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1.
Rev Med Interne ; 33(4): e19-21, 2012 Apr.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21492973

ABSTRACT

Dirofilariosis is an endemic filarial parasitic disease in the Mediterranean basin, unfamiliar in France. Its incidence and geographic area are increasing due to global warming. Dogs and cats are the usual hosts, but humans may be accidentally infected. We reported the 91st case of French dirofilariosis, contracted in Camargue (South France) which appeared as a subcutaneous abdominal nodule. Ultrasound strongly guided the diagnosis by showing a linear structure moving in a fibrocystic structure. Surgical excision confirmed the diagnosis of species (Dirofilaria repens) and this remains the only curative treatment.


Subject(s)
Dirofilaria repens/isolation & purification , Dirofilariasis/diagnosis , Skin Diseases, Parasitic/diagnosis , Animals , Diagnosis, Differential , Dirofilariasis/parasitology , Dirofilariasis/surgery , Dirofilariasis/transmission , France , Groin/pathology , Humans , Insect Vectors , Male , Middle Aged , Skin Diseases, Parasitic/parasitology , Skin Diseases, Parasitic/surgery , Skin Diseases, Parasitic/transmission , Travel , Treatment Outcome
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22255014

ABSTRACT

All patient-related medical information during a hospital stay in France, has to be collected and coded in the compilation of medical units discharge documents, according to a standardized approach. The process of describing a patient disease in terms of appropriate diagnostic codes is nevertheless, a non-intuitive operation for the physician. As a consequence, coding errors, inaccuracies and missing data are frequent, leading to potentially severe economical upshots. A coding support system developed to improve medical coding results, integrates three information processing methodologies, using the outputs from various Hospital Information System applications. Each methodology generates partial heterogeneous information, with considerable semantic variety. In order to properly synthesize these outputs, information fusion is required to produce enriched contextualized information, presented to the physician as an ordered list of suggested codes. This paper explores two information fusion approaches: voting system and possibilistic. Both methods are tested on a database of 1,000 discharge summaries, to show the interest of information fusion in this context. Results show that fusion methods perform better in most of the cases than partial information extraction methods.


Subject(s)
Clinical Coding , Diagnosis , France , Humans , Length of Stay , Probability
3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21096565

ABSTRACT

For the practitioner, choosing diagnosis codes is a non-intuitive operation. Mistakes are frequent, causing severe consequences on healthcare performance evaluation and funding. French physicians have to assign a code to all their activities and are frequently prone to these errors. Given that most of the time and particularly for chronic diseases indexed information is already available, we propose a tool named AnterOcod, in order to support the medical coding task. It suggests the list of most relevant plausible codes, predicted from the patient's earlier hospital stays, according to a set of previously utilized diagnosis codes. Our method applies the estimation of code reappearance rates, based on an equivalent approach to actuarial survival curves. Around 33% of the expected correct diagnosis codes were retrieved in this manner, after evaluating 998 discharge abstracts, significantly improving the coding task.


Subject(s)
Actuarial Analysis/methods , Chronic Disease/classification , Chronic Disease/mortality , Clinical Coding/methods , Clinical Coding/statistics & numerical data , Survival Analysis , France/epidemiology , Humans , Prevalence , Survival Rate
4.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19963581

ABSTRACT

Choosing diagnosis codes is a non-intuitive operation for the practitioner. Mistakes are frequent with severe consequences on healthcare evaluation and funding. French physicians have to assign a code for everything they do and they are not spared with these kinds of errors. We propose a tool named REFEROCOD to support the medical coding task in order to minimize errors without losing time, by suggesting a list of codes in accordance with the physician activities and of the patient medical context. The proposed method uses probabilistic knowledge and indicates the probability to have a proper diagnosis code considering the realized procedure, age, sex and other information available in the discharge abstract.


Subject(s)
Forms and Records Control , Medical Informatics/instrumentation , Algorithms , Computer Graphics , Decision Support Techniques , Female , Humans , Male , Medical Errors/prevention & control , Medical Informatics/methods , Medical Records , Probability , Software , User-Computer Interface
5.
Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc ; 2006: 4691-4, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17947111

ABSTRACT

In this article, we focus on the complementary role of watermarking with respect to medical information security (integrity, authenticity ...) and management. We review sample cases where watermarking has been deployed, we conclude that watermarking has found a niche role in healthcare systems, as an instrument for protection of medical information, for secure sharing and handling of medical images. The concern of medical experts on the preservation of documents diagnostic integrity remains paramount.


Subject(s)
Medical Records Systems, Computerized , Algorithms , Computer Graphics , Computer Security , Computers , Delivery of Health Care , Equipment Design , Humans , Information Storage and Retrieval , Information Systems , Pattern Recognition, Automated , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Software , Technology
6.
Nephrol Dial Transplant ; 14(3): 728-31, 1999 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10193828

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Determinants of hyperhomocysteinaemia in peritoneal dialysis patients have been recently reported but there is still conflicting data on the influence of dialysis adequacy on homocysteine (Hcy). METHODS: We studied 46 consecutive new continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) patients to determine the variation of Hcy before and 1 and 6 months after dialysis. The variation in Hcy was analysed with respect to dialysis adequacy, factors known to influence its metabolism, and Hcy peritoneal clearance. RESULTS: Hcy was 31.9+/-9 micromol/l before dialysis. It was significantly higher before dialysis than 1 month after the onset of PD (31.9+/-9 micromol/l vs 23.2+/-6.9 micromol/l, P < 0.0005). Weekly PD Hcy clearance was 14.3+/-5.4 1. There was no relationship between pre-dialysis Hcy and 1 month post-dialysis Hcy (r=0.176, P=0.15). There was a strong relationship between PD Hcy clearance and both PD creatinine clearance (r=0.502, P<0.005) and Kt/V (r=0.42, P<0.005). There was no relationship between Hcy and PD creatinine clearance (r= -0.221, P=0.11). In contrast, the decrease in tHcy at 1 month was related to PD Hcy clearance (r=0.487, P<0.01), to PD creatinine clearance (r= 0.349, P<0.02) and to Kt/V (r=0.32, P<0.02). Multivariate analysis confirmed the relationship between the decrease in Hcy and dialysis adequacy. Eleven patients (24%) experienced arteriosclerotic complications. Fasting Hcy concentrations in this population were significantly higher before and 1 month-post-dialysis than in patients without cardiovascular complications. CONCLUSIONS: We observed a significant and prolonged reduction in Hcy concentrations by peritoneal dialysis in end-stage renal disease patients. The decrease in Hcy concentration was positively related to dialysis adequacy. This study suggests the possibility that dialysis adequacy may influence arteriosclerotic outcomes through an Hcy-lowering effect.


Subject(s)
Homocysteine/blood , Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Time Factors , Urea/metabolism
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