Online Pharmacy

Monday, August 13, 2007

Aggressive therapy of patient against hospitalized or treatment of department of help

The insurmountable or refractory migraines are those which do not react to the treatment. This can lead to the despair on behalf of the patient and the destruction on behalf of their doctor. The insurmountable and refractory migraines need aggressive treatment, but few doctors are laid out to offer such a treatment. It is not a bill of indictment of any doctor, simply a report/ratio of the fact. Except the true headache and the specialists in migraine, the doctors have simply too many conditions to treat to be designed to have the expertise to treat such cases. John Claude Krusz, PhD, MANDELEVIUM; (To ask the clinician) and his/her colleagues; Virginia Scott-Krusz; Jeanne Ballanger, RN; and Jane Cagle, LVN; had employed the treatment of patient IV for refractory migraines in Dr. Private clinic of Dallas de Krusz since 1994 and gathering of the data of research. Summary: “The future of the aggressive treatment of headache is in the private clinic of speciality, much more mode of cost and time-effective to treat insurmountable headaches, including refractory and chronic migraines. Compared with the department of help, the private clinic of headache can offer a range of effective and final treatments and offer to patients of headache the maximum degree of success for the order of the migraines. We employed the treatment of IV in the private clinic since 1994 and presented initial data concerning its effectiveness in 1998. This study continues by documenting the degree of success of the treatment of patient IV of the headaches. Our total treated patients number more than 1700. Of the latter, 874 were treated for migraines or refractory headaches; the rest was for sudden blazes of pain or a mixture from both. We used the following treatments: Sulphate magnesium IV, dexamethasone, sodium of valproate, lidocaïne, droperidol, dihydroergotamine, promethazine, propofol, tramadol, levetiracetam and ketamine. Results are measured on the basis of successful resolution of the symptoms, defined by at least a reduction of 50% of the severity of the headache or migraine of presentation, or by return to work or the regular activity. On this basis, 62 patients of all the swimming pool, and 22 of the swimming pool of headache (22/874) [2.5%] had the treatment not successful which required the reprocessing in the private clinic, the hospital ED or hospitalized. This represents an effective rate 97.5% of treatment in the arrangement of private clinic. We conclude that the aggressive therapy of patient of the headaches and the refractory migraines is strongly successful with a very low need for reprocessing. It contributes to the productivity, in a more important way in the personal place of work and also at the house and in life.* “Reasoning:It was the theory and the experiment of some principal specialists in pain and management in pain which move and other sudden blazes in pain could be better controlled aggressively in a patient placing rather than of arrangements of part of hospitalized or help. Such a treatment depends on the private clinic of patient being established for the suitable treatments. Krusz and others believe and showed that this treatment is more effective for and preferable to the patient, being less expensive and offering more options which can be offered in the event of urgency the arrangement of department. Based on the results of their work, they push the headache and make suffer from the experts to incorporate these techniques of treatment of IV when they see a patient presenting the headache or the refractory migraine. Combinations - “it seems like practically each combination of the drugs of IV at our disposal was tested or given in my private clinic at the same time or others for refractory migraines, headaches or a combination of the latter with a sudden blaze of pain. Naturally, we make any effort employ a drug at the same time and carefully document the reduction of percentage to this simple agent”