Editorial
Living longer and stronger: Are children and young adults with Down syndrome experiencing healthier and better lives?
Down syndrome (DS) is the most common genetic cause of intellectual disability and is associated with multiple medical conditions affecting various organ systems, impacting the individual’s health, development and function.1 In Singapore, the life-birth prevalence of DS was 0.89 per 1000 births in the 1990s, a figure expected to...
Original Article
Development and validation of a new self-assessment tool to measure professionalism among medical students
Professionalism is a concept that is difficult to define, but in relation to medical practice, it can be summarised as values, behaviours and conduct that foster the public’s trust in doctors. It comprises a complex interplay of abstract concepts that have led to many attempts at defining professionalism.1-4 With...
Images in Medicine
Cause of vaginal spotting in an older woman
A 77-year-old Chinese woman with a past medical history of Sjogren’s syndrome, nodular goitre and right-sided neck lymphadenopathy, presented to the gynaecological service for per-vaginal spotting. On clinical examination, she was noted to have a cervical polyp. A polypectomy was performed and the specimen was sent for histological examination.
The...
Commentary
Congenital cytomegalovirus infection: Advocating for screening and education
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is the leading non-genetic cause of congenital neurosensory hearing loss in children, accounting for 21% of cases of hearing loss at birth and 25% of deafness at age 4 years.1 It can also give rise to other serious sequelae such as cerebral palsy, cognitive impairment, seizures...
Commentary
Experience with a Nine-step Policy Dealing with Requests for Medically Inappropriate Interventions for Cancer
Although great strides have been made in treating cancers, a significant number of patients still reach the point at which no curative treatment is available. Physicians then face the difficult task of informing patients that, although palliation is always possible, cure is not.
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Commentary
Invasive Cancer after Treatment of Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia
The objective of a cervical screening programme is to prevent invasive cancer of the cervix by detecting and treating pre-invasive disease of the cervix. The impact of the programme depends both on the detection of women with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) and upon their being treated effectively.
This article is...
Commentary
The Polarprobe—Emerging Technology for Cervical Cancer Screening
Cervical cancer is a preventable disease that affects nearly half a million women worldwide. The Papanicolaou smear has been used for screening for over fifty years and the test has the advantage of fast and relatively easy sample collection.
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Others
Occult Virilizing Ovarian Tumours in Postmenopausal Women: Problems in Evaluation with Reference to a Case
A remarkable variety of endocrinologic disorders may cause virilization syndromes. This can pose a diagnostic dilemma to even the most experienced clinicians.
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Others
Occult Virilizing Ovarian Tumours in Postmenopausal Women: Problems in Evaluation with Reference to a Case
A remarkable variety of endocrinologic disorders may cause virilization syndromes. This can pose a diagnostic dilemma to even the most experienced clinicians.
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Others
Pelvic Spleen Masquerading as an Ovarian Neoplasm
A 53-year-old Caucasian woman, a receptionist in a general practice, was referred to the gynaecology outpatient clinic with an 18-month history of heavy, irregular menses and a pelvic mass on an abdominal ultrasound arranged by her General Practitioner (GP). She was otherwise asymptomatic.
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Others
Repair of Complex Ureterovaginal and Vesicovaginal Fistulas with Ileal Cystoplasty and Ureteric Reimplantation into an Antireflux Ileal Nipple Valve—A Case Report
Urogenital fistulas are a known but uncommon complication of gynaecological surgery, especially those involving a malignant process. Its incidence does not exceed 2%.
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Others
A Case Report—Delayed Vesicocutaneous Fistula After Radiation Therapy for Advanced Vulvar Cancer
To our knowledge this is the first reported case of an isolated vesicocutaneous fistula related to previous radiation therapy for recurrent vulvar cancer.
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Review Article
Optimal Treatment in Gestational Trophoblastic Disease
Gestational trophoblastic diseases (GTD) encompass a spectrum of interrelated conditions:
Hydatidiform mole (HM)
Invasive mole (IM)
Choriocarcinoma (CC)
Placental site trophoblastic tumour (PSTT)
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Review Article
Fallopian Tube Carcinoma—A Review
Fallopian tube cancer is the least common of gynaecological malignancies. It was first described by Renaud in 1847.
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Review Article
Current Management of Early Vulvar Cancer
Carcinoma of the vulva is an uncommon malignancy, but one that is amenable to early diagnosis if symptoms and signs are appropriately investigated. Although patient and physician delay remains common, an increasing number of patients are being diagnosed with early stage disease.
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Review Article
Topoisomerase-I Inhibitors in Gynaecologic Tumours
Topoisomerases are essential nuclear enzymes with a multiplicity of cellular functions involving DNA replication, RNA transcription, mitosis, and chromosome condensation. Two classes have been identified: the class I topoisomerases, named “I” because they induce single-strand breaks and reunions of the DNA double helix, and the class II topoisomerases, named...
Review Article
Screening for Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is the most common gynaecological malignancy with over 5000 new cases diagnosed every year in the UK and 22 000 in the United States. Four thousand women die each year of ovarian cancer in England and Wales, and 13 000 die in the USA.
This article is available...
Review Article
Biomarkers in Carcinoma of the Cervix: Emphasis on Tissue-related Factors and Their Potential Prognostic Factors
Accurate staging is of utmost importance in determining the prognosis of carcinoma of the cervix. Demographic features such as race and socio-economic status have been demonstrated as not having significant influence.
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Review Article
The Management Dilemma of the Mildly Abnormal Smear: Fact or Fiction?
Carcinoma of the cervix is still a relatively common gynaecological malignancy. However, despite being potentially preventable it still claims the lives of many women even in those countries where organised screening programmes exist.
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Review Article
Adenocarcinoma of the Cervix
It is clear from studies in Canada, Scandinavia, and more recently the United Kingdom, that routine Pap smear screening has not only reduced the incidence of squamous carcinoma of the cervix but indeed in the last 10 to 15 years has halved the mortality rate from this disease. In...
Original Article
Malignant Ovarian Germ Cell Tumours: Experience in the National University Hospital of Singapore
One of the most remarkable advances in the management of gynaecological cancers is in malignant ovarian germ cell tumours. Before the early 70s, some of the malignant ovarian germ cell tumours had a notoriously bad reputation in terms of aggressiveness and poor prognosis.
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Original Article
A Phase II Study of Combined CPT-11 and Mitomycin-C in Platinum Refractory Clear Cell and Mucinous Ovarian Carcinoma
Platinum resistance, either de novo or acquired, is a major obstacle in the treatment of advanced ovarian cancer. Platinum-resistance has been classified into the following three categories; (1) primarily (intrinsically) platinum-resistant disease: tumours showing no change (NC) or progressive disease (PD) while on initial platinum-based chemotherapy; (2) secondarily platinum-resistant...
Original Article
Single Agent Paclitaxel in Resistant and Relapsed Epithelial Ovarian Cancer After First-line Platinum-based Chemotherapy—Experience in an Asian Population
Ovarian carcinoma ranks fourth among causes of death in women and is the leading cause of death from gynaecological malignancies in Western countries. In Singapore, the incidence of this cancer has been rising for the last 25 years.
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Original Article
Uterine Papillary Serous Carcinoma—The KK Hospital Experience
Endometrial carcinoma comprises a morphologically heterogeneous group of tumours. Several authors during the 1960s and 1970s described an unusual variant of endometrial cancer containing psammoma bodies.
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Original Article
Radiotherapy as Local Adjuvant Treatment for Endometrial Carcinoma—A Review of 45 Patients
Radiotherapy as an adjunct to surgery has long been used in the management of endometrial carcinoma with the intent to improve local tumour control as well as to achieve excellent survival rates. Over the years, however, the specific role and relative benefit of postoperative radiotherapy for this particular cancer...
Original Article
Outcome of Obstructive Uropathy After Pelvic Irradiation in Patients with Carcinoma of the Uterine Cervix
Radiotherapy is the mainstay treatment for locally advanced carcinoma of the cervix. It is also administered as an adjuvant therapy to patients deemed at high risk for local recurrence after radical hysterectomy.
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Original Article
The Surgical Management of Colorectal Complications from Irradiation for Carcinoma of the Cervix
Radiation bowel injury is a significant clinical problem because of the technical difficulties of surgery. Among the more common causes is radiation of carcinoma of the cervix, because radiotherapy is the principle mode of treatment for this fourth most common malignancy in women in Singapore (after carcinoma of the...
Original Article
Adjuvant Chemotherapy in “High Risk” Patients after Wertheim Hysterectomy—10-year Survivals
Wertheim radical hysterectomy has today become an accepted method of management of stage IB and early stage IIA cervical carcinoma, particularly in young patients in whom preservation of ovarian and coital function cannot be achieved if they were subjected to radiotherapy instead. However, a group of patients undergoing radical...
Original Article
A Review of Patients with High-risk Carcinoma of the Cervix Treated with Combined Surgery and Postoperative Radiotherapy
It is generally accepted that early stage invasive carcinoma of the cervix, stage I to stage IIA disease, can be treated with equal effectiveness with either radical hysterectomy or radical radiotherapy. However a proportion of patients treated with surgery may be classified as having a significant risk of relapse...
Original Article
Outcome of Early Cervical Carcinoma Treated by Wertheim Hysterectomy with Selective Postoperative Radiotherapy
Cancer of the cervix is the fourth most common cancer in females in Singapore after breast, colorectal and lung cancers. It forms 7.8% of all cancers in females for the period 1988 to 1992.
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Editorial
Gynaecologic Oncology—The Next Lap
Cancer of the pelvic reproductive organs and external genitalia accounts for one in six cancers in women. It can occur in women of all age groups: rhabdomyosarcoma in young girls, germ cell tumours in teenage girls and young women, cervical cancer in the middle age women, and epithelial ovarian...
Others
The Sixth SGH Lecture—Singapore: A New Venice of the 21st Century
Venice is one of the legendary cities of the world. Its beauty and physical setting make Venice unique. For almost 800 years, from 1000 AD to 1797, the Venetians were a separate people.
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Original Article
Urinary Deoxypyridinoline is a Useful Biochemical Bone Marker for the Management of Postmenopausal Osteoporosis
Postmenopausal osteoporosis is the most common cause of osteoporosis. It is heralded by the cessation of oestrogen production by the ovaries resulting in at least 10% to 15% bone loss over the next 10 to 15 years from menopause.
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Others
A Case of Accelerated Development of Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy in a Woman with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus after Pregnancy
Diabetic retinopathy is the leading cause of blindness in persons between the age of 24 and 64 years both in the US and the UK. Peak fertility and childbearing years correspond to the first half of this period.
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Others
Medicine and Surgery—History, Change and Challenge
Mr Koh Yong Guan, guest-of-honour; Dr Tan Ser Kiat, Master, Academy of Medicine; Dr K C Tan, Chairman, Chapter of Surgeons; Dr Robert Jalleh from Malaysia; Dr Idral Darwis from Indonesia; Dr P B Chacha, my esteemed partner; Dr John Isaac, Master of Ceremonies; fellow academicians, practitioners and friends,...
Others
Current Continuing Medical Education Provision in Singapore
It was in 1994 that as an overseas fellow of the College, I received a letter from Dr Peter Toghill, Director of Continuing Medical Education (CME), Royal College of Physicians of London, stating that the three Royal Colleges of Physicians in the UK have agreed to joint recommendation on...
Others
Early 21st Century Professional Practice: Change and Challenge
Today is a day of rejoicing for all of you, graduates, parents, relatives and loved ones. I can share in your joy and also a sense of relief that you have passed the first and for some, the second professional exam in your career.
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Others
9th Seah Cheng Siang Memorial Lecture: Gastric Cancer—Where are we now?
The last two decades have witnessed dramatic changes in the understanding of gastric cancer: a rapid decline in global incidence, its association with Helicobacter pylori gastritis, and the new information regarding its molecular biology. Nevertheless, gastric cancer remains the second commonest cancer in the world in terms of morbidity...
Others
New Treatment and Research Strategies for the Improvement of Care of Cleft Lip and Palate Patients in the New Millennium
I have chosen as the title of my keynote address “New Treatment and Research Strategies for the Improvement of the Care of Cleft Lip and Palate Patients”. The reason for this is that despite the tremendous strides we have made over the past 50 years in the management of...
Original Article
Rapid One-day Fluorescence In Situ Hybridisation in Prenatal Diagnosis Using Uncultured Amniocytes and Chorionic Villi
The most common chromosomal abnormalities in newborns are trisomy 21, trisomy 18, trisomy 13, and monosomy X, with incidences of 1/800, 1/8,000, 1/20,000, and 1/10,000, respectively. Conventional cytogenetic approaches traditionally employ foetal cells from amniotic fluid (AF) or chorionic villus (CV) grown in vitro and metaphase banding for chromosome...
Original Article
A Preliminary Study of the Immunohistochemical Detection of a Novel Tumour Marker, 22-1-1 Antigen, in Gynaecological Cancer Specimens
Monoclonal antibodies expressed against specific tumour cells can play a useful role in the study and management of such cancers. Such antibodies have been useful in diagnosis and treatment of certain cancers (as tumour markers) and many such antibodies have now been described.
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Others
Young Investigator’s Award: Induction of Apoptosis Following Traumatic Head Injury in Humans
The outlook for sufferers of severe head trauma is extremely poor. Some 20% of patients died before significant treatment can be administered, and nearly one quarter of patients end in a vegetative state with little potential for further progress.
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Others
8th Seah Cheng Siang Memorial Lecture: New Antithrombotic Agents
The tremendous interest in finding new anti-aggregating agents stems from the preeminent role that platelets play, not only in haemostasis and thrombosis, but also in atherogenesis and, be it less definitive, in arterial spasm. Compelling data from large-scale trials have established the role of platelet inhibitors in reducing coronary...
Others
3rd Yahya Cohen Lecture: The Role of the Myofibroblast-Like Cell in Hepatocellular Carcinoma—Host Defence?
It is indeed a great honour for me to be named the third Yahya Cohen lecturer and I would like to express my deepest thanks and appreciation to the Academy of Medicine Singapore for having selected me for this award. At this lecture, I would like to share with...
Others
9th Chapter of Surgeons’ Lecture: The Orthopaedic Surgeon: Historical Perspective, Ethical Considerations and the Future
The legacy of caring and humanitarianism has been the mission of the medical profession since the founding of Singapore by Sir Stamford Raffles in 1819. To this small fishing village in the Riau Archipelago on the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula came traders and entrepreneurs from China, India...
Others
1998 Distinguished Academician Lecture: Hepatic Resection— A Western Perspective
Although debridement of portions of liver that prolapsed through war wounds was recorded from distant times, attempts at resection of a solid liver tumour were first reported in the latter part of the 19th century. When one considers the enormous challenges faced by surgeons of the time, without the...
Others
1998 Runme Shaw Memorial Lecture: Somatic Evolution of Cancer
The interpretation of cancer as a somatic evolutionary process involving genetic mutation followed by selection, goes back to the early years of this century. Boveri’s hypothesis put forward in 1914 that cancer was associated with abnormalities of the chromosomes and Tyzzer and Strong’s experiments of transplantable tumours in 1916...
Others
14th Gordon Arthur Ransome Oration: Continuity and Change
Deputy Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, Datuk Dr Yeoh Poh Hong, Dr Chee Yam Cheng, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, I am deeply honoured to be invited to deliver the 14th Gordon Arthur Ransome Oration, following in the footsteps of previous illustrious speakers. I am particularly honoured that you...
Others
The Future of Medicine from the Standpoint of the Practising Paediatrician
From the time of recorded history of medicine, the doctor whether he be the ancient healer or the modern medical practitioner, the doctor had practised the art and science, on the basis of curing the patient when he has an illness. The doctor is sought out when the patient...
Review Article
Prognostic Factors in Endometrial Carcinoma
In the United States of America, endometrial carcinoma is the most common cancer of the female genital tract and has an annual incidence of 72 per 100,000 women. In Singapore it is the third most common female genital tract cancer after cancer of the cervix and ovary.
This article is...
Original Article
Factors Affecting Success in an Embryo Cryopreservation Programme
The first pregnancy resulting from the thaw and transfer of cryopreserved pre-embryos was reported in 1983 by Trounson and his team, in Melbourne, Australia. This technological breakthrough in infertility treatment has been successfully repeated since then and cryopreservation of excess embryos now forms an integral part of any assisted...
Original Article
Hyperlipidaemia during Normal Pregnancy, Parturition and Lactation
Increase in the plasma lipid fractions in normal pregnancy have been described but irregularity of sampling, difference in materials studied (whole blood, serum, and plasma) and the variations in the method of reporting precluded any comparison of results. In Western populations normal pregnancy leads to an increase in cholesterol...
Others
An Unusual Tumour Metastasis to the Cervix
A 55-year-old Chinese lady had a left mastectomy in April 1995 for an invasive lobular carcinoma of the breast. Axillary lymph node metastases were present.
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Others
Address by the Master, Academy of Medicine, Singapore at the 2000 Annual Induction Dinner—Learn the Past, Ensure the Future
I am delighted to share this celebratory occasion with you. It is a time for congratulations all round not only to our new Fellows but also to their families and friends. No specialist trains by himself.
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Others
Response by the Representative of Inductees, Academy of Medicine, Singapore at the 2000 Annual Induction Ceremony—A Call to Patient Advocacy
I count myself fortunate to be allowed to join the ranks of the Academy. On behalf of my fellow inductees, may I extend a word of thanks for this honour. Thank you, also, for allowing me the privilege of delivering this Reply.
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Others
Address by the Master, Academy of Medicine, Singapore at the 2000 Annual Induction Ceremony—The EQ & IQ of Specialist Doctors
First, let me warmly welcome you to this pristine auditorium with its well preserved ceiling architectural details. Probably none of the new Fellows is old enough to remember that this was the old Allen and Farris Lecture Theatres of the Faculty of Medicine when it was at Sepoy Lines...
Others
8th SGH Lecture: Genomics, Talent and the Development of the Life Sciences Industry in Singapore
In a few months’ time, one of the most significant advances, possibly the most significant advance ever in the history of biology and medicine, will be achieved with the rolling out of the first draft of the map detailing the entire Human Genome.
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Others
Genetics of Male Infertility: Role of Androgen Receptor Mutations and Y-Microdeletions
Three to four per cent of men have severe defects in sperm production that result in infertility. Most of these men are healthy and the causes of depressed spermatogenesis are rarely identified with certainty.
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Others
3rd Tan Tock Seng Hospital Oration: The Changing Fabric of Medicine—An Ethical and Social Revolution
The legacy of Tan Tock Seng Hospital began with the founding of the Pauper Hospital in Pearl’s Hill in 1844.
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Others
Management of Growth Arrest with Tissue-engineered Cells
Before I go on to the scientific aspects of my talk, I would like to pay tribute to Dr Yahya Cohen. Dr Cohen was born in Singapore of Jewish parents.
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Others
Association or Agreement
Association and agreement between two factors are very different concepts, although the methods used to describe them appear similar. For example, the association between levels of aflatoxin serum albumin adducts and dietary aflatoxin intake can be demonstrated in a bivariate scattergram; the agreement between two methods of measuring aflatoxin...
Original Article
Microdochectomy for Single-duct Nipple Discharge
Nipple discharge is a common disturbing symptom for many women and often leads to a surgical referral. It accounts for 3% to 5% of all breast symptoms.
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Others
10th Chapter of Surgeons’ Lecture: The Challenges in Surgery—Past, Present and Future, and in Search of the 4Cs
Firstly may I thank the Academy of Medicine and the Chapter of Surgeons for giving me this great privilege and honour to deliver the final lecture of the century for our series of Chapter of Surgeons lectures to close the 20th century and begin a new dawn in the...
Others
Opening Address by Dr Chee Yam Cheng, Master, Academy of Medicine, Singapore at the 33rd Annual Combined Surgical Meeting on 4 November 1999 at the COMB Auditorium
It is a pleasure to be present with you all at your 33rd Annual Combined Surgical Meeting for 1999 with less than 60 days to go into the new millennium. I applaud your organising committee under Dr Sarbjit Singh for a comprehensive and exciting programme which I trust you...
Others
Funding and Future Diagnosis Related Group Development
Supplement on Casemix Conference Singapore 2001 held on 17-19 August 2001 in Singapore
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Others
Clinical Pathways or Case Management
Supplement on Casemix Conference Singapore 2001 held on 17-19 August 2001 in Singapore
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Others
Getting Clinicians Involved: The Australian Experience
Supplement on Casemix Conference Singapore 2001 held on 17-19 August 2001 in Singapore
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Others
The 4th Tan Tock Seng Hospital Oration: Challenge for the Medical Profession in the 21st Century
I am greatly honoured to speak at the 4th TTSH Oration following such distinguished luminaries like Dr Chew Chin Hin, Dr Chen Ai Ju and Professor N Balachandran. I also wish to thank all of you who are present this evening.
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Original Article
Prevention of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Transmission from Mother to Child—A Cohort Study in Singapore
Since the onset of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) epidemic in the mid-1980s, the number of HIV-infected cases has risen sharply throughout the world. Globally, 5.8 million new HIV infections have been diagnosed in 1998 with 1.2 million being diagnosed in Southeast Asia.
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Others
Book Review
The above is a textbook of medicine written by Singapore doctors and published in Singapore. It is difficult not to be over-enthusiastic about it as there are so few books of medicine written and published in Singapore.
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Original Article
Obstetric Admissions to the Intensive Therapy Unit of a Tertiary Care Institution
Pregnancy is associated with physiological changes in various organ systems and complications arising from the interaction between these changes and disease processes may be severe enough to require admission to the intensive therapy unit (ITU) for management. The purpose of this study was to review all obstetric patients admitted...
Others
Alternate Modes of Financing Health Care Technology
Alternative financing of health care delivery is one of the most vexing problems facing medicine today. Intensive care in many ways is a perfect example of the core problems facing policymakers responsible for financing health care.
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Others
2nd Chapter of Paediatricians Lecture: The Future of Paediatrics in Singapore
When I was first invited to give this 2nd Chapter of Paediatricians Lecture by the Chapter, my obvious answer was no. I could think of quite a few other paediatricians more qualified and appropriate as speakers and hoped that my emphatic no would work.
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Others
10th Seah Cheng Siang Memorial Lecture: Going Places—A Rheumatological Odyssey
I am greatly honoured to deliver the 10th Seah Cheng Siang memorial lecture. I came into direct contact with Professor Seah in January 1965 when I joined the then Thomson Road General Hospital as his senior registrar.
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Others
5th Yahya Cohen Lecture: Angiosomes and Extension of Skin Flaps—Anatomic Study and Clinical Implications
I would like to express my gratitude to the Chapter of Surgeons and the Academy of Medicine, Singapore for the honour of presenting this 5th Yahya Cohen Lecture.
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Others
11th Chapter of Surgeons Lecture—The Art of Letting Go
These observations were made by a Persian mathematician some 900 years ago. His sentiments are self-evident but no less easy to accept especially for operating surgeons.
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Others
15th Gordon Arthur Ransome Oration: A Journey of Care—Mission Impossible?
I am deeply honoured by the invitation to deliver the 15th Sir Gordon Arthur Ransome Oration.
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Others
The Runme Shaw Memorial Lecture 2000—Treating VIPs in Washington
My lecture is about people, power, illness, and the patient-physician relationship. It is the personality of the politician or official, the ego elevation conferred by power, the repression of the thought of illness, and the combination of these factors, which leads to subversion of the patient-doctor relationship when a...
Others
12th Chapter of Surgeons Lecture: Shifting Paradigms in the Management of Breast Cancer—A Surgical Perspective
The recorded history of breast cancer management spans four millennia. This story about breast cancer management is also one about change, about resistance to and acceptance of change.
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Others
5th Tan Tock Seng Hospital Oration: Advances for Life
I am honoured and privileged to have been invited to deliver the 5th Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH) Oration at the Opening of your 9th Annual Scientific Meeting. When I was invited, I hesitated for a moment as I have not been in active practice for quite a while,...
Others
6th Yahya Cohen Lecture: Visual Experience During Cataract Surgery
What a patient can see during his or her surgery can be a cause of anxiety for the patient. It may cause additional stress to what for most patients is already a traumatic event.
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Others
Management of Premalignant Lesions of the Cervix
Cervical cancer is one of the most common female cancers worldwide. It is ranked second only to breast cancer and in many underdeveloped countries, it is the most common female cancer.
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Others
Four Pregnancies in Two Patients with Essential Thrombocythaemia—A Case Report
Essential thrombocythaemia (ET) is a rare myeloproliferative disease which manifests with an elevated platelet count. It presents predominantly in the middle-aged population, occurring slightly more frequently in women than men.
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Others
The Course of Pregnancy in a Patient with Nail-Patella Syndrome
The nail-patella syndrome (NPS) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder defined by the association of nail dysplasia, bone abnormalities and, frequently, renal disease. We report the course of pregnancy in a patient with such a condition.
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Review Article
Rheumatic Heart Diseases in Pregnancy
Rheumatic heart disease comprises acute rheumatic fever following group A beta-haemolytic streptococcal infection of the tonsillopharynx, and its long-term sequelae of heart valve fibrosis causing chronic valvular lesions. Severe myocardial and pericardial involvements are much less common.
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Review Article
Idiopathic Thrombocytopenia in Pregnancy
Idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) is an autoimmune disorder in which platelets are sensitised with an antiplatelet autoantibody and then destroyed by the reticuloendothelial system.1 Hence, it is also known as primary autoimmune thrombocytopenic purpura. There are two forms of ITP—acute and chronic.
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Review Article
Thrombophilia in Pregnancy
A clear understanding of thrombophilia is becoming increasingly important in the practice of high-risk obstetrics. In addition to their role in thromboembolic disease, there is increasing evidence linking thrombophilia and adverse pregnancy outcomes such as pre-eclampsia, intrauterine growth restriction, placental abruption and recurrent pregnancy loss.
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Review Article
Current Understanding of Pre-eclampsia
Pre-eclampsia is a major cause of adverse obstetric outcome. It remains one of the leading causes of maternal mortality1 and continues to contribute significantly to perinatal morbidity and mortality.
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Review Article
Management of Thromboembolic Disease in Pregnancy
Venous thromboembolism (VTE) refers specifically to 2 related entities: deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism. The management of arterial thrombo-embolism, in particular that of women with artificial heart valves, is beyond the scope of this paper.
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Review Article
Management of Haematologic Malignancies in Pregnancy
Malignancy complicates the course of about 1 in 1000 pregnancies and is the second leading cause of death in women of reproductive age. The most commonly diagnosed malignancies during pregnancy are breast cancer, cervical carcinoma, Hodgkin’s lymphoma and melanoma.
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Review Article
Thyroid Diseases in Pregnancy
Abnormalities of thyroid function associated with pregnancy encompass both hyperthyroidism and hypothyroidism. These may have been present before the onset of pregnancy, or occurred only during or after pregnancy.
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Original Article
Outcome of Pregnancy in Asian Women with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: Experience of a Single Perinatal Centre in Singapore
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic systemic connective tissue disease with a reported prevalence of 5 to 100/100,000. Women are affected much more commonly than men (ratio 9:1), particularly those in the child-bearing age (15:1).
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Original Article
Pregnancy after Renal Transplantation: Experience in Singapore General Hospital
Successful renal transplantation significantly improves the sexual and reproductive functions of women with end-stage renal disease and offers the best hope for those who wish to have children. Conception rate has been reported to improve dramatically from 1 in 200 dialysis patients to 1 in 50 women with a...
Original Article
Gestational Diabetes Mellitus: A Call for Systematic Tracing
The prevalence of diabetes is increasing worldwide. In Singapore, the prevalence of diabetes has increased dramatically from 4.7% in 1984 to 8.6% in 1998. Diabetic complications lead to a significant number of patients with blindness, amputations and end-stage renal failure annually.
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Original Article
Pregnancy in Women with Idiopathic Thrombocytopaenic Purpura
Idiopathic thrombocytopaenic purpura (ITP) is the most common autoimmune haematological disorder in pregnancy. The pathophysiology of the disease is peripheral destruction of platelets mediated by antiplatelet antibodies.
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Original Article
Are Maternal Deaths on the Ascent in Singapore? A Review of Maternal Mortality as Reflected by Coronial Casework from 1990 to 1999
It is said that, worldwide, over half a million maternal deaths occur annually. This might well be a conservative estimate, given the difficulties inherent in collecting the relevant data, compounded by the under-reporting and misclassification of such deaths.
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Editorial
Medical Disorders in Pregnancy—The Challenges Ahead
Nowhere is the fate of two individuals more closely intertwined than that of the mother and her fetus. Pregnancy is a unique state where the physiology of the mother is greatly altered to accommodate the newly developing “organ”—the fetus.
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Review Article
Osteoporosis in Relation to Menopause
Singapore has a rapidly ageing population. In 1990, only 6% of the population was above the age of 65 years but this percentage of elderly citizens will rise rapidly to 17% by the year 2030. As Singaporean women achieve longer life expectancy and live a greater portion of their...
Others
Is Healthcare Competition Healthy?
There are many problems which all Health Ministers worry about. But we can generally boil them down to one common problem: “money no enough”.
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Original Article
Burch Colposuspension: Review of Perioperative Complications at a Women’s and Children’s Hospital in Singapore
Genuine stress incontinence (GSI) is the most common cause of female urinary incontinence. When conservative treatment fails, surgery is indicated. Open Burch colposuspension is an established surgical procedure1 and remains the gold standard upon which the efficacy of newer surgical options is evaluated.
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Others
Endometrioid Adenocarcinoma of the Uterus: Surgico-Pathological Correlations and Role of Pelvic Lymphadenectomy
Endometrial cancer is the most common female genital malignancy in industralised countries today. Despite the overall favourable prognosis in this neoplasia, survival is associated with several prognostic factors. In endometrial cancer, one of the most potent prognostic factors is nodal metastasis.
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Others
FIGO Stage 1B2 Cervical Carcinoma – The KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital Experience
Important prognostic factors in stage 1B cervical carcinoma include primary tumour diameter, nodal metastases, depth of stromal invasion, lymph-vascular invasion, microscopic parametrial extension and status of surgical margins.1 In 1994 FIGO addressed the significance of tumour diameter by designating stage 1B into 1B1 (clinical lesions no greater than 4.0...
Others
Bowel Surgery for Epithelial Ovarian Cancer – An Early Case Series
Epithelial ovarian cancer is the leading cause of death in patients with gynaecological malignancies in Singapore and developed countries, the main reason being the advanced stages of the disease (stage III or IV) at diagnosis. This is largely due to the lack of an effective screening tool to detect...
Others
Pregnancy Following Embolisation of Uterine Arteriovenous Malformation – A Case Report
Arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) of the uterus are rare but potentially life-threatening lesions. The common presentation is vaginal bleeding and, if not diagnosed correctly, can result in torrential bleeding, especially following dilatation and curettage.
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Others
A Case Series of Gastrointestinal Abnormalities in Fetuses with Echogenic Bowel Detected During the Antenatal Period
Although the presence of fetal echogenic bowel (EB) has been largely regarded as benign, it has been viewed as a soft marker for various congenital anomalies. To date, no studies have been conclusive and the importance of antenatal EB amongst the low-risk population has remained confusing.
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Others
Audit of ‘Crash’ Emergency Caesarean Sections Due to Cord Prolapse in Terms of Response Time and Perinatal Outcome
Umbilical cord prolapse is an uncommon intrapartum event with a reported incidence of 1 in 160 to 714 deliveries. Predisposing factors include fetal malpresentation, prematurity, small fetal size, multiple gestation, polyhydramnios and membranes rupture prior to head engagement.
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Others
Quality Control Assurance in National Screening Programmes for Cervical Cancer
The National Health Service (NHS) was established in the United Kingdom (UK) in 1948, against a post-war background of poverty and ill health. The aim was to provide healthcare based on need to all citizens of the UK, free at the point of delivery.
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Others
The Combined Oral Contraceptive Pill in Women Over Age Forty
In the 1970s, several studies appeared to suggest that users of oral contraceptives (OCs) were at increased risk of cardiovascular events. More recently following newer studies on lower dose OCs and re-analysis of the old studies, it was concluded that the risk of cardiovascular accidents was attributable primarily to...
Others
Contemporary Management of Fibroids
Fibroids are the most common, solid benign pelvic tumours occurring in about 30% of women beyond the age of 30. They are asymptomatic in most women.
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Others
Investigating the Infertile Couple
Infertility is defined as the inability to conceive after 1 to 2 years of unprotected intercourse. In general, an estimated 84% of all women would conceive after a year of intercourse.
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Others
Use of Hormone Replacement Therapy in the Asymptomatic Postmenopausal Woman: What is the Current Evidence?
The understanding of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for postmenopausal women has undergone dramatic change since the publication of the results of the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study in July 2002.
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Others
Fetal Cells in Maternal Blood: State of the Art for Non-Invasive Prenatal Diagnosis
Without prenatal diagnosis, 1 in 50 babies are born with serious physical or mental handicap, and as many as 1 in 30 with some form of congenital malformation. These may be due to structural or chromosomal abnormalities, or single gene disorders.
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Others
Human Papillomavirus Triage of Patients with Atypical Squamous Cells of Undetermined Significance on Cervical Papanicolaou Smear
Cervical cancer affects >400,000 women a year worldwide, and represents a significant health issue for women. In the United States (US) however, screening programmes have reduced the incidence to 8.3 cases per 100,000 women with only 14,000 cases and 5000 deaths annually.
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Others
Screening for Chromosomal Anomalies: First or Second Trimester, Biochemical or Ultrasound?
A chromosome abnormality contributes significantly to fetal loss during pregnancy, and perinatal morbidity and mortality. The contribution of chromosomal abnormalities to fetal loss decreases as pregnancy progresses; an estimated 50% of first-trimester spontaneous abortions are due to chromosomal abnormalities.
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Others
Should Doctors Perform an Elective Caesarean Section on Request?
Caesarean sections performed without medical indication, better known as maternal request caesarean sections, have generated intense debate in recent times. While uncommon in the past, a recent national audit in the United Kingdom (UK)1 revealed that 7% of all elective caesarean sections were performed for precisely this reason.
This article...
Editorial
Recent Advances in Obstetrics and Gynaecology
The science and art of providing quality health care to women has made tremendous strides in recent years. In the subspecialties of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, recent advances in laboratory techniques and in clinical diagnostic, surgical and laparoscopic skills have improved the prevention and early detection of disease.
This article is...
Review Article
MR Imaging of the Fetal Brain and Spine: A Maturing Technology
The introduction of a new diagnostic test into a clinical arena goes through a number of stages. The first stage is technical development.
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Others
The Use and Abuse of Steroids in Perinatal Medicine
Preterm birth, delivery prior to 37 weeks of gestational age, accounts for a major and disproportionate amount of infant and neonatal morbidity and mortality. Despite advances in medical technology, the prevalence of preterm birth in Singapore has increased, secondary to an increase in multiple gestations and obstetric interventions.
This article...
Others
Neonatology In Singapore: The Way We Were, The Way Forward
Over a span of 35 years of my working life, I have witnessed the growth of, and also grown together with, neonatology in Singapore. As I look at the present-day status of neonatology, it gives me a sense of achievement and accomplishment.
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Original Article
Changing Trends in Indications for Caesarean Sections in a Tertiary Hospital
Increasing rates of caesarean deliveries have received widespread attention in recent years and has increased widespread discussion in the public domain. The ideal caesarean section rate has never been defined and national rates of caesarean delivery vary from country to country.
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Review Article
Obstetric Cholestasis: Current Opinions and Management
Obstetric cholestasis (OC) is a pregnancy-specific liver disorder. It is also known by other names, such as pruritus gravidarum, recurrent intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy and obstetric hepatosis.
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Review Article
Advances in Imaging in Prenatal Diagnosis and Fetal Therapy
Technology in sonography has advanced tremendously in recent years, contributing to improvements in clinical applications for prenatal diagnosis and fetal therapy. These include transvaginal scanning, harmonic imaging, Doppler imaging, 3-dimensional (3D) ultrasonography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) ultrafast sequences.
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Review Article
Factors Influencing Fetal Growth
Birth weight remains one of the most important measures we have of the health status of a population, being a strong predictor of both mortality and morbidity, and reflecting nutritional status and growth rates. Yet, the estimation of the normal growth potential — and hence the definition of growth...
Others
Significance of the Lateral Epiphysis of the Acetabulum to Hip Joint Stability
Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) remains one of the most difficult disorders to understand and treat in Paediatric Orthopaedics. The aetiology have not been clearly understood and therefore the management remains controversial.
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Others
Craniofacial Anomalies: Clinical and Molecular Perspectives
Cleidocranial dysplasia is an autosomal dominant skeletal disorder characterized by short stature, brachycephaly, delayed closure of the fontanelles and sutures, Wormian bones, midface hypoplasia, unerupted teeth, supernumerary permanent teeth, aplasia or hypoplasia of the clavicles, and other skeletal anomalies, such as hypoplastic iliac wings and brachydactyly.
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Others
Autoimmune Liver Disease in Children
Autoimmune liver disorders are inflammatory liver diseases characterised histologically by a dense mononuclear cell infiltrate, including plasma cells, in the portal tract (Fig. 1) and serologically by the presence of non-organ and liver-specific autoantibodies and increased levels of immunoglobulin G (IgG), in the absence of a known aetiology. They...
Others
HIV/AIDS in Children
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) epidemic in Asia has grown from a handful of cases to a major public health threat with wide-ranging medical, social and economic consequences. First gaining foothold among intravenous drug users and commercial sex workers, HIV quickly spreads to...
Others
Speech By Mr Lim Hng Kiang, Minister For Health and Second Minister for Finance, at the Opening Ceremony of the 36th Singapore-Malaysia Congress of Medicine on Thursday, 1 August 2002 at 1810 Hours at Raffles City Convention Centre
It gives me great pleasure to join you this evening at the 36th Singapore Malaysia Congress of Medicine and the 36th Annual Combined Surgical Meeting of the Chapter of Surgeons, Academy of Medicine, Singapore.
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Original Article
Improving the Uptake of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Antenatal Screening in a Primary Healthcare Setting
Since the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) was first diagnosed in Singapore in 1985, its incidence rose from 15 cases in 1988 to 226 in 2000. There has also been a change in the profile of AIDS patients over this period.
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Letter to the Editor
Labour epidural practice in a tertiary training centre
Dear Editor,
Labour analgesia provided through the central neuraxial approach is offered for parturients who are in their active stage of labour, usually after 2–4cm of cervical dilatation. Lumbar epidural, the gold standard for labour analgesia, is recently recommended over other alternative methods of analgesia such as pressurised gaseous nitrous...
Original Article
Evaluation of a Bedside Test for Phosphorylated Insulin-like Growth Factor Binding Protein-1 in Preterm Labour
The diagnosis of preterm labour poses a problem. Preterm labour accounts for about 50% of preterm births; however, most data reveal that only about 20% of women presenting with suspected preterm labour actually deliver preterm.
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Others
Citation on Dr Andrew Chew Guan Kuan for Admission to Honorary Fellowship on 19 August 2004
It is indeed a great pleasure and honour to present to you Dr Andrew Chew Guan Khuan, who is already a Fellow of the Academy, for conferment of Honorary Fellowship of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore, the highest honour the Academy can bestow on any of its Fellows. Dr...
Others
Citation on Sir Donald Irvine – 17th Gordon Arthur Ransome Orator
It is my pleasure and privilege to introduce Sir Donald Irvine as the 17th Gordon Arthur Ransome Orator.
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Others
Address by Master, Academy of Medicine, Singapore at the Opening Ceremony of the 38th Singapore-Malaysia Congress of Medicine and Induction Ceremony
It is my pleasure to welcome you to the Opening Ceremony of the 38th Singapore-Malaysia Congress of Medicine with participation of the Hong Kong Academy of Medicine and Induction Comitia of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore.
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Others
1st College of Physicians Lecture: The Role of Internal Medicine as a Specialty in the Era of Subspecialisation
It humbles me to accept the invitation to give this lecture, the First College of Physicians Lecture, titled “The Role of Internal Medicine as a Specialty in the Era of Subspecialisation”. I believe I am given this honour as I am one of the few of a seemingly dying...
Others
15th Chapter of Surgeons Lecture: Surgeon of the New Millennium – Surgeon, Scientist and Scholar
Next year, we celebrate a hundred years of medical education in Singapore. We have come a long way since 1821 – from a small, sleepy medical outpost catering to the British Armed Forces in the Far East, to an excellent state-of-the-art medical hub.
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Others
Standards and Revalidation or Recertification
In my Gordon Arthur Ransome Oration and other papers, I have described the nature and development of patient-centred professionalism, the key features of which are summarised in Figure 1.
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Others
Continuing Professional Development – a Surrogate for Recertification?
The Hong Kong Academy of Medicine is a statutory body set up in 1993 with the objectives of fostering the development of postgraduate medical education and continuing medical education, the study and practice of medicine and its specialties, and medical research. It is concerned with the standard of specialist...
Others
Teaching and Learning of Professionalism in Medical Schools
There is now worldwide consensus that the elements of medical professionalism need to be enhanced and explicitly taught in medical schools. Medical schools in the United Kingdom (UK) have recently published a model for a core ethics curriculum.
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Others
The Challenge of Teaching Professionalism
For the past 25 years, professionalisation, industrialisation, large-scale infusions of technology into the healthcare system and consumerism, to name a few factors, have definitely contributed to changes in the healthcare environment. At the same time, society has moved from modernity to post-modernity with the adoption of pluralism, relativism and...
Others
2004 Runme Shaw Memorial Lecture: Professionalism – A Concept in Need of Nurturing
It is a great honour to be invited to deliver the Runme Shaw Memorial Lecture. I am grateful to the Runme Shaw Foundation for their support of this lecture.
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Others
17th Gordon Arthur Ransome Oration: Patient-centred Professionalism
When sickness strikes we all need doctors. People everywhere know that the quality of medical care can affect the outcome and possible consequences of illness, and at times mean the difference between life and death.
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Others
The Role of Public Health and Occupational Physicians in the New Millennium
I want to thank the Chapter and organisers for honouring me with this kind invitation to speak to you. This millennium is only 4 years old, and yet I cannot see beyond the next decade, with things moving so rapidly.
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Others
Flap Prefabrication – The Bridge Between Conventional Flaps and Tissue-engineered Flaps
Flap prefabrication is one of the most exciting areas in Plastic Surgery because of its bridging role between conventional reconstructive surgery and tissue engineering. Using this technique, tissues such as bone, cartilage, skin and muscle can be pre-assembled to form precise composites that will fit any defect.
This article is...
Others
The Importance of High Resolution Chromosome Analysis in the Diagnosis of Birth Defects: Case Reports of Holoproscencephaly and Cystic Hygroma
Optimal chromosome preparation is a function of many factors. These include cell density culture initiation, optimal time for harvest, concentration and exposure duration to a mitotic arrestant, appropriate hypotonic treatment and adequate fixation with modified Carnoy’s fixative.
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Original Article
Tailoring the Field and Indication of Adjuvant Pelvic Radiation for Patients with FIGO Stage Ib Lymph Nodes-Negative Cervical Carcinoma Following Radical Surgery Based on the GOG Score – A Pilot Study
Although no significant survival difference exists between primary surgery and radiotherapy (RT) for the treatment of FIGO stage Ib cervical cancer, radical surgery is the preferred modality of treatment as conservation of the ovarian and vaginal function is of prime importance. It also allows the study of prognostic histopathological...
Others
Refining Clinical Practice: Transforming Science Research into the Art of Medicine
I am humbled by the invitation given to me by Changi General Hospital to deliver this lecture at your 5th Annual Scientific Meeting with the theme “Frontiers of Medicine”. Thank you very much for the honour accorded me. Your CEO, Mr Udairam, and your CMB, Prof Fock Kwong Ming,...
Others
14th Chapter of Surgeons Lecture: Back to Basics
I am happy to be among old friends. As surgeons, we share a kindred spirit. I wish to thank the Academy for the honour of giving this lecture.
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Others
A Case of Cystic Leiomyoma Mimicking an Ovarian Malignancy
Uterine leiomyomas are the most common gynaecological tumour. Typical appearances of leiomyomas are easily recognised on imaging.
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Review Article
Marijuana in Pregnancy
Marijuana has been used for thousands of years for both medical and recreational purposes. Because the pharmacological actions of marijuana are complex and include a unique blend of effects of alcohol, opioids, tranquilisers and hallucinogens, the clinical picture could be very unpredictable and the diagnosis is often difficult.
This article...
Original Article
Abnormal Liver Function Tests in the Symptomatic Pregnant Patient: The Local Experience in Singapore
The diagnostic work-up of abnormal liver function tests (LFT) in pregnancy is challenging, as the conditions peculiar to pregnancy have to be considered in addition to the causes affecting the non-pregnant population. The spectrum of disease is varied and the abnormal LFT can be mild with no long-term consequence,...
Original Article
Twin Births in Singapore: A Population-Based Study Using the National Birth Registry
Twin studies are regarded as one of the better ways to study the effects and significance of gene, environment and interactions of both. The study of monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twins allows for an estimation of the relative importance of genes and environment.
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Original Article
The Effectiveness of Transvaginal Anterior Colporrhaphy Reinforced with Polypropylene Mesh in the Treatment of Severe Cystoceles
Using the Baden-Walker halfway system, Grade 4 cystoceles are defined as extrusions of the bladder base beyond the vaginal introitus with patient straining maximally and represent the extremes of anterior vaginal wall prolapse (Table 1). They result from increased laxity and weakness of the urethrovesical supporting system comprising the...
Others
Book Review
This handbook is written by 3 obstetricians and gynaecologists based at the KK Women’s & Children’s Hospital, Singapore. It is an excellent book that answers the everyday questions that general practitioner (GP) will ask in their clinical practice.
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Others
3rd College of Physicians’ Lecture – Translational Research: From Bench to Bedside and From Bedside to Bench; Incorporating a Clinical Research Journey in IgA Nephritis (1976 to 2006)
In our quest to pursue knowledge regarding a patient’s illness or seek a cure for the disease, as doctors we have to derive the necessary answers through physical examination of the patient and investigations either at the bedside or the laboratory. We engage in research activities into the patient’s...
Others
16th Seah Cheng Siang Memorial Lecture – The Changing Face of Cardiology Practice, Training and Research in Singapore
Professor Seah Cheng Siang was one of the most illustrious physicians of his era. During his professional career, he held the following positions: Head, Department of Medicine, Thomson Road General Hospital (1960-71); Head, Department of Medicine III at the Singapore General Hospital (1971-87); Master of the Academy of Medicine...
Others
Recurrent Non-immune Fetal Hydrops: A Case Report
The incidence of non-immune hydrops (NIH) has been reported to be 1/10001 and is associated with high perinatal morbidity and mortality at all gestational ages with an overall perinatal mortality rate (PNMR) of 86.6%. If the diagnosis is made before 24 weeks’ gestation, the PNMR is 95%, with 30%...
Others
3rd FY Khoo Memorial Lecture – Education, Professionalism, Outsourcing and the Future of Radiology
Radiology is undergoing unprecedented changes. Not only is the technology evolving rapidly, providing images of breathtaking anatomical clarity, but functional information has also become a reality.
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Others
10th Yahya Cohen Memorial Lecture: Clinical Predictors in Obstructive Sleep Apnoea Patients with Computer-assisted Quantitative Videoendoscopic Upper Airway Analysis
Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is a common disease, which is estimated to affect up to 2% of middle-aged women and 4% of middle-aged men.1 Various attempts have been made to obtain predictive indicators of OSA, ranging from clinical predictors using body mass index (BMI), Malampatti score2 and tonsil size...
Others
New Treatments for Atopic Dermatitis – Facts, Comparisons and Uncertainties
Atopic dermatitis is associated with asthma and allergic rhinitis, and presents with a typical morphology and distribution. Eighty-four per cent of cases of atopic dermatitis are mild, 14% moderate, and 2% severe.1 There are 10 randomised controlled trials, and 1 systematic review addressing the appropriate frequency of application of...
Original Article
Assessing Professionalism in Early Medical Education: Experience with Peer Evaluation and Self-evaluation in the Gross Anatomy Course
The professional role of physicians implies a commitment to upholding social order by providing strong leadership, good moral judgement, and the ethical practice of medicine.1-3 However, in the latter part of the 20th century, increasing pressure from political, legal, and market forces has effected significant change in healthcare delivery...
Others
5th College of Physicians Lecture – A Physician’s Odyssey: Recollections and Reflections
Allow me to thank you Mr President and your Council for asking me to deliver the 5th College of Physicians Lecture. Your President has suggested that with over 50 years of association with Medicine, the title be “In the Service of the Medical Profession”.
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Original Article
Right Atrial Isomerism – Preponderance in Asian Fetuses. Using the Stomach-distance ratio as a Possible Diagnostic Tool for Prediction of Right Atrial Isomerism
Atrial isomerism is a disorder of lateralisation characterised by symmetric development of normally asymmetric cardiac atria and organ systems. The synonyms for these defects include heterotaxy syndrome, polysplenic/ asplenic syndrome, right/left isomerism, isomerism of the atrial appendages and situs ambiguous.
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Letter to the Editor
Assessment of Medical Graduates Competencies
Medical professional proficiency comprises a set of skills, knowledge, and attitudes necessary to efficiently accomplish the practice of medicine. The major aim of undergraduate medical education in the region is to produce doctors who are competent and able to meet the health needs of the community while also being...
Others
Brachytherapy – One Man’s Meat, A Personal Journey in Radiation Oncology
Dr Tan Kim Ping, Chairman for the Dr FY Khoo Memorial Lecture, Ladies and Gentlemen – It is a signal honour for me to deliver this Lecture, the second since the Inaugural Lecture last year. Sadly, it has been renamed a Memorial Lecture, as Dr FY Khoo passed away...
Others
Retinal and Cardiovascular Diseases: The “Common Soil” Theory
There is increasing evidence that retinal and cardiovascular diseases share a “common soil”. Risk factors for cardiovascular disease, such as hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidaemia and cigarette smoking, are known to influence the development of a range of retinal diseases, including hypertensive retinopathy, diabetic retinopathy, retinal vein and artery occlusion, retinal...
Letter to the Editor
Chylous Ascites in Recurrent Gynaecological Malignancies
Chylous ascites is an unusual phenomenon where there is accumulation of chyle in the peritoneal cavity. It is especially rare following treatment of gynaecological cancers.
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Others
4th FY Khoo Memorial Lecture 2008: Nasopharyngeal Cancer Workgroup – The Past, The Present and The Future
Thank you Madam Chairman. First, I would like to thank the Singapore Radiological Society and the College of Radiologists, Academy of Medicine Singapore for giving me the honor of delivering this the 4th FY Khoo Memorial Lecture, 2008.
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Others
Placental Calcification in Pseudoxanthoma Elasticum
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) is an inherited multisystem disorder of the elastic tissue leading to skin disease as well as ocular and cardiovascular complications. Although earlier literature on pregnancy in PXE contained reports of severe complications, most patients show no serious complications during pregnancy.
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Others
Holoprosencephaly: An Antenally-diagnosed Case Series and Subject Review
Holoproscencephaly (HPE) is an uncommon congenital developmental defect of the forebrain structures to divide into separate hemispheres and ventricles during embryogenesis. The prevalence rate of HPE is estimated to be between 1 in 11,000 to 1 in 20,000 live births, and 1 in 250 during early embryogenesis.
This article is...
Letter to the Editor
Laparoscopic Heller’s Cardiomyotomy for Achalasia of the Cardia in a Pregnant Patient
Laparoscopy was first used for the evaluation of acute abdominal pain in pregnancy by gynaecologists in 1980. The most commonly reported laparoscopic procedure during pregnancy is laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
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Letter to the Editor
Spontaneous Vaginal Expulsion of a Filshie Clip
Laparoscopic sterilisation is a common method of permanent contraception. The Filshie clip system is a safe and effective method of female sterilisation.
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Others
3rd College of Paediatrics and Child Health Lecture – The Past, the Present and the Shape of Things to Come…
In the post-war days of the 1950s, Singapore children were faced with problems of malnutrition and infectious diseases. There was poverty, overcrowded housing and lack of hygiene, and the social conditions were apparently appalling.
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Review Article
Care of Women in Menopause: Sexual Function, Dysfunction and Therapeutic Modalities
Menopause is a life change described by biological alterations occurring in the context of important social changes. There is an increasing appreciation for the role of sexual function in menopause and its importance for a woman’s health and well-being.
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Others
An Unexpected Presentation of Endometriosis – A “Parasitic” Cyst of the Bowel in a Menopausal Woman on Hormone Therapy
Endometriosis commonly affects women during their reproductive years and may involve any organ. Although rare, endometriosis has been reported in postmenopausal women and is often associated with hormone replacement or tamoxifen.
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Review Article
Menopause, Hormone Therapy and Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease
Cardiovascular disease is a major cause of morbidity among postmenopausal women. Up to the age of 50 years, the prevalence of coronary artery disease (CAD) among women is lower than among men, but the incidence rises significantly after the menopause.
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Others
The Role of Electrophysiology in the Diagnosis and Management of Cervical Spondylotic Myelopathy
Cervical spondylosis is an extremely common condition managed by both physicians and surgeons in daily clinical practice. Cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM), resulting from longstanding degenerative impingement of the spinal cord and nerve roots by osteo-cartilagineous elements, is managed by conservative or surgical methods.1 While surgery is often performed in...
Others
Demands and Challenges of Modern Medicine
I am deeply honoured by the invitation to deliver the 16th Tun Dr Ismail Oration and I wish to thank the Master and Council of the Academy of Medicine of Malaysia for this rare privilege of addressing a distinguished gathering such as this, as previous illustrious orators had done...
Others
Happenings in Histopathology – A Post-World War II Perspective
During the past few decades, there have been many significant developments in the practice of histopathology, the specialty that is also referred to as anatomic pathology, surgical pathology, or simply as pathology without qualification. Those selected for review are grouped under 4 headings: new techniques, organisational developments, ethical and...
Others
Tumour Interstitial Fluid Pressure May Regulate Angiogenic Factors in Osteosarcoma
Solid tumours have states of raised interstitial fluid pressure (IFP) that cause significant changes to their physiology.1-3 We have previously shown that human osteosarcomas respond to this raised IFP by increasing their proliferative state. This proliferative state results in increased sensitivity to chemotherapy – a finding noted both in...
Others
Surgical Training – The Challenge of Change
President of the College of Surgeons, distinguished guests, friends, ladies and gentlemen. It is a great honour and a unique privilege for me to be invited to deliver a named lecture for a third time. Twenty years ago, I gave the first overseas Joint Lecture of the Academy and...
Others
Preparedness for Terrorism: Managing Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Threats
Preparedness for terrorism in the 21st century includes addressing the management of nuclear, biological and chemical (NBC) terrorism events. Understanding the terrorist threat and detecting clues that an attack has occurred are critical to reducing morbidity and mortality in the next decade. While high explosive events (bomb and blast)...
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5th College of Surgeons Lectureship: Surgery beyond Scalpels
The training of surgeons composed of two aspects: (1) Clinical skill and competence; (2) The ‘soft’ skill and ‘art’ of surgery. With the gradual introduction of residency programme into the surgical discipline, hopefully our clinical training will be more systematic, closely supervised, monitored, assessed and reassessed, and structured.
This article...
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The Evolution of Radiology from Paraclinical to Clinical
I would like to thank the Academy of Medicine and the Singapore Radiological Society for giving me the honour of delivering this year’s F Y Khoo’s Memorial Lecture. I believe that I am one of the few radiologists in Singapore who had the privilege of working with Dr F...
Original Article
New House-Officers’ Views on Unprofessional Behaviour
The need for incorporation of biomedical ethics and professionalism into the formal undergraduate and postgraduate curriculum has been increasingly recognised in the last twenty years.1-4 Parallel to changes in the curriculum, reports of doctors accused of or engaged in criminal activities have appeared in the lay press and medical...
Original Article
The Influence of Maternal Ethnic Group and Diet on Breast Milk Fatty Acid Composition
Human milk is the ideal food which provides the complete nutritional requirements for infants during the first 6 months of life. The lipids accumulated in an infant represent the majority of all energy retained in the growing tissues during this crucial period of rapid growth and development.
This article is...
Original Article
A Clinicopathologic Study of Uterine Smooth Muscle Tumours of Uncertain Malignant Potential (STUMP)
Smooth Muscle Tumours of Undetermined Malignant Potential or STUMPs are interesting tumours from both the standpoint of histological diagnosis and classification as well as clinical management mainly because, as a group, its natural history is poorly understood. Prognostic criteria of how STUMP tumours will behave have been studied and...
Original Article
Obstetric Outcomes of Influenza A H1N1 (2009) Infection in Pregnancy – Experience of a Singapore Tertiary Hospital
Influenza A H1N1 (2009) is a new viral strain containing gene segments from human, swine and avian lineages. Soon after reports of human cases of the infection in April 2009, the World Health Organization declared the situation a public health emergency of international concern.
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3rd College of Surgeons Lecture — Bringing up Surgeons
I am greatly honoured to be given the privilege of delivering the 3rd College of Surgeons Lecture, especially when I have retired from surgery for 3 years. I am not in a position to contribute anything significant to your knowledge. There is an old Chinese saying that learning is...
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Inadvertent Use of Bevacizumab to Treat Choroidal Neovascularisation During Pregnancy: A Case Report
The recognition that vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) plays an important role in the pathogenesis of neovascular age-related macular degeneration (NVAMD) has led to the development of several intravitreal anti-angiogenic therapeutics. Ranibizumab (Lucentis, Genentech, San Francisco, USA) and pegaptanib (Macugen, OSI/Eyetech Pharmaceuticals, New York, USA) have been FDA-approved for...
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12th Yahya Cohen Memorial Lecture – The Cellular and Molecular Basis of Radiation-induced Sensori-neural Hearing Loss
Radiation-induced sensori-neural hearing loss (SNHL) has long been recognised as a complication of radiotherapy (RT) for head and neck tumours, if the auditory pathways had been included in the radiation fields. In Singapore, nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is common and the prevalence of SNHL after radiotherapy for NPC has been...
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11th Yahya Cohen Memorial Lecture – An In vivo Comparative Study of the Ability of Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells in the Treatment of Partial Growth Arrest
It has been my greatest pleasure and honour to accept this, the 11th Yahya Cohen Memorial Lectureship on the anniversary of a half century of the Academy of Medicine.
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Original Article
Emerging Trends in Breastfeeding Practices in Singaporean Chinese Women: Findings from a Population-based Study
The health benefits of breast milk have been well documented, with positive implications for infants’ metabolic, immunologic, respiratory and digestive health. The World Health Organization (WHO) and the American Academy of Pediatrics recommend exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months and partial breastfeeding thereafter for at least 12 or 24 months....
Letter to the Editor
Dilemmas in Management of Brain Tumours in Pregnancy
Brain tumours in pregnancy are rare with an incidence of 15 per 100,000 and previous reports have shown variable outcomes. We present a case of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) in pregnancy in which the patient underwent emergency craniotomy and adjuvant radiotherapy before delivering a healthy baby with good outcome.
This article...
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A Unique Pair of Monozygotic Twins with Concordant Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma: A Case Report
Studies of monozygotic and dizygotic twins represent an important approach in estimating the relative contributions of genes and environment to the development of various cancers and disease in general. However, remarkably and almost curiously, there has been no monozygotic twin-pair concordant for clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) reported...
Original Article
Clinical Outcomes of High-risk Labours Monitored Using Fetal Electrocardiography
Intermittent auscultation (IA), cardiotocography (CTG), amniotic fluid colour and fetal scalp capillary blood gas analysis are currently accepted standards for intrapartum fetal monitoring. According to the results of recent randomised clinical trials, intrapartum CTG monitoring is a very sensitive method; however, its very low specificity seems to be strongly...
Original Article
Microsurgical Reversal of Sterilisation – Is This Still Clinically Relevant Today?
Different contraceptive options are available today; however, tubal sterilisation is still one of the most prevailing contraceptive alternatives. Locally, many prefer mechanically occluding the tubes with Filshie clips.
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Challenges and Pitfalls in the Introduction of Pharmacogenetics for Cancer
Pharmacogenetics, by definition, refers to the study of genetic differences in metabolic pathways which can affect an individual’s responses to drugs in terms of both therapeutic and adverse effects. In recent years, there have been several success stories such as HER2 for trastuzumab in breast cancer and VKORC1/CYP2C9 for...
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7th College of Physicians Lecture — The Changing Face of Medicine, Medicine – Past, Present and Future
When we think about medicine, just like we do about other things in life in the past and the present, we usually reflect on the good old days. On hindsight, the past always seems brighter than the present. Sometimes, it is worth looking back to see how things have...
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15th Yahya Cohen Memorial Lecture – The Relationship between the Air-bone Gap and the Size of Superior Semicircular Canal Dehiscence
Superior semicircular canal dehiscence (SSCD) can result in a characteristic constellation of vestibular and auditory features, including autophony, oscillopsia, and vertigo, and characteristic eye movements induced by sound and pressure changes. Patients with SSCD also show lowered thresholds for vestibular-evoked myogenic potentials (VEMPs) and a heightened sensitivity to bone-conducted...
Original Article
Evaluating the Effects of an Integrated Medical Ethics Curriculum on First-year Students
Knowledge and confidence, and positive or negative attitudes in relation to medical ethics, are affected by medical ethics education. Mainstreaming and formalising ethics education in the medical school curriculum increases knowledge and confidence, and creates positive attitudes towards ethics education.
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5th Chao Tze Cheng Memorial Lecture—Recent Developments in Informed Consent
The question of informed consent is a concern of recent origin and has engaged the mind of the medical profession here for only some 5 decades now. The term ‘informed consent’ is very much of American origin and the British have termed it as ‘a duty to warn’. This...
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7th Tan Tock Seng Oration: Surgical Excellence at TTSH—100 Years on and onward
Mr SR Nathan, our guest of honour, Mr Gan Kim Yong, Minister for Health, Madam Kay Kuok, Chairman of NHG Board, Board members, colleagues, distinguished guests, friends, ladies and gentlemen, I am greatly humbled by the honour and privilege to deliver the 7th TTSH Oration this evening. The sixth...
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8th FY Khoo Memorial Lecture 2012 —Why Radiologists Need Philosophy
Firstly, I wish to thank the Singapore Radiological Society and the College of Radiologists, Singapore for deeply honouring me with the invitation to give the FY Khoo Memorial Lecture for this year’s Annual Scientific Meeting. Today, I will present you an argument that radiologists should be conscious of philosophy...
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6th College of Surgeons Lecture The Philosophy of Balance: The Art of Healing
With the rise of high tech medicine, and emphasis on the scientific aspects of medicine, there is danger that we may lose the balanced approach to healing, and lose the benefit of the traditional medical wisdom and emotional support to improve the care of our patients.
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2013 Runme Shaw Memorial Lecture: Clinical Applications of Stem Cells in Modern Medicine—21st Century and Beyond
The rapid advancement of biomedical research in the recent years was propelled by a series of groundbreaking technological inventions and breakthrough discoveries. In this lecture, I will discuss about the scientific achievements that led to different eras of intense research with profound impact on biomedicine, focusing on the use...
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22nd Gordon Arthur Ransome Oration: Is Medicine Still an Art?
Distinguished guests and colleagues in medicine, I am deeply honoured to have been invited to deliver this 22nd oration in honour of Sir Gordon Arthur Ransome, and also humbled when I peruse the list of outstanding previous orators.
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Original Article
Neonatal Outcome of the Late Preterm Infant (34 to 36 Weeks): The Singapore Story
Neonatologists were caught looking the other way in the early part of the millennium. While they were keenly following the progress of extreme preterms and their travails, preterms born at the other end of the spectrum were being quietly ignored as “well babies”. In July 2005, the National Institute...
Original Article
Are Pregnant Women Adequately Equipped for Autonomy in Pregnancy Screening?
The concept of first trimester screening (FTS) to evaluate the risk of fetal aneuploidies was first introduced in 1997 by Orlandi et al. The Fetal Medicine Foundation, London, has refined and populated this screening test that uses a combination of maternal age, nuchal translucency (NT) thickness and biochemical markers,...
Editorial
Prenatal Diagnosis of Chromosomal Abnormalities—Shifting Paradigm
It is very likely that in 10 years time, invasive prenatal diagnostic tests like amniocentesis and chorionic villus sampling (CVS) will join the club of forgotten obstetric procedures like vaginal breech delivery and rotational forceps delivery. In 1968, Henry Nadler1 and his team were the first to report prenatal...
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24th Seah Cheng Siang Lecture: Seeing Better, Doing Better—Evolution and Application of Gastrointestinal (GI) Endoscopy
Man’s innate curiosity to study the internal organs of the human body dates back to the time of Hippocrates where basic speculums were invented to peer into the buccal cavity and vagina. The first instruments used to intubate the oesophagus and stomach in the 16th and 17th centuries were...
Letter to the Editor
Prevalence of vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency in Malaysian infants
Vitamin D deficiency, a worldwide health problem, is also prevalent in tropical countries. It is estimated that 15% of the world’s population are either vitamin D deficient or insufficient. In a study on the state of Kelantan in Malaysia (2010–2012), 60% of pregnant women were vitamin D deficient. Maternal...
Letter to the Editor
Maternal obesity and risk of adverse obstetric outcomes in Malaysia
Obesity during pregnancy is associated with increased risk of adverse health outcomes such as gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), hypertension and preeclampsia. Unlike the well-known association between maternal hyperglycaemia and pregnancy outcomes, the effect of obesity in pregnancy has drawn some controversial conclusions.1Data are even scarcer in Southeast Asia countries....
Editorial
Uterine rupture in Singapore: Trends and lessons learnt
Uterine rupture is arguably one of the most dreaded acute obstetric complications in obstetrics. Synonymous with significant maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality risks, uterine rupture is usually encountered in the context of vaginal births after previous caesarean section (VBAC).
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Original Article
Cervical screening in foreign domestic workers in Singapore
Cervical cancer is the most common gynaecological cancer in many countries in Southeast Asia, with a cumulative age-standardised incidence rate (ASRI) of 17.2 per 100,000 and a corresponding mortality rate (ASMR) of 10 per 100,000. In Singapore, cervical cancer is the 10th most common cancer in women with an...
Original Article
Risk factors and outcomes of uterine rupture in Singapore: Emerging trends
Uterine rupture is a catastrophic life-threatening complication of pregnancy with associated high maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality. The incidence of uterine rupture varies with geographical location and obstetric practice. With the changes in obstetric practice over the years, caesarean section rates have increased in our population with undesirable...
Original Article
A Pilot Study of the Efficacy and Tolerability of Intralesional Recombinant Human Beta-Interferons in Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia
Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) is a neoplastic disorder in which infection with sub-types of the human papillomavirus appears to play an important aetiological ro1e. The interferons are a family of proteins which possess anti-viral action, inhibit cell proliferation and modulate the natural immune response2 and which therefore may be...