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Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine
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Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine

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More articles from Review

  • You have access
    Noninfectious respiratory disease in pregnancy
    Mark J. Clinton, MD and Michael S. Niederman, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine May 1993, 60 (3) 233-244;

    BACKGROUND Pregnancy increases the risk of many noninfectious respiratory conditions.

    OBJECTIVE To review the clinical presentation and management of a variety of noninfectious respiratory conditions in pregnant women.

    SUMMARY Asthma, aspiration pneumonia, venous air embolism, adult respiratory distress syndrome, pulmonary embolism, and deep venous thrombosis may have unique features in pregnant women.

    CONCLUSIONS Evaluation and treatment of these diseases and conditions requires an understanding of the normal physiologic alterations that accompany pregnancy and an awareness of the risks of medication use during pregnancy and in the postpartum period.

  • You have access
    Noninvasive risk assessment after myocardial infarction
    Nora Goldschlager, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine May 1993, 60 (3) 245-251;

    BACKGROUND Mortality from acute myocardial infarction is substantially less than it was two and even one decade ago. This improvement in both short-term and postdischarge outcome results both from early interventions to restore myocardial perfusion and mitigate expansion and remodeling, and from later assessment and management of functional status at the time of hospital discharge.

    OBJECTIVE Recent studies suggest that invasive evaluation of the patient who has had a myocardial infarction (MI) should not be recommended on a routine basis. This review provides an approach to the noninvasive assessment of the patient.

    DISCUSSION Stress testing to ascertain post-MI ischemia, ejection fraction determination to evaluate ventricular volumes and function, and ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring, electrophysiologic study, and signal-averaged electrocardiography to assess presence and type of ventricular ectopy are discussed.

    CONCLUSION The approach to the post-MI patient offered herein is felt to be medically sound and cost-effective. Refinement and alterations in this approach will be necessary as outcomes in specific patient groups, such as thrombolysis patients, women, and the elderly, become clearer.

  • You have access
    The changing profile of anesthetic practice: an update for internists
    Thomas L. Higgins, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine May 1993, 60 (3) 219-232;

    BACKGROUND Internists are commonly consulted to "clear" patients for anesthesia and surgery. Newer anesthetic agents and techniques now extend limits and possibilities beyond what many internists were taught.

    OBJECTIVE To update internists on recent changes in anesthetic management and how they affect the preoperative evaluation.

    SUMMARY Recent advances in anesthetic management include new monitoring standards, balanced anesthetic technique, new agents, equipment changes, better understanding of human factors, and expanded pain management techniques.

    CONCLUSIONS Postoperative care will likely assume increasing importance in determining anesthesia-related morbidity and mortality. For this reason, increased interaction and cooperation between surgeons, internists, and anesthesiologists are needed.

  • You have access
    The role of multiple risk factors in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality
    Ray W. Gifford, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine May 1993, 60 (3) 211-218;

    BACKGROUND Cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States.

    OBJECTIVE To identify important modifiable cardiovascular risk factors and appropriate interventions.

    DISCUSSION The three most important modifiable risk factors are hypertension, cigarette smoking, and dyslipidemia. Systolic hypertension poses a greater risk than diastolic, but the prognostic significance of diastolic blood pressure may have been underestimated. When a smoker quits, the cardiovascular risk soon approaches that of the nonsmoker. Cardiovascular risk increases progressively with elevations of the serum total cholesterol level above 200 mg/dL. Recently identified risk factors include hyperinsulinemia and left ventricular hypertrophy.

    CONCLUSION Each patient deserves an evaluation of cardiovascular risk followed by education about and therapy for those risk factors that can be changed. When more than one risk factor is present, as is often the case, the increase in risk may be synergistic rather than additive.

  • You have access
    Cardiopulmonary exercise testing in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
    Scott K. Epstein, MD and Bartolome R. Celli, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine March 1993, 60 (2) 119-128;

    Defining the etiology of dyspnea, evaluating impairment, and assessing the response to therapy are among the current indications.

  • You have access
    Physiologic evaluation of coronary flow: the role of positron emission tomography
    Loretta Isada, MD, Thomas H. Marwick, MD and William J. Macintyre, PhD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine January 1993, 60 (1) 19-24;

    Quantitative documentation of the hemodynamic severity of coronary artery disease is more important than ever. A brief analysis of current imaging techniques.

  • You have access
    Adjuvant therapy for colorectal cancer
    Anthony M. Vernava, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 1992, 59 (6) 603-607;
  • You have access
    New strategies in nonantibiotic treatment of gram-negative sepsis
    Judith Cohn, MD, PhD and Roger C. Bone, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 1992, 59 (6) 608-615;
  • You have access
    Viral hepatitis in the 1990s, part III: hepatitis C, hepatitis E, and other viruses
    William D. Carey, MD and Glrish Patel, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 1992, 59 (6) 595-601;
  • You have access
    Glucocorticoids in clinical oncology
    Declan Walsh, MSc and Jay Avashia, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine September 1992, 59 (5) 505-515;

    A review of current indications.

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