Authors


Mark A. Becker, MD

Latest:

Provide Your Patients with an Online Resource You can Both Trust...Your Own!

Patients are going online for health information but would prefer to get it from you. Are you there to help them?


Atsushi Hozawa, MD, PhD

Latest:

White-coat hypertension and progression to home hypertension

Our study aimed to clarify whether white-coat hypertension represents a transient state in the development of hypertension outside medical settings. We followed up 128 subjects with white-coat hypertension and compared their risk of progression to home hypertension with that of 649 sustained normotensive subjects. After 8 years of follow-up, subjects with white-coat hypertension had an approximately 3-fold higher risk of eventually manifesting home hypertension. We concluded that patients with white-coat hypertension should be carefully monitored.



Elizabeth Kukielka, PharmD

Latest:

Daily Antituberculosis Therapy Superior for Pulmonary TB in PLWH

A daily, 6-month ATT regimen in HIV-positive patients with TB receiving concomitant ART proved superior to an intermittent regimen in terms of efficacy and prevention of ARR.



Alice Goodman, freelance author

Latest:

Early Chemotherapy for Ovarian Cancer Relapse Based on Serial CA-125 Monitoring does Not Improve Overall Survival or Quality of Life

Early chemotherapy for relapsed ovarian cancer based on serial monitoring of CA-125 levels failed to improve overall survival or quality of life compared with delayed therapy according to clinical signs and symptoms of relapse in a large European trial.



Salam Sbaity

Latest:

Heart failure and sudden death in patients with tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy and recurrent tachycardia

The effects of recurrent tachycardia after resolution of cardiomyopathy have not been thoroughly assessed. We evaluated and followed 24 patients with tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy for more than 12 years. Our observations showed that patients with tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy may be at long-term risk for sudden death. Surreptitious cardiomyopathy due to occult ultrastructural changes may persist. It has yet to be determined whether rapid and aggressive rate control would prevent structural damage to risk of sudden cardiac death.



Jay Sochoka, BSPharm, RPh, CIP

Latest:

ADHD Drugs and Addiction

A community pharmacist shares his insights and opinions on concerns over the risks involved with ADHD medications for children.





Alan H. Gradman, MD

Latest:

Hypertension in the elderly

More important than the choice of pharmaceutical agent in the treatment of elderly hypertensive patients is the achievement of goal blood pressure. Low-dose diuretics, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin receptor blockers, and calcium channel blockers are equally effective in reducing cardiovascular end points. Most patients will require 2 or more drugs to achieve target blood pressure, and physicians should feel comfortable prescribing 3 to 4 agents to a significant proportion of patients.


Dragana Radovanovic, MD1

Latest:

Sex-related differences in treatment and outcome in patients with ACS

The AMIS (Acute Myocardial Infarction in Switzerland) Plus prospective cohort study compared treatment and in-hospital outcomes between men and women with acute coronary syndrome (N = 26,452) admitted to Swiss hospitals between 1997 and 2007. The study reached several important conclusions: women had different baseline characteristics than men at admission, were treated with different drug regimens, and were significantly less likely to undergo percutaneous coronary intervention. After adjusting for these differences, researchers found no significant difference in the rates of in-hospital mortality between men and women, except for women aged 51 to 60 years, who were more likely to die in-hospital.



William Meffert, MD

Latest:

Vodou Baby--the Birth of a Surgeon

A Haitian nurse offered advice: "Keep your textbook nearby".




Carole Bullock, MA

Latest:

What is the Most Effective Treatment Strategy for Patients with Secondary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis?

Experts examine conflicting evidence regarding the continuation of disease-modifying therapy in patients with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis.


MD Mag Editorial Staff

Latest:

2018-2019 Flu Vaccine Recommendations from ACIP

New recommendations from the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices reveal that health care providers have the intranasally-administered live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) among their arsenal of available vaccines for the 2018-2019 flu season.




Harry E. Davis II, MD, MACP

Latest:

Medication-Free Strategies Can Prevent Coronary Heart Disease

Drug therapy is recognized as an effective way to lower lipids and control hypertension, and for its effect on reducing the incidence of myocardial infarction. However, the impact of personal habits, such as eating, drinking, smoking, and exercise, on the incidence of coronary heart disease without reliance on prescription medications and their potential side effects may be less well established.


Steven Roy Daviss, MD

Latest:

National Strategy to Reduce Prescription Drug Abuse

Psychiatrist Steven Roy Daviss, MD provides a detailed review of the elements in the National Drug Control Strategy.


Alexandra Ward, MA

Latest:

Early Momentum for a Genomic Approach to Sickle Cell Disease Therapy

In a late-breaking presentation at ASGCT 2022, investigators shared preclinical results of a gene-editing strategy that seeks to reactivate developmentally silenced fetal hemoglobin (HbF, α2γ2) in order to replace defective sickle hemoglobin (HbS, α2βS2).


Brian Levy, MD

Latest:

Interoperability and Standards: The Effect on Patient Care

As clinicians, we are increasingly accustomed to using EMRs in the hospital, as well as practice management and billing systems in the office.


Audrey Andrews, Freelance Medical Writer

Latest:

BRAF Mutation Emerging as Prognostic in KRAS Wild-Type CRC Patients

Colorectal cancer patients who had wild-type (normal) KRAS gene status, but mutations in the BRAF, had a poor prognosis in spite of treatment with cetuximab.


Nany Tice, MD

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