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Background: Experienced and anticipated regret influence physicians’ decision-making. In medicine, diagnostic decisions and diagnostic errors can have a severe impact on both patients and physicians. Little empirical research exists on regret experienced by physicians when they make diagnostic decisions in primary care that later prove inappropriate or incorrect. The aim of this study was to explore the experience of regret following diagnostic decisions in primary care.
Methods: In this qualitative study, we used an online questionnaire on a sample of German primary care physicians. We asked participants to report on cases in which the final diagnosis differed from their original opinion, and in which treatment was at the very least delayed, possibly resulting in harm to the patient. We asked about original and final diagnoses, illness trajectories, and the reactions of other physicians, patients and relatives. We used thematic analysis to assess the data, supported by MAXQDA 11 and Microsoft Excel 2016.
Results: 29 GPs described one case each (14 female/15 male patients, aged 1.5–80 years, response rate < 1%). In 26 of 29 cases, the final diagnosis was more serious than the original diagnosis. In two cases, the diagnoses were equally serious, and in one case less serious. Clinical trajectories and the reactions of patients and relatives differed widely. Although only one third of cases involved preventable harm to patients, the vast majority (27 of 29) of physicians expressed deep feelings of regret.
Conclusion: Even if harm to patients is unavoidable, regret following diagnostic decisions can be devastating for clinicians, making them ‘second victims’. Procedures and tools are needed to analyse cases involving undesirable diagnostic events, so that ‘true’ diagnostic errors, in which harm could have been prevented, can be distinguished from others. Further studies should also explore how physicians can be supported in dealing with such events in order to prevent them from practicing defensive medicine.
Background: Point of care devices for performing targeted coagulation substitution in patients who are bleeding have become increasingly important in recent years. New on the market is the Quantra. It is a device that uses sonorheometry, a sonic estimation of elasticity via resonance, which is a novel ultrasound-based technology that measures viscoelastic properties of whole blood. Several studies have already shown the comparability of the Quantra with devices already established on the market, such as the rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM) device.
Objective: In contrast to existing studies, this study is the first prospective interventional study using this new system in a cardiac surgical patient cohort. We will investigate the noninferiority between an already existing coagulation algorithm based on the ROTEM/Multiplate system and a new algorithm based on the Quantra system for the treatment of coagulopathic cardiac surgical patients.
Methods: The study is divided into two phases. In an initial observation phase, whole blood samples of 20 patients obtained at three defined time points (prior to surgery, after completion of cardiopulmonary bypass, and on arrival in the intensive care unit) will be analyzed using both the ROTEM/Multiplate and Quantra systems. The obtained threshold values will be used to develop a novel algorithm for hemotherapy. In a second intervention phase, the new algorithm will be tested for noninferiority against an algorithm used routinely for years in our department.
Results: The main objective of the examination is the cumulative loss of blood within 24 hours after surgery. Statistical calculations based on the literature and in-house data suggest that the new algorithm is not inferior if the difference in cumulative blood loss is <150 mL/24 hours.
Conclusions: Because of the comparability of the Quantra sonorheometry system with the ROTEM measurement methods, the existing hemotherapy treatment algorithm can be adapted to the Quantra device with proof of noninferiority.
Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03902275; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03902275
International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/17206
Limb stump pain after amputation, due to sensitized neuromas, is a common condition that can cause a great deal of suffering in affected patients. Treatment is difficult, requiring a multidisciplinary approach that is often unsatisfactory. One treatment used to mitigate pain is electrical stimulation (EStim), administered using several different therapeutic approaches. The research described in this dissertation sought to characterize changes in peripheral nerve morphology, and neuroma formation, following limb amputation, with an eye toward developing better treatment strategies, that intervene before neuromas are fully formed. Another focus of this study was to evaluate the effect EStim has on changes in peripheral nerve morphology, and neuroma formation, following limb amputation.
Right forelimbs of 42 male Sprague Dawley rats were amputated. At 3, 7, 28, 60 and 90 days post amputation (DPA) 6 limb stumps, in each group, were harvested and changes in peripheral nerve morphology, and neuroma formation were measured. In addition, limb stumps of 6 EStim treated, 6 sham-treated (deactivated EStim devices), and 6 non-treated rats were harvested at 28 DPA.
Analysis revealed six distinct morphological characteristics of peripheral nerves during nerve regrowth and neuroma development; 1) normal nerve, 2) degenerating axons, 3) axonal sprouts, 4) unorganized bundles of axons in connective tissue, 5) unorganized axon growth into muscles, and 6) unorganized axon growth into fibrotic tissue (neuroma). At the early stages (3 & 7 DPA), normal nerves could be identified throughout the limb stump tissues and small areas of axonal sprouts were present near the distal tip of the stumps. Signs of degenerating axons were evident from 7 to 90 DPA. From day 28 on, variability of nerve characteristics, with signs of unorganized axon growth into muscle and fibrotic tissue, and neuroma formation, became visible in multiple areas of stump tissue. These pathological features became more evident at 60 and 90 DPA. EStim treated stumps revealed neuroma formation in 1 out of 6 animals, whereas in sham and controls, neuroma formation was seen in 4 out of 6 stumps respectively.
We were able to identify 6 separate histological stages of peripheral nerve regrowth and neuroma formation over 90 days following amputation. Axonal regrowth was observed as early as 3 DPA, and signs of unorganized axonal growth and neuroma formation were evident by 28 DPA. Our observations suggest that EStim-based treatment and/or other prevention strategies might be more effective if administered in the initial dynamic stages of neuroma development.