Finewedges.com Finewedges.com Finewedges.com
   Index :> About Us :> Privacy Policy :> Terms of Use :> Add Your Link :> Add Your Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Relationship & Lifestyle

Investment & Finance

People & Communities

Recreation & Entertainment

Self Management

Sports & Adventure

Games & Play

Health & Hygiene

Property & Estate

Automobile & Automotive

Companies & Business

Medical Care

Tour & Travel

Creative Arts

Children

Home Family & Garden

Science & Space

Shopping & Auction

Eating & Drinking

Education & Learning

Politics & Government

Jobs & Careers

News & Events

Internet & Computers

 

Index » Medical Care » Diseases & Ailments
 

Seven Sloppy Uses of Medical Tests

 

Even excellent tools can be mis-used. Here are seven "sins" of medical testing:

1. Ordering the wrong test for the right condition.

If I had a nickel for every time a doctor ordered a carotid artery test in a patient with a fainting spell, I could fund my retirement several times over. And this is despite the fact that problems with the carotid arteries (the pulsating blood-vessels in the front of the neck) are incapable of generating fainting spells! Narrowed or blocked carotid arteries are capable of generating many other symptoms -- including paralysis on one side of the body or loss of speech -- but not unconsciousness. Yet this test is frequently ordered in a knee-jerk fashion for people with fainting spells. Moreover, when the artery is found to be narrowed, it sometimes triggers a needless and risky operation on the affected artery. All because of a test that shouldn't have been ordered in the first place!

2. Treating the test instead of the patient.

There are situations in which a tool gets confused with a goal. One example of this is in the treatment of people with epileptic seizures. Most people with seizures do well with the help of seizure-suppressing medications. The amount, or level, of some of these medications can be measured in the bloodstream and there are circumstances in which it is useful to do so. A drug level can be a useful tool. But it's only a tool, and nothing more.

The goals of seizure treatment are simple -- no seizures and no side-effects. What could be more straightforward? However, some physicians appear to believe that the goal of treatment is to produce a certain drug level on a lab report. When this occurs, trouble can ensue. For example, a patient might be doing great on a certain dose of a medication that stops his or her seizures without causing side effects. (How can one improve on that?) But then a doctor, ordering a drug level because it seems like the right thing to do, feels compelled by the number appearing on the lab slip to lower the dose of medication. When this occurs, a seizure sometimes results. This is a seizure that didn't need to happen.

3. Using a test as a substitute for interacting with the patient.

I have great respect for emergency physicians. Having done emergency work myself, I know it's not an easy job. Emergency physicians work in a fish bowl, subject to criticism and second-guessing for decisions made in crisis situations and under pressure of time. That said, one gains the impression that sometimes they order thousands of dollars worth of tests based on a 30-second interview and a cursory exam. Yet there are cases in which, if a few more questions had been asked of the patient or family, the diagnostic possibilities and choice of tests would have changed.

4. Ordering irrelevant tests.

There are certain tests -- like a chloride level in spinal fluid or blood-levels of some of the newer seizure-preventing drugs -- that are not known to be useful for anything. But they get ordered anyway.

5. Forgetting that tests are imperfect.

All tests -- from high-tech scans to lowly blood measurements -- have false-positives (overcalls) and false-negatives (undercalls). But sometimes test-results are handled as if they're perfect and never wrong. As an example, sometimes patients have attacks for which the descriptions are compelling for a diagnosis of seizures, but then have normal electroencephalograms (brain-wave tests). Electoencephalograms can be very helpful, but it's possible for a patient who really does have seizures to have a normal tracing. Yet it's not unusual to encounter cases where patients' normal brain-wave tests kept them from receiving the treatments they needed.

6. Forgetting that there aren't tests for every medical condition.

When patients report hard-to-diagnose symptoms to their doctors, medical tests are often ordered. Sometimes all the test-results are normal. Does this mean there is nothing wrong with the patient? Not necessarily. There are many conditions -- like migraine, Parkinson's disease, fibromyalgia and restless legs syndrome -- for which conventional tests show no abnormality. We just don't have tests for everything. So it can happen that the tests are normal, but the patient isn't.

7. Failing to order tests that could affect treatment.

One axiom of medical management is that a test should only be done if its different outcomes would lead to different plans of action. If the plan of action is the same no matter how the test turns out, then why do the test? There's a flip side to this axiom. If a test's different outcomes would indeed lead to different plans of action, then the test really should be done, or at least be strongly considered. So, when it comes to ordering a test, there can be sins of omission as well as sins of commission.

It is tragic when a patient develops progressive memory loss and confusion. But it's even more tragic when it is assumed that the cause is Alzheimer's disease (for which there is no good treatment) when it's really due to something else for which good treatment is available. A risk-free head scan and a small assortment of blood tests can check for a number of curable conditions, but sometimes these tests are omitted.

(C) 2006 by Gary Cordingley

Author: Gary Cordingley
 
Author Bio:

Gary Cordingley

Gary Cordingley graduated from Purdue University with a B.S. in chemistry and biology in 1971. He attended Duke University where he earned a Ph.D. in physiology and pharmacology in 1976, and an M.D. in 1977. He received internship training in internal medicine at the University of Michigan Hospitals 1977-1978, residency training in neurology at the Neurological Institute of Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in New York, 1978-1981, and fellowship training as a pharmacology research associate in the National Institute of General Medical Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland, 1981-1983.

He has practiced neurology in Athens, Ohio, since 1983. He is an associate professor of neurology at the Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine and a medical staff member of O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens, Ohio.

Dr. Cordingley has been certified in neurology by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Neurology and a member of the American Headache Society. He is also a member of the Ohio Academy of Medical History and was president of this organization 1994-1997. Dr. Cordingley's articles on neurology, neuroscience and medical history have appeared in numerous professional and general publications.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Home Remedies for Yeast Infection
 
Cancer? I Just Never Thought It Would Happen To Me
 
A Closer Look At Colon Cancer
 
Prostate Cancer Research - The Promise Of Pomegranates
 
Give Your Stomach a Rest
 
Allergies - Not Just A Skin Rash!
 
Seven Sloppy Uses of Medical Tests
 
Need Energy? Natural Supplements Like CO Q10 Are Known For Increasing Energy
 
Heart Attack Symptoms
 
Type 2 Diabetes: A Growing Epidemic
 
 
 
Index :> Privacy Policy :> Terms of Use
Copyright © www.finewedges.com - All Rights Reserved