Literature DB >> 10938177

Users' guides to the medical literature: XXIV. How to use an article on the clinical manifestations of disease. Evidence-Based Medicine Working Group.

W S Richardson1, M C Wilson, J W Williams, V A Moyer, C D Naylor.   

Abstract

Clinicians rely on knowledge about the clinical manifestations of disease to make clinical diagnoses. Before using research on the frequency of clinical features found in patients with a disease, clinicians should appraise the evidence for its validity, results, and applicability. For validity, 4 issues are important-how the diagnoses were verified, how the study sample relates to all patients with the disease, how the clinical findings were sought, and how the clinical findings were characterized. Ideally, investigators will verify the presence of disease in study patients using credible criteria that are independent of the clinical manifestations under study. Also, ideally the study patients will represent the full spectrum of the disease, undergo a thorough and consistent search for clinical findings, and these findings will be well characterized in nature and timing. The main results of these studies are expressed as the number and percentages of patients with each manifestation. Confidence intervals can describe the precision of these frequencies. Most clinical findings occur with only intermediate frequency, and since these frequencies are equivalent to diagnostic sensitivities, this means that the absence of a single finding is rarely powerful enough to exclude the disease. Before acting on the evidence, clinicians should consider whether it applies to their own patients and whether it has been superseded by new developments. Detailed knowledge of the clinical manifestations of disease should increase clinicians' ability to raise diagnostic hypotheses, select differential diagnoses, and verify final diagnoses. JAMA. 2000;284:869-875

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10938177     DOI: 10.1001/jama.284.7.869

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA        ISSN: 0098-7484            Impact factor:   56.272


  5 in total

Review 1.  Searching for evidence-based medicine in the literature. Part 3: Assessment.

Authors:  Barbara A Bartkowiak
Journal:  Clin Med Res       Date:  2005-05

2.  Clinical features of 78 adults with 22q11 Deletion Syndrome.

Authors:  Anne S Bassett; Eva W C Chow; Janice Husted; Rosanna Weksberg; Oana Caluseriu; Gary D Webb; Michael A Gatzoulis
Journal:  Am J Med Genet A       Date:  2005-11-01       Impact factor: 2.802

3.  A new look at XXYY syndrome: medical and psychological features.

Authors:  Nicole Tartaglia; Shanlee Davis; Alison Hench; Sheela Nimishakavi; Renee Beauregard; Ann Reynolds; Laura Fenton; Lindsey Albrecht; Judith Ross; Jeannie Visootsak; Robin Hansen; Randi Hagerman
Journal:  Am J Med Genet A       Date:  2008-06-15       Impact factor: 2.802

4.  Clinical manifestations of tension pneumothorax: protocol for a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Derek J Roberts; Simon Leigh-Smith; Peter D Faris; Chad G Ball; Helen Lee Robertson; Christopher Blackmore; Elijah Dixon; Andrew W Kirkpatrick; John B Kortbeek; Henry Thomas Stelfox
Journal:  Syst Rev       Date:  2014-01-04

5.  Obesity in adults with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome.

Authors:  Sarah L Voll; Erik Boot; Nancy J Butcher; Samantha Cooper; Tracy Heung; Eva W C Chow; Candice K Silversides; Anne S Bassett
Journal:  Genet Med       Date:  2016-08-18       Impact factor: 8.822

  5 in total

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