June 02, 2007
On a daily basis, both patients and providers are confronted with the complicated problem of pain. Unfortunately, pain is prevalent among persons infected with HIV-1 and is undertreated.2 Metaphorically, pain can be likened to sound. At the same decibel level, different persons will perceive the same level of sound as pleasant or unpleasant. At either end of the spectrum (ie, no sound and extreme noise), all who are not hearing-impaired will agree on how the sound is perceived. Likewise, in pain, at the extremes (no pain and excruciating pain), everyone will agree on how the level of pain is perceived. Like sound, what complicates our assessment of pain is that pain typically falls in the middle range, where many different variables affect both the physiology of the pain and the psychosocial perception of that pain.
June 02, 2007
A49-year-old woman was referred to the emergency department by her primary medical provider for complaints of 3 weeks of cough, pleuritic chest pain, fever, and night sweats. The patient reportedanorexia and weight loss of 9 kg (20 lb) during the past 4 months.