symptoms were caused by thickening of the lens
capsule and they disappeared after YAG laser capsulotomy. His visual
acuity also improved.
Minerva learned a little English history from the British
Journal of Psychiatry, thanks to a paper on suicide in medieval England (2001;178:42-47). During the reigns of Henry III (1216-1272) and the first three Edwards (1272-1377), judicial inquiries record 190 cases of suicide, gamely translated from medieval legal Latin by one of
the authors. Hanging and drowning were the most popular methods,
followed by self stabbing with a sword. Suicide was a crime and was
often concealed. The consequences included confiscation of all the
victim's property by the Crown, not to mention eternal damnation of
the soul.