Kolkata Doctor Rape Case: Viral Video shows ex-principal’s aids at seminar hall

Kolkata: A video that went viral on social media reportedly showing some close associates of former RG Kar Medical College and Hospital Principal Sandip Ghosh in the seminar hall shortly after the body of a female postgraduate doctor was discovered on the morning of August 9.

However, the body of the doctor who became the victim of a ghastly rape and murder, is not visible in the video, the authenticity of which could not be verified by IANS.

Following the surfacing of the video allegedly showing Ghosh’s confidants, including a lawyer, assembling near the scene of the crime, the leaders of Opposition parties in West Bengal have raised apprehensions about evidence loss and tampering. 

Also Read:Kolkata doctor rape-murder case: CBI files FIR against RG Kar ex-principal

According to an IANS report, BJP’s state General Secretary Jagannath Chattopadhyay told media persons that because of the presence of so many people at the scene of crime, there would surely be footprints and fingerprints of those persons there and the evidence would have been compromised.

He also alleged that this could have been done deliberately.

“There is a high possibility of tampering with evidence. Those who are responsible for tampering and for the loss of evidence are equally guilty and they should be arrested immediately,” he said.

Soon after the video went viral a senior officer of Kolkata Police gave clarifications on its contents, where she indirectly admitted that the video was of the seminar hall.

According to Deputy Commissioner (central division) of city police, Indira Mukherjee, the size of the seminar room was 50×32 feet, out of which the police cordoned off a 40 feet radius around the body of the victim immediately after reaching the spot, news agency IANS reported.

“The video that has surfaced shows that area of the cordoned-off zone. Only police personnel, members of the forensic team and those who were responsible for shifting of the body were allowed within the 40 feet area which was cordoned off,” she said.

However, she did not give any answer on what a lawyer was doing at the scene of the crime.

“The hospital authorities can give the answer, since probably the lawyer was associated with them,” she said.

Legal brains, however, said that instead of cordoning only a portion of the seminar hall, the entire hall should have been cordoned off barring entry of others in the room.

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MAMC MD medico found dead in hostel, probe launched

New Delhi: In a tragic incident, an MD medico of Maulana Azad Medical College (MAMC) was found dead yesterday hanging from a ceiling fan in his hostel room.

While the police investigating the case suspect suicide, no suicide note has been recovered from the spot. Initial reports suggest that the incident may be a case of suicide, though authorities have yet to confirm the cause of death.

The medico was reportedly undergoing treatment for psychiatric disorder.

Speaking to PTI, the police officials informed, “A 30-year-old medical student allegedly committed suicide at the Maulana Azad Medical College in Central Delhi. The body of *** *** was found hanging from a ceiling fan in his hostel room on Tuesday evening.”

Also Read:NEET aspirant dies under mysterious circumstances in Hamirpur, Investigation underway

The deceased medico has been identified as a first-year student of MD (Doctor of Medicine).

He was under treatment for psychiatric disorder, a police officer said, adding that no suicide note has been found.

“Information was received regarding suicide in the Old Resident Doctors’ Hostel at MAMC. It was found that a 30-year-old male *** who was a student at Maulana Azad Medical College studying in MD in 1st year has committed suicide. He was under treatment for psychiatric disorder,” the Delhi Police stated, as per news agency ANI.

The family members of the deceased have been informed and further probe is underway, the officials added.

Also Read:Depression, Alleged Academic Pressure: 2nd-year MBBS Student of Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College jumps to death from institute building

Earlier this month, a 34-year-old neurosurgeon at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), reportedly died by suicide due to an alleged overdose of medication at his home in Gautam Nagar. A suicide note was discovered at the scene, in which the doctor stated that he was ending his life of his own volition and did not hold anyone responsible for his death. The note also mentioned a dispute with his wife, who had left for her maternal home for Raksha Bandhan.

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PG Medico Rape-Murder Case: ED to probe financial irregularities at RG Kar Hospital

Kolkata: In a recent development, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) has filed a money laundering case to probe the alleged financial irregularities at the RG Kar Medical College and Hospital in Kolkata, focusing on the tenure of former and controversial Principal Sandip Ghosh.

The ED has filed an Enforcement Case Information Report (ECIR) to look into financial irregularities that occurred during Ghosh’s tenure. 

According to an IANS report, sources aware of the development said that the ECIR will be filed on the basis of the first information report (FIR) filed in the matter by the officials of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), who have already started a probe into the matter, following an order from a single-judge bench of Calcutta High Court last week.

ED, the investigation arm of the Union Ministry of Finance, will now probe the money laundering angle in the case, sources said.

Also Read:RG Corruption Probe Case: CBI Interrogates Ex-Principal, Medical Superintendent, Vice Principal

ED always has greater flexibility than CBI in starting an investigation in any case. While CBI can enter the investigation scene only under two circumstances, the first being standing clearance from the state government concerned and the second being a court order, there are no such restrictions on ED in such matters.

As a result, Ghosh and his associates at RG Kar Medical College will face dual scrutiny—first from the CBI and then from the ED.

Medical Dialogues had earlier reported that the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), investigating the alleged financial irregularities at RG Kar Medical College and Hospital in Kolkata, began interrogating former principal Sandip Ghosh and former medical superintendent and vice principal Sanjay Vashisth on Monday.

Ghosh, whose Beliaghata residence was searched by CBI officers on Sunday, appeared at the central agency’s office in Salt Lake on Monday morning with files and documents, an officer of the agency said.

The FIR registered by CBI includes the names of Ghosh and three business entities, namely Maa Tara Traders, Ehsan Café and Kham Louha. The three entities are being perceived as beneficiaries of the alleged financial scam.

As per findings of CBI, sources said that Maa Tara Traders enjoyed a virtual monopoly in supplying different medical equipment to R.G. Kar because of the closeness of its proprietor with Ghosh.

CBI is carrying out a multi-angle investigation in the matter of financial irregularities at state-run R.G. Kar Medical College and Hospital involving 15 specific charges of fund fudging, sources said, news agency IANS reported.

The main allegation is the tendering of different contracts to private and outsourced parties without getting the necessary approval from the state health department and the college council.

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Seeking MBBS seats at Delhi University’s LHMC, MAMC, UCMS this year! Here is complete admission process, check details

New Delhi- Based on the National Eligibility and Entrance Test- Undergraduate (NEET UG) 2024 exam, Delhi University Faculty of Medical Sciences (UDMFC) is going to give admission to candidates into MBBS courses at Lady Hardinge Medical College LHMC, Maulana Azad Medical College MAMC and Univeristy College of Medical Sciecnes UCMS for the academic year 2024-25. On this, the university has released an information bulletin detailing the admission process for candidates.

As per the information bulletin, admission to undergraduate MBBS and BDS courses will be done under 15% All India Quota (AIQ) and 85% Delhi quota. Counselling for admission to the courses 2024-2025 for both quotas will be done by the Medical Counselling Committee (MCC), DGHS, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (Government of India).

The duration of the MBBS course is 41/2 years followed by 1 year of compulsory rotatory internship and the BDS duration is 4 years followed by 1 year of compulsory rotatory internship.

Candidates who are willing to take admission to MBBS and BDS courses are required to register online on the official website of MCC to participate in the counselling of MBBS and BDS courses 2024-2025 for 15% AIQ and 85% Delhi quota. Along with this, candidates will also have to pay the registration fee, which SC/ST/PWBD candidates have to pay Rs 1000 and General/OBC/EWS candidates have to pay Rs 1500.

Additionally, candidates should upload the following documents-

1 Passport-size photograph of the applicant.

2 Scanned signature of the applicant.

3 Self—attested copy of NEET-UG-2024 Admit Card.

4 Self—attested copy of NEET-UG-2024 Score Card.

5 Self-attested copy of Aadhar Card.

6 Self-attested copy of Matriculation Certificate for verification of date of birth.

7 Self-attested copies of I Phand 10+2 Marksheet.

8 Self-attested copies of 10+2 Certificate.

9 Certificate from the Principal of the School.

QUALIFYING EXAMINATION

1. To be eligible for 85% Delhi quota, candidates must have passed 11th and 12th class examinations under the 10+2 system.

2 The candidates who have passed the qualifying examination from Partachar Vidyalaya or National Institute of Open Schooling will be eligible for admission in MBBS and BDS courses under 85% Delhi Quota provided their study centre and the examination centre were within the National Capital Territory of Delhi (NCTD) and they must upload a certificate from the controlling authority of Patrachar Vidyalaya/NCTD in this regard.

PROCEDURE FOR SELECTION TO MBBS AND BDS COURSES WILL BE AS FOLLOWS

The University of Delhi will not conduct a separate entrance examination for admission to MBBS and BDS courses under 85% of Delhi Quota. Candidates are required to appear in NEET-UG 2024 conducted by NTA.

DISPLAY OF MERIT LIST

The counselling for admission to UG (MBBS/BDS) courses 2024 for 85% Delhi Quota and 15% All India Quota will be undertaken by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare. All applicants may regularly visit the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (Govt. of India) official website for regular updates.

PROCEDURE FOR ADMISSION

1. The candidate has to produce all original certificates including NEET-UG-2024 Admission Ticket and NEET-UG-2024 Score Card at the time of admission to MBBS/BDS courses.

2. Admission will be done on the basis of merit based on the percentage of eligible candidates in each category, which will be determined by the rank/marks obtained in NEET-UG-2024.

3 As soon as a candidate is allotted his/her selected seat, he/she is required to register online after verification of their documents from the concerned college.

COUNSELLING SCHEDULE

The counselling for 85% of Delhi quota and 15% AIQ will be done by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Government of India online mode. The candidates are required to fulfil all the modalities for registration for counselling.

Meanwhile, the leftover seats/stray vacancy seats if provided by MCC will be filled up through stray vacancy rounds as and when notified.

SURETY BOND MONEY

A bond worth Rs 3 lakhs with two sureties should be executed by the candidates at the time of their provisional admission. The admission will not be valid unless and until the surety bond is executed by the candidates.

SEAT MATRIX

A total of 710 seats are vacant for MBBS and BDS courses for the academic year 2024-25, out of which 660 seats are vacant in MBBS and 50 seats are vacant in BDS. The detailed seat matrix is ​​given below-

SEAT MATRIX FOR MBBS COURSE

S.NO

NAME OF THE COLLEGE

TOTAL VACANT SEATS

1

LHMC

240

2

MAMC

250

3

UCMS

170

TOTAL

660

To view the information bulletin, click the link below

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Govt to open special medical stores for AYUSH medicines: Shri Prataprao Jadhav

New Delhi: Union Minister Prataprao Jadhav announced on Monday that special medical stores will be established in every tehsil across the country to ensure the adequate availability of AYUSH medicines.  

The Union AYUSH Minister also discussed efforts to give due recognition to Ayurvedic medicines derived from traditional knowledge.

“The traditional knowledge of Ayurveda has been passed on from generation to generation. There are very good medicines in Ayurveda, but they have no recognition. We are wondering how these drugs can be recognised,” he told PTI here.   

Also Read:WHO’s ICD-11 Traditional Medicine Module 2 integrates Ayurveda, Unani, Siddha

According to the PTI report, he said, “Only a few AYUSH medicines are available in common medical stores, due to which patients and doctors prescribing these medicines face problems. The government wants to ensure AYUSH drugs come into the market in abundance after research. These medicines should be available everywhere. For this, we are trying to open at least one special medical store of AYUSH medicines in every tehsil of the country”.  

AYUSH hospitals are also being opened at the tehsil level, said the minister, who also visited medical institutes in Indore, Dewas and Ujjain and reviewed facilities there.  

Medical Dialogues team had earleir reported that as of June 30, 2024, the Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (AB-PMJAY) has authorized 7.37 crore hospital admissions totalling ₹1 lakh crore, according to the latest data from the Ministry of Health. The scheme is active across 33 states and Union Territories. According The leading states in which Ayushman cards have been created under the PMJAY scheme include Madhya Pradesh with 402.5 lakh cards, Maharashtra (280 lakh), Karnataka (171.5 lakh) Jammu and Kashmir (85.9 lakh), Telangana (82.5 lakh), Tamil Nadu (73.6 lakh) and Meghalaya (19.76 lakh).  

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Heme iron found in red meat and other animal products significantly linked type 2 diabetes: Study

Higher intake of heme iron, the type found in red meat and other animal products-as opposed to non-heme iron, found mostly in plant-based foods-was associated with a higher risk of developing type 2 diabetes (T2D) in a new study led by researchers at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. While the link between heme iron and T2D has been reported previously, the study’s findings more clearly establish and explain the link.

“Compared to prior studies that relied solely on epidemiological data, we integrated multiple layers of information, including epidemiological data, conventional metabolic biomarkers, and cutting-edge metabolomics,” said lead author Fenglei Wang, research associate in the Department of Nutrition. “This allowed us to achieve a more comprehensive understanding of the association between iron intake and T2D risk, as well as potential metabolic pathways underlying this association.”

The study will be published in Nature Metabolism.

The researchers assessed the link between iron and T2D using 36 years of dietary reports from 206,615 adults enrolled in the Nurses’ Health Studies I and II and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study. They examined participants’ intake of various forms of iron-total, heme, non-heme, dietary (from foods), and supplemental (from supplements)-their T2D status, controlling for other health and lifestyle factors.

The researchers also analyzed the biological mechanisms underpinning heme iron’s relationship to T2D among smaller subsets of the participants. They looked at 37,544 participants’ plasma metabolic biomarkers, including those related to insulin levels, blood sugar, blood lipids, inflammation, and two biomarkers of iron metabolism. They then looked at 9,024 participants’ metabolomic profiles-plasma levels of small-molecule metabolites, which are substances derived from bodily processes such as breaking down food or chemicals.

The study found a significant association between higher heme iron intake and T2D risk. Participants in the highest intake group had a 26% higher risk of developing T2D than those in the lowest intake group. In addition, the researchers found that heme iron accounted for more than half of the T2D risk associated with unprocessed red meat and a moderate proportion of the risk for several T2D-related dietary patterns. In line with previous studies, the researchers found no significant associations between intakes of non-heme iron from diet or supplements and risk of T2D.

The study also found that higher heme iron intake was associated with blood metabolic biomarkers associated with T2D. A higher heme iron intake was associated with higher levels of biomarkers such as C-peptide, triglycerides, C-reactive protein, leptin, and markers of iron overload, as well as lower levels of beneficial biomarkers like HDL cholesterol and adiponectin.

The researchers also identified a dozen blood metabolites-including L-valine, L-lysine, uric acid, and several lipid metabolites-that may play a role in the link between heme iron intake and TD2 risk. These metabolites have been previously associated with risk of T2D.

On a population level, the study findings carry important implications for dietary guidelines and public health strategies to reduce rates of diabetes, according to the researchers. In particular, the findings raise concerns about the addition of heme to plant-based meat alternatives to enhance their meaty flavor and appearance. These products are gaining in popularity, but health effects warrant further investigation.

“This study underscores the importance of healthy dietary choices in diabetes prevention,” said corresponding author Frank Hu, Fredrick J. Stare Professor of Nutrition and Epidemiology. “Reducing heme iron intake, particularly from red meat, and adopting a more plant-based diet can be effective strategies in lowering diabetes risk.”

The researchers noted that the study had several limitations, including the potential for incomplete accounting for confounders and measurement errors in the epidemiological data. In addition, the findings-based on a study population that was mostly white-need to be replicated in other racial and ethnic groups.

Reference:

Wang, F., Glenn, A.J., Tessier, AJ. et al. Integration of epidemiological and blood biomarker analysis links haem iron intake to increased type 2 diabetes risk. Nat Metab (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42255-024-01109-5.

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Blood platelet score detects previously unmeasured risk of heart attack and stroke, finds study

Platelets are circulating cell fragments known to clump up and form blood clots that stop bleeding in injured vessels. Cardiologists have long known that platelets can become “hyperreactive” to cause abnormal clotting that blocks arteries and contributes to heart attack, stroke, and peripheral artery disease.

Despite this major contribution to cardiovascular risk, routine measurement of whether each patient’s platelets clump (aggregate) too much has been infeasible to date. This is because results delivered by the method typically used to determine platelet activity, called platelet aggregometry, vary too much from lab to lab.

To address this challenge, a new studyled by researchers at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, precisely identified a group of patients with platelet hyperreactivity, and then surveyed them to reveal 451 genes the activity of which differed significantly in those with hyperreactive platelets versus those without. Publishing online August 20 in Nature Communications, the research team then used bioinformatics to assign a weight to each genetic difference and generate each patient’s Platelet Reactivity ExpresSion Score (PRESS).

“Our results demonstrate that our new platelet-centric scoring system can, for the first time and across populations, circumvent aggregometry to reliably predict platelet hyperreactivity and the related risk of cardiovascular events,” said corresponding study author Jeffrey Berger, MD, director of the Center for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease at NYU Grossman School of Medicine.

The researchers found that their new score can detect platelet hyperreactivity, both in patients at imminent risk of heart attack, and in healthy patients whose future risk may otherwise remain unknown.

“Physicians currently prescribe aspirin, a medication that counters platelet activity, to patients based on available risk factors, including high cholesterol or high blood pressure, which are not directly related to platelet function,” added Berger. “PRESS promises to help physicians confine anti-platelet treatment to the people most likely to benefit: those with platelet hyperreactivity.”

By acting on platelets, aspirin is known to protect against abnormal clotting, but in doing so, increases risk of bleeding, said the study authors. The field needs a reliable way to identify patients for whom protection against heart attack outweighs bleeding risk.

Platelet Score

Progress toward the design of the PRESS began with a shift in the field away from aggregometry methods that expose each patient’s platelets to high doses of proteins known to strongly encourage aggregation. Platelets that do not aggregate under these extreme conditions are labelled dysfunctional, but these tests were not designed to directly assess hyperreactivity.

Experience on Berger’s team and in other labs working with platelets led to a switch to an aggregometry method that instead exposes platelets to a very small dose (4 μM or microMolar) of epinephrine known to weakly encourage aggregation. The field settled on 60 percent aggregation in platelet sample at 0.4 μM of epinephrine as the threshold over which platelets would be designated as hyperreactive. While this method is not new, the current study provided new evidence that patients meeting this hyperreactivity definition are at much greater risk for cardiovascular events.

Specifically, the team used the newer, but still labor-intensive, aggregometry method to track the impact of platelet activity status on MACLE (major adverse cardiovascular and limb events), a composite measure of death, heart attack, stroke, and lower extremity amputations in patients enrolled in the Platelet Activity and Cardiovascular Events in PAD (PACE-PAD) clinical study. MACLE was measured in this group of high-risk patients after they underwent lower extremity revascularization (LER), a group of procedures that open blocked arteries.

In 254 PACE-PAD patients whose platelet aggregation was measured with 0.4 μM of epinephrine, 17.5% showed hyperreactive platelets, and those patients with hyperreactivity had more than double the incidence of heart attack, stroke, or acute limb ischemia or major amputation within the 30 days after LER than those without hyperreactivity.

While the team has an uncommon expertise in aggregometry, and despite these learnings, their goal was to create a generalizable measure of risk that could one day be easily performed in physicians’ offices. To make global implementation feasible, the researchers designed PRESS based on a genetic signature and independent of blood collection techniques and other variables that affect aggregometry.

To create PRESS, the researchers collected platelet genetic material from 129 PACE-PAD patients before their LER procedure and designed the score based on the genetic differences seen with hyperreactivity. The researchers confirmed the score’s accuracy by checking it against platelet aggregation tests.

To further validate PRESS, the team explored the link between the score and cardiovascular risk in several other patient groups. Among these was the Heart Attack Research Program, which enrolled women undergoing coronary angiography. In this group PRESS was found to be higher in those who had a heart attack than in those with stable coronary artery disease. Among patients with lower extremity atherosclerosis followed for an average of 18 months, patients with PRESS above the middle (average) score were 90% percent more likely to have a major cardiovascular event than those below it.

“In current practice, anti-platelet therapy is not routinely recommended for the prevention of a first heart attack or stroke, but a platelet-based test would help to identify patients at highest risk, and those who would benefit most from anti-platelet therapy to prevent a cardiovascular event,” says study author Tessa Barrett, PhD, assistant professor in the departments of Medicine and Pathology at NYU Langone. “Our score has the potential to further personalize cardiovascular disease risk prevention.”

Reference:

Berger, J.S., Cornwell, M.G., Xia, Y. et al. A Platelet Reactivity ExpreSsion Score derived from patients with peripheral artery disease predicts cardiovascular risk. Nat Commun 15, 6902 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-50994-7

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Chatbots and AI: Enhancing Efficiency and Accessibility in Medical Care, New Review Highlights Future Trends

India: A recent scoping review has shed light on the evolving role of chatbots in the medical field, highlighting their potential to enhance the accessibility, efficiency, and quality of medical care. The review underscores how artificial intelligence (AI), particularly in the form of chatbots, can revolutionize routine medical functions and activities. 

The review revealed the effectiveness of these applications in providing mental health support to patients, as well as enhancing their awareness through patient education strategies. They are also helpful in organizing health-related information for the benefit of patients, physicians, and the general public.

The study is scheduled for publication in the Oct-Dec 2024 issue of Apollo Medicine and is now available online ahead of its print release.

Describing the concept of chatbots, lead author, Dr. Vibhu Krishnan Viswanathan from the Department of Orthopaedics at Dr. Rela Institute and Medical Center in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India, explained, “Chatbots are computer programs designed to simulate conversations through voice or based-interactions. These applications offer a range of benefits, including enhancing patient education, supporting clinical decision-making, improving interpersonal communication, facilitating research, aiding in data analysis, and streamlining administrative tasks. This scoping review examines the current roles, challenges, and future potential of chatbots across various medical fields.” 

“On the clinical front, chatbots and AI can be beneficial in scheduling patient appointments, triaging individuals in clinics and emergencies, as well as ensuring appropriate language translations and communications. They can also help in clinical decision-making, based on their ability to evaluate patients’ symptoms and diagnosis of pathology. AI can also be useful in organizing regular patient surveillance, coordinating post-discharge care, arranging visits; and carrying out remote patient monitoring,” Dr. Viswanathan told Medical Dialogues.

The researchers conducted a literature search on April 9, 2024, across
five databases (PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Embase, and Google Scholar).
The results were synthesized using a narrative approach.

The researchers
reported the following findings:

  • A literature search resulted in 1,024 studies.
    After removing duplicates with Endnote, 342 articles were selected.
  • Following the screening of titles and abstracts,
    74 articles were shortlisted for further review. Ultimately, 14 articles were
    chosen for scoping review.
  • A wide
    range of chatbot applications has been rapidly developed for use in medical
    science. There is an increasing trend towards utilizing machine learning
    techniques to create these chatbot programs.
  • Chatbots have substantial potential to transform
    various aspects of medicine, including patient care, educational activities,
    and research efforts.

According to the researchers, “the role of Chatbots in a wide variety of surgical and non-surgical specialties such as Orthopaedic Surgery, Oncology, Radiology, Psychiatry, Infectious diseases; and weight reduction and lifestyle modifications have been described in the literature. 

“The major considerations regarding the use of chatbots in the medical field include breaches in patient privacy, infringement on patient’s autonomy and decision-making, potential bias, unequal access of patients to chatbots, need for establishing chatbot-based protocols and diagnostic algorithms, medicolegal and ethical concerns of errors in diagnosis, language biases, reduced physician empathy, disrupted interpersonal communications, and inadequate transparency in the decision-making process,” concluded Dr. Viswanathan.

Reference: Viswanathan
VK, Jain VK, Vaish A, Jeyaraman M, Iyengar KP, Vaishya R. Chatbots and Their
Applications in Medical Fields: Current Status and Future Trends: A Scoping
Review. Apollo Medicine. 2024;0(0). doi:10.1177/09760016241259851

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Low-Dose Nebulized Dexamethasone Effective in Reducing Postoperative Sore Throat, Study Reveals

India: A recent study has demonstrated that administering a low dose of nebulized dexamethasone before surgery can significantly reduce the incidence and severity of postoperative sore throat (POST) in patients undergoing general anaesthesia.

The research, aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of this intervention, found that a 4 mg dose of dexamethasone was notably more effective than a placebo in mitigating POST, with no observed side effects. The study is scheduled for publication in the Oct-Dec 2024 issue of Apollo Medicine and is now available online ahead of its print release. 

“Anaesthesia as a branch is a paradigm of various services offered under
one roof. The main goal of an anesthetist is to make the patient feel most
comfortable in an OT environment. This involves psychological management,
physiological management, and pain management, all of which are done
pharmacologically. Postoperative sore throat is one of the complications that
occur in 21%-65% of anaesthetized persons,” the lead author Dr. Arvinpreet Kaur,
Department of Anaesthesia, Maharishi Markandeshwar Institute of Medical Science
and Research (MMIMSR), Mullana, Haryana, India, told Medical Dialogues.

Discussing the study’s aim, she noted, “We aimed to utilize the most widely available medication in the smallest effective dose to alleviate sore throat symptoms. While various treatments have been explored, including lozenges, ketamine gargles, lignocaine jelly, and different forms of steroids, our focus was on dexamethasone. Administered at a dose of 4 mg via nebulization, dexamethasone is not only convenient for patients but also readily accessible for anesthetists in any setting, from remote clinics to major hospitals.”

Dr Kour and colleagues came together to conduct this study in
the Anaesthesiology Department of Maharishi Markandeshwar Institute of Medical
Sciences and Research (MMIMSR) Mullana, Ambala, after institutional ethical
committee approval and written, with informed consent was secured from patients
between March 2021 and March 2022, with Group S comprising 25 patients and
Group D also consisting of 25 patients.

Group D: Patients were administered 4 mg of dexamethasone along with 4
mL of normal saline (totaling 5 mL) via a nebulization mask connected to a
wall-mounted oxygen supply.

Group S: Patients were given 5 mL of normal saline nebulization (total
volume 5 mL) through a nebulization mask, with the oxygen connected to the
wall-mounted supply.

Study findings reveal:

·
24 hours after extubation, none of the patients in Group D exhibited
postoperative sore throat, whereas 8 patients (32%) in Group S experienced
postoperative sore throat.

·
The occurrence of postoperative sore throat varied between the two
groups, and the difference was statistically significant.

Talking about the significance of this study, Dr. Kaur said “It would be so
helpful and fruitful if more research is done using different doses and methods
of administration of dexamethasone or various other modalities to prevent sore
throat.”

Mentioning the mode of action of dexamethasone and normal saline,
she added, “Dexamethasone is a potent synthetic glucocorticoid possessing
anti-inflammatory effects. Various previous studies have used 8mg doses
effectively for nebulisation which has decreased the incidence of sore throat
postoperatively. In our study, we have used less dose which is 4mg for the same
and luckily have not encountered any side effects. Normal saline on the other
hand has been used as a placebo to make the study more effective and relevant.”

Reference: Parvez A, Gupta R, Kour A, Singh A. A Study to Evaluate the
Efficacy of Preoperative Low-dose Nebulised Dexamethasone in Decreasing the
Incidence of Postoperative Sore Throat in Patients Undergoing Surgery Under
General Anaesthesia. Apollo Medicine. 2024;0(0). doi:10.1177/09760016241255847

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Naloxone may improve survival rates among patients with opioid-associated out of hospital cardiac arrest: JAMA

Patients who overdose on opioids and have a pulse are often given naloxone (Narcan) by first responders, a common life-saving measure.

However, emergency medical service (EMS) agencies have different protocols for administering naloxone, so there is little evidence to support its use in patients without a pulse who experienced opioid-associated out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA).

A recent study by UC Davis Health researchers set out to assess the effects of giving naloxone administration by paramedics to patients with OHCA.

The study, published in Jama Network Open, concluded there was an association between naloxone administration, and both return of spontaneous circulation and survival to hospital discharge.

“The incidence of drug-related cardiac arrests has skyrocketed in the past two decades, and there is an urgent need for evidence to guide possible naloxone use in this circumstance,” said David Dillon, assistant professor of Emergency Medicine and one of the study’s authors.

What is naloxone?

Naloxone is a medicine that rapidly reverses an opioid overdose. It is an antagonist-meaning it attaches to opioid receptors and reverses and blocks the effects of other opioids. Naloxone can quickly restore normal breathing to a person whose breathing has slowed or stopped because of an opioid overdose. Researchers hypothesize that naloxone may also help patients who are experiencing opioid-related cardiac arrest.

Naloxone has no effect on someone who does not have opioids in their system, nor does it harm them, and it is not a treatment for opioid use disorder.

Opioid-associated cardiac arrests

Cardiac arrest occurs when the heart suddenly stops beating. Roughly 350,000 cardiac arrests occur outside the hospital each year, according to the American Heart Association. The majority of these are due to heart attacks or electrical issues with the heart, but opioid overdose-related cardiac arrests are a major cause of death for adults 25 to 64 years old.

Recent studies estimate 17.6% of all OHCA, and 34% of OHCA in those under 60 years of age, are the result of opioid toxicity.

Study results

For this retrospective study, researchers collected data from San Francisco, Sacramento and Yolo county EMS agencies between 2015-2023. In total, 8,195 patients with OHCA were treated by the three agencies.

The results showed EMS administration of naloxone was associated with significantly improved outcomes. The number needed to treat with naloxone, which represents the number of patients that need to be given naloxone to observe one additional positive outcome, was nine patients for return of spontaneous circulation and 26 patients who survived and were discharged from the hospital.

“Surprisingly, our findings showed that naloxone was associated with improved clinical outcomes in both drug-related cardiac arrests and non-drug related cardiac arrests,” explained Dillon. “This is important because it adds to our understanding about the effectiveness of naloxone for drug related out of hospital cardiac arrest.”

The researchers noted that these finding warrant further investigation, given the growing opioid epidemic in the United States and the potential benefits of naloxone as part of cardiac arrest care.

Reference:

Dillon DG, Montoy JCC, Nishijima DK, et al. Naloxone and Patient Outcomes in Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrests in California. JAMA Netw Open. 2024;7(8):e2429154. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.29154.

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