Flynn, Patrick M., and Barry S. Brown. “Co-Occurring Disorders in Substance Abus[…]ssues and Prospects.” Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, June 15, 2007. Accessed May 2019. National Institute on Drug Abuse. “Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction: What Science Says.” February 2016....
Without treatment, your symptoms may get worse. You may faint or fall often, which can lead to injuries, such as a broken bone. You may be at increased risk for depression, confusion, and memory problems. Hypotension may cause decreased blood flow to your brain and heart. This may lead ...
Treatment of heart failure (HF) is particularly complex in the presence of comorbidities. We sought to identify and associate comorbidity profiles with inpatient outcomes during HF hospitalizations. Methods Latent mixture modeling was used to identify common profiles of comorbidities during adult hospitaliza...
In fact, the opioid respiratory depression we fictitiously assigned him doesn’t really align with his calculated clinically near normal PaCO2 of 46 mmHg and arterial pH of 7.34 that we worked out with multiple simulated HbO.Dash computation runs. But any PaCO2 higher than 50 mmHg would drop ...
depression (p< 0.001), and at least one comorbidity (AN = 96% vs. C = 33%,p< 0.001). No statistically significant differences existed for other medical disorders. In terms of medication, a significant difference between both groups existed only for psychopharmacological treatment, with none ...
Journal of Clinical Medicine Article The Role of Objectively Measured, Altered Physical Activity Patterns for Body Mass Index Change during Inpatient Treatment in Female Patients with Anorexia Nervosa Celine S. Lehmann 1,2 , Tobias Hofmann 1 , Ulf Elbelt 1,3, Matthias Rose 1, Christoph U. ...
When analysing depression and delirium, the concordance showed Kappa = 0.46. Conclusions: Delirium is a highly prevalent psychiatric disorder, but it is still underdiagnosed, with low diagnostic concordance between non-psychiatric doctors and psychiatrists from CLP units. There are multiple risk factors ...