Author: denialism_bv2x6a

  • More on the effects of tobacco poisoning

    My recent post on tobacco poisoning focused on chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, the cause of about one-third of smoking related deaths. Let’s move on to cardiovascular disease (CVD), which accounts for another third.

    When we talk about CVD, what are we taking about? The pathophysiology is very interesting…go and read.

    Heart disease, which includes heart attacks and heart failure, kills about 100K smokers yearly. This includes people who have a heart attack and die suddenly, but also people who develop heart failure and linger on swollen and breathless.

    Strokes kill about 16.5K smokers yearly, which doesn’t include smokers who are only disabled by strokes.

    Aortic aneurysms kill about 8.5K yearly. That’s a fun one. An aortic aneurysm is a dilation of the main blood vessel that leaves the heart. When this tears or bursts it causes horrific pain in the chest or abdomen that radiates to the back. Thankfully the pain often doesn’t last long, because if the aorta actually bursts, you bleed out into your chest or abdomen very quickly.

    Oh! Wait! I forgot peripheral vascular disease! Who doesn’t like gangrene? (Don’t click unless you’re ready for the gangrene picture.)

    Peripheral vascular disease often starts as pain in the calves when walking, but can rapidly progress to loss of a limb. Eww.

    I always tell my residents that helping a patient to quit smoking is usually the best thing you can ever do for their health. Smoking is the cause of most preventable deaths in the U.S. and causes about 20% of all deaths. It is impossible to overstate the public health menace that smoking presents. Cessation programs have become more sophisticated, as have the drugs that are available. Patients often ask me if nicotine patches are safe. My usual response is, “Well, are cigarettes safe?” There are very few bad ways to quit smoking. The first step is deciding you’re ready. Then, get educated. Resources abound.

    Ach! I forgot to tell you….

    Average monthly cost of cigarettes: 350 USD. That’s a whole lot of money.

  • Another reader question, and open thread

    This is one of those topics I’ve always sort of avoided, and I’m still avoiding it for now. But that doesn’t mean you have to remain silent. Here’s the reader comment/question:

    This is off-topic, but I wanted some doctorly input to a discussion that I am having over at another blog.

    This lady is hyperventillating about the “sinister” (her word) policy of the Oregon Public Health Plan.

    They won’t cover curative treatment for people who have a “less than 5% chance of surviving five or more years”

    Instead, they cover palliative treatment, hospice, and Doctor-Assisted suicide.

    This lady is setting it up as a moral judgement that the government is making a value judgement on 1,2,3, or 4 years of life.

    To me “less than 5% chance of surviving five or more years” doesnt sound like curative treatment doesn’t have a very good chance of buying you even one year of additional life. I think that she has an unrealistic view of what it means to have a less than 5% chance of surviving five or more years” means.

    Heres the story:

    http://conservablogs.com/haemet/2008/07/28/the-real-face-of-choice/

    Teresa

    It’s all yours, folks.

  • Link love—Sceptics' Circle #92 at The Lay Scientist

    It’s up over at Martin’s place. His blog came out of nowhere (don’t they all) a few months back, and he’s hit the ground running.

    Just, please, when you get to my section, try not to use your imagination too well. Trust me.

  • How real science works

    ResearchBlogging.orgEvery once in a while I like to do a piece on how real science works. The New England Journal of Medicine was kind enough to serve up a nice example for us this week.

    Real science is hard. It’s time-consuming, expensive, and leads down many blind alleys. That’s one of the reasons pseudoscience is so alluring—anyone can do it. It doesn’t require an education, an R01 grant, or really even a grasp of reality.

    So on to the current article. Heart disease is a big killer. Over half-a-million people yearly have the worst type of heart attack, called an ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). Coronary heart disease kills almost a half-a-million Americans yearly and around 300,000 people die of heart attacks in American ER’s every year.

    So this is a pretty important disease. Here’s how it works…
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  • Rationality served up hot and fresh

    i-6de973c7aac254ddc623f112bcbac6e6-RW_Logo_1_Optimized.png
    One of my favorite pet websites is RationalWiki, which is slowly transforming into it’s 3.0 iteration. It originated as a parody/rebuttal site to the execrable Conservapedia (and no, Conservapedia is not a parody, just an example of Poe’s Law at work). Eventually, it expanded to developing articles that examined irrationality in general, such as fundamentalism, evolution denialism, etc.

    In its latest phase, it has implemented an interactive “What is Going On” (WIGO) feature. Initially this simply tracked inanity at Conservapedia. Now it will also track the best and worst of the blogosphere, the news, and anything else that seems interesting. It will allow readers to evaluate content real-time and see how idiocy is debunked. And, being a wiki, anyone can join in on the back-end helping to build content.

    It’s fun. Check it out.

  • The truth is out there…WAY out there

    Oh. My. F-ing. God. All the news that’s fit to print???

    I know some of my readers don’t think much of the New York Times (yes, PP, I’m talking to you), but despite some of my reservations, it’s still the Paper of Record. That’s why I was, er, um, was nauseated was flabbergasted threw up in my mouth was surprised when I saw a piece on the OpEd page today calling for better investigation of UFOs.

    If you just did a spit take on your LCD, please wipe it off now.

    OK, done? Good.

    I did not make this up. Really. I’m not going to go through all the arguments regarding the utter improbability of alien visitors, or a conspiracy to cover up alien visits. It’s been done, and done, and done.

    There are a few points about this particular piece worth pointing out. First,

    It’s the New York Freakin’ Times!

    Second, the main argument here is that the US reportedly stopped investigating UFOs in 1968, and in these days of hightened terrorist threats (what color are we now, RED!!111!!?) we should not be ignoring potential threats, especially threats that might be invisible to radar.

    To parse it out, the author is essentially defining UFO’s as FO’s that are visible to credulous individuals, but not to radar. He points out that the US has stealth aircraft, so Bad Guys might have radar-evading craft as well.

    OK, first, al-Queda can’t afford a stealth bomber, ‘k?

    Second, does this guy think the US military is completely daft? Yes they have their problems, but the military is also staffed by some seriously smart professionals. D’ya think they are ignoring airborne threats to national security?

    This whole piece is ridiculous. The only reason it isn’t fit for the National Enquirer is that it uses too many words. Why it’s in the Times is beyond me.

  • I get questions…

    ResearchBlogging.orgI frequently get questions by email or by comment. If it’s simple, I might fire off an answer. If it’s about a personal medical problem, I either don’t answer, or send a standard disclaimer to seek medical care. If it’s a really interesting question, I blog. Today, I blog.

    The question regarded the ubiquitous commercials for erectile dysfunction treatments (see this excellent post for an overview of the topic of ED drugs). As anyone who has a TV knows, the commercials always have the pleasant warning of “if you have an erection lasting more than four hours, seek immediate medical help.”

    An erection lasting more than four hours, in the absence of sexual stimulation, is known as “priapism”. It is named after a Greco-Roman god who was usually portrayed with large, turgid phallus. Priapism is a bad thing. It can lead to permanent dysfunction of the penis, and even to gangrene.
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  • What should smokers be scared of?

    This comes up every day. Everyone’s afraid of the big “C”, and they should be. Smoking increases a person’s risk of dying of lung cancer by about 12-20 times (whatever that means, but it’s significant).

    And while cancer may be scary, other diseases are just as bad. Lung cancers attributable to smoking cause about 125K deaths per year (all numbers US). Add in head and neck cancers, and the number goes up to about 133K. Add in cancers with less clear causative associations and we’re up to 160K.

    In contrast, there are about 130K cardiovascular deaths yearly attributable to smoking, and about 100K deaths due to lung disease such as emphysema.

    So let’s explore the various ways of dying of tobacco poisoning.
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  • Scene III, wherein we move on to more important things

    What could be more important than a good old-fashioned flame war? I’ll get to that in a moment, so please stick with me.

    The recent imbroglio between some of our doctor bloggers and non-physician scientists got me thinking (so it couldn’t be all bad).

    As a quick summary, PhysioProf of the DrugMonkey blog used an incident of a doctor committing battery on a patient as a generalization regarding surgeons, all doctors, and medical education. Many of us who are actually doctors and physician educators took issue with that. PhysioProf apologized, but made it clear that s/he still feels that there is a valid point here, that doctors are bred to be arrogant, etc.

    Let’s move on from the fray, and dig through the battlefield relics that may help illustrate larger issues.
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  • Putting the Rose to Bed

    Okay, as Denialism’s lawyer, let me get to the issue of the rose tattoo.

    A medical procedure is a battery. Patients consent to it, thus allowing the doctor to engage in even invasive touching without liability for the battery. The scope of consent is key, however. Many individuals have a rough sense of consent; they think that if consent is given to one thing, anything goes. But, the law takes a much more nuanced approach to consent. Thus, a patient does not consent to all forms of touching, just ones that are consistent with the procedure authorized.

    Was applying a rose tattoo within the scope of consent? Many people get off track by focusing on the temporary nature of the tattoo, but why should that fact matter? The key here is whether the touching itself is authorized. Whether the touching caused a permanent mark goes to damages, not to the consent issue.

    It is clear that applying the tattoo, temporary or permanent, is a battery. And a doctor engaged in such pranks can end up paying through the nose for it. Take the facts discussed in Woo v. Fireman’s, where Dr. Woo (real name) applied temporary teeth to his patient (who was also an employee) while under sedation. The teeth were boar tusks, and thus made the patient/employee look very funny. Dr. Woo took pictures, removed the teeth, finished the procedure, and then showed the pictures to the patient/employee. The touching did not physically harm her, and the teeth were temporary. When presented with the pictures, she never came back to work again.

    Dr. Woo settled the case for $250,000. That might seem unreasonable, but from the patient’s perspective, there is an incredible amount of anxiety surrounding general anesthesia. Apart from the medical risks, there is the fear that while unconscious, anyone could do anything to you, and you may never learn what happened. Therefore, any deviance in that type of situation can cause years of suffering and anxiety.

    The tattoo was a bad idea. They should have known better. And if a patient can recover $250,000 for temporary false teeth, don’t you think a similar or larger award could be appropriate for a below-the-underwear-line application of a temporary tattoo?