MS: Treating the disease and the symptoms

    Is 'osteopenia' a useful diagnosis?

   Familial hypercholesterolemia: A challenge of diagnosis and therapy

   Should we screen for AAAs?

   Contrast-induced renal failure: What works, what doesn't

   Studies in ARDS that changed our practice

   Anemia in renal failure: Should everyone get EPO?

   Using the BNP assays to diagnose heart failure

   Diabetes insipidus: A complex disease

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Education Home | CCF Home | CCJM Home

The Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine
9500 Euclid Avenue, NA32
Cleveland, Ohio 44195

216.444.2661, FAX 216.444.9385
  mailto:ccjm@ccf.org

 

 

Please return the postcard
To help us continue to mail you the Journal every month, please return the attached postcard.
B.F. MANDELL

 

How long can my patient use intranasal steroid sprays?
There is little evidence to indicate they cause significant systemic side effects. However, patients who use them regularly should undergo examinations of the nasal cavity at least once a year to check for damage to the septum.
L.C. PIEN

 

Primary hyperparathyroidism: 7,000 years of progress
Nowadays, most patients with primary hyperparathyroidism present with very mild disease instead of with the severe bone or kidney manifestations seen in the past. Some experts wonder if the indications for surgery should be broadened.
M.A. LEVINE

 

A patient with acute flank pain
With all of the imaging options, which is the best way to assess for renal calculi in the acute setting?
J.B. HORNER, D.M. EINSTEIN, and B.R. HERTS

 

Frailty in older adults: Insights and interventions
We are getting better at systematically predicting who is vulnerable and at understanding the biologic basis of this vulnerability, which should lead to interventions to improve outcomes.
S. ESPINOZA and J.D. WALSTON

 
Dyslipidemia in HIV patients
HIV can raise lipid levels, and so do the drugs used to treat it. As patients with HIV infection live longer, these non-HIV medical problems become more relevant.
M. TUNGSIRIPAT and J.A. ABERG
 

Use of corticosteroids in the sepsis syndrome: What do we know now?
Although there is a physiologic rationale for using corticosteroids in sepsis, there are also safety concerns. A definitive trial is under way. This article analyzes the evidence to date and gives the author's personal recommendations.
S.P. LaROSA

 

Avian influenza: An emerging pandemic threat
We briefly review the lessons from past pandemics, the threat of the current avian flu outbreak, and recommendations for prevention.
X.W. JIN and S.B. MOSSAD

 

Renovascular hypertension: Balancing the controversies in diagnosis and treatment
Which patients should undergo testing for renovascular hypertension, and with which test? What are the roles of renal angioplasty and stenting?
V.D. GAROVIC, G.C. KANE and G.L. SCHWARTZ

 

All proton pump inhibitors are equivalent for treatment of GERD

Blood testing causes anemia

Office measurements usually overestimate BP

Measuring BP at home is valuable

 

Letter to the Editor
Hypercalcemia (August 2005)

Index to Volume 72