Author information from the last article
Akuttmedisinsk avdeling
Oslo universitetssykehus, Ullevål
og
Senter for medisinsk etikk
Universitetet i Oslo
Hege Ihle-Hansen er ph.d., spesialist i indremedisin og i geriatri, overlege og forsker.
Articles by Hege Ihle-Hansen
A woman in her 70s with chest pain and elevated troponin T levels
- Benedicte Christina Bertelsen,
- Eirik Qvigstad,
- Anne Cecilie K. Larstorp,
- Hege Ihle-Hansen
06.05.2026:
Troponin T is a biomarker of myocardial injury. Patients presenting with chest pain and elevated troponin T in peripheral blood are normally investigated for acute coronary heart disease. This case report illustrates that alternative explanations should also be considered when troponin T levels are...
Advance care planning towards the end of life
- Hege Ihle-Hansen,
- Håkon Ihle-Hansen,
- Siri Rostoft,
- John Munkhaugen,
- Siri Færden Westbye,
- Maria Romøren,
- Trygve Johannes Lereim Sævareid,
- Linn Brøderud,
- Karin Berg Hermansen,
- Marie Hamilton Larsen,
- Astrid Klopstad Wahl,
- Marc Ahmed,
- Reidar Pedersen
01.11.2024:
The Norwegian Directorate of Health recently launched national clinical guidelines on advance care planning (ACP) for patients with a short life expectancy (1). ACP is a communication process about the patient's values and wishes for involvement and future treatment and care. Its goal is to ensure...
Monitoring following acute stroke should be improved
- Ole Morten Rønning,
- Maria Carlsson,
- Hege Ihle-Hansen,
- Anne Hege Aamodt,
- Arnstein Tveiten,
- Agnethe Eltoft,
- Annette Fromm,
- Hanne Ellekjær,
- Martin Kurz
10.10.2022:
Many serious complications following acute stroke can be prevented and treated. This requires close and systematic monitoring following stroke. Modern acute stroke treatment means that patients with severe stroke have a greater chance than ever before of survival without major sequelae. However...
What can registry data teach us about the pandemic?
- Hege Ihle-Hansen
23.09.2020:
Underlying conditions are more common among patients hospitalised for COVID-19 than in the general population. We must use this knowledge from our national registries in the further contingency planning for pandemics. Nystad and colleagues are now presenting data from the Norwegian Patient Registry...