December 19th 2025
Your daily dose of the clinical news you may have missed.
AGS: Nursing Intervention Helps Hospitalized Patients Sleep Through the Night
May 7th 2007SEATTLE -- Hospitalized patients slept longer when their nurses straightened patients' sheets and blankets at bedtime or avoided talking at the patients' bedsides when making nighttime rounds, researchers reported here.
COPD and mood disorders, part 2:Sleep problems
April 1st 2007Sleep complaints are common in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Many patients complain of morning tiredness, early awakenings, difficulty in falling asleep, restlessness, and daytime sleepiness. Functional status may eventually be impaired by the resulting chronic fatigue that is compounded by dyspnea.
Drug Choices for Different Seizures Get Clarification
March 23rd 2007LIVERPOOL, England -- Lamotrigine (Lamictal) should be the drug of choice for patients with partial-onset epileptic seizures while valproate (Depacon) heads the list for generalized and unclassifiable seizures, two major studies have found.
Bewildered Computer Clocks May Bedevil Hospitals at 2 a.m. on Sunday
March 9th 2007ROCKVILLE, Md. -- The FDA has warned all hospitals about a possible unanticipated fallout from an act of Congress -- the three-week-early shift to daylight savings time. All medical events triggered by computer clocks could chime an hour out of whack on Sunday.
Kids With Asthma Lose Fewer School Days on Leukotriene Antagonist
February 15th 2007MELBOURNE, Australia -- For children with intermittent asthma, a short course of Singulair (montelukast), a leukotriene antagonist, given at the first sign of an episode may reduce acute care visits, reported Australian investigators.