Authors


James R. Couch, MD, PhD

Latest:

Medication Overuse Headache: When the Cure is the Cause of the Pain

Also known as rebound headache, medication overuse headache is a fairly common condition that can be missed by non-specialists who are unfamiliar with its presentation and clinical signs. This article reviews the causes and types of medication overuse headache and discusses the current thinking on treatment.


Roger S. Blumenthal, MD

Latest:

Triglycerides and EPA: A New Chapter in CV Disease Prevention

Findings from REDUCE-IT are the first to show that EPA lowers the relative risk of hard cardiovascular endpoints. Johns Hopkins' Seth Martin, MD, and colleagues put the trial in perspective. 



Amit Phull, MD

Latest:

Healthcare 2020: Video, Vaping, Value and More

From new tech, to better therapy, to resolution on vaping, what will dominate discussion in US medicine this decade?


Keyur B. Shah MD

Latest:

Laboratory monitoring for spironolactone in congestive heart failure

We evaluated how well patients taking spironolactone were monitored for hyperkalemia, as well as the association between spironolactone and hyperkalemia. Only two thirds of patients received testing for serum potassium and creatinine levels, and higher baseline serum creatinine levels predicted a high risk of hyperkalemia. These results indicate that appropriate patient selection and close monitoring are essential, especially for patients with renal impairment.




Enoch Choi, MD

Latest:

After the Tsunami, Physician Volunteers Find Obstacles Both Obvious and Unexpected

Enoch Choi, MD, writes about his experiences leading a disaster relief team in Japan.


Nobuyuki (Bill) Miyawaki, MD, is attending physician, Division of Nephrology

Latest:

Obesity and cardiovascular risk in hypertensive patients with left ventricular hypertrophy

The observed relationship linking obesity, severity of hypertension, and increase in cardiovascular risk was traditionally thought to emanate from the increase in circulatory volume, persistently increased systemic resistance from obesity, and clustering of major cardiovascular risk factors (eg, hypercholesterolemia and diabetes mellitus) among obese patients.


Sam Awada, MD

Latest:

Recognizing the Signs of Pheochromocytoma

Pheochromocytoma is a rare chromaffin cell neoplasm that secretes catecholamines and is usually found in the adrenal medulla. One fourth of these tumors are the result of genetic inheritance. Hypertension is the most common symptom. The classic triad of paroxysmal symptoms?consisting of palpitations, diaphoresis, and headaches?should prompt a consideration of this diagnosis and appropriate laboratory testing. The best biochemical marker is plasma free metanephrines, which is 99% sensitive and 89% specific for diagnosis. Magnetic resonance imaging and radioactive iodine metaiodobenzylguanidine scans are used to localize the tumor before surgery.


Albert Chan, MD, MS, Chief of Digital Patient Experience, Sutter Health

Latest:

Implementing Price Transparency Tools at Ambulatory Care Centers

Patients are satisfied with an online cost-estimator tool, according to findings of a recent study.



Kent Kramer, CFP

Latest:

Physicians' Investment Decisions Magnified Due to Earnings Potential Uncertainty

Many physicians are feeling the earnings squeeze amidst the tectonic shifts in the health care system and changing US demographics.





Amy Watson, MD

Latest:

Swapping Soda for Coffee Can Reduce Stroke Risk

Perhaps, a very simple change in beverage choice could reduce the stroke burden in the United States.





Harry Hemingway, FRCP

Latest:

Large-scale clinical epidemiology of stable angina in women and men

We performed a whole-country study using linked health care records in Finland and showed that stable angina as the initial symptomatic manifestation of coronary disease occurs as frequently in women as it does in men. Among easily recognized subgroups, the absolute rates of prognostic outcomes were similarly high in women and men.


Jeffrey T. Junig, MD, PhD

Latest:

Psychiatric Medication as a Warm Coat

I'd like to introduce Junig's Warm Coat Theory of Psychotropic Prescribing, or what I suggest the medical field refers to as the "JWCT."


Jimena A. Blandon, MD

Latest:

ARBs and the Impact of Worsening Renal Function in Heart Failure Patients With Preserved EF

Worsening renal function over time is associated with poorer outcomes in patients with acute and chronic HF. Although this association is established in patients with reduced ejection fraction, there are no data about the relationship between WRF and outcomes in HF patients with preserved ejection fraction.


Paulette A. Lyle, BS2

Latest:

Body mass index and cardiovascular events in patients with hypertension and left ventricular hypertrophy

In a separate analysis of patients enrolled in the Losartan Intervention For Endpoint reduction in hypertension (LIFE) study, thin patients and those with moderate-to-severe obesity were at increased risk for cardiovascular events. These results indicate that patients at the low anda high ends of the body size spectrum should be treated aggressively to lower the risk of cardiovascular events.


James Kim, MD

Latest:

Controversial Changes to Screening Recommendations for Preventive Pediatric Care

The American Academy of Pediatrics designed the 2014 Recommendations for Pediatrics Preventive Health Care to guide well-child care, but there is controversy over some of the changes.


Don Dizon

Latest:

Lymph Nodes and Breast Cancer? Is Less as Good?

How important is a completion node dissection for women with a positive sentinel node biopsy in breast cancer?


Adil Rajwani, MRCP

Latest:

Mortality of patients with diabetes mellitus and acute myocardial infarction

We evaluated trends in the treatment and mortality of patients with and without diabetes mellitus and acute myocardial infarction over the last decade. Despite improvements in the provision of evidence-based care, patients with diabetes did not derive improvements in long-term survival.




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