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Outpatient management of jaundice needed to lessen paediatric ED visits
Neonatal jaundice (NNJ) and pyrexia (NNP) are the most common diagnoses in the paediatric emergency department (PED) and during discharge from the hospital, a Singapore study has observed. In addition, the rates of hospital admission and referral from polyclinics and other clinics are higher than those in other series, driven by different healthcare structure, protocols, and workflows in the different studies.
Outpatient management of jaundice needed to lessen paediatric ED visits
03 Nov 2021
Weight loss boosts response to intrauterine progestin
Among women with obesity and atypical hyperplasia or low-risk endometrial cancer, weight loss during conservative management with intrauterine progestin improves treatment outcomes, according to a study.
Weight loss boosts response to intrauterine progestin
03 Nov 2021
SCLC: Hippocampal avoidance in prophylactic cranial irradiation a potential SoC
In patients with small-cell lung cancer (SCLC), hippocampal avoidance-prophylactic cranial irradiation (HA-PCI) better preserves cognitive function and has no adverse impact on the incidence of brain metastases, overall survival (OS) and quality of life (QoL) compared with standard PCI, a phase III randomized controlled trial has shown.
SCLC: Hippocampal avoidance in prophylactic cranial irradiation a potential SoC
03 Nov 2021
Add-on brivaracetam for epilepsy makes good in real-world practice
Long-term postmarketing data for adjunctive brivaracetam show that its use helps improve seizure control in patients with various epilepsy syndromes, even in those with prior exposure to levetiracetam. However, psychobehavioural adverse events (AEs) occur in one out of ten patients.
Add-on brivaracetam for epilepsy makes good in real-world practice
02 Nov 2021
Transplantation bias, misconceptions endure for alcohol-, obesity-related liver disease
Bias and misconceptions about liver transplantation persist for patients with alcohol- (ALD) and obesity-related liver disease (OLD), a study has found.