More articles from Review
- Bisphosphonates and osteonecrosis of the jaw: Innocent association or significant risk?
A cause-and-effect relationship has not been established, and most of the reported cases have been in patients with cancer who were receiving much higher doses than those used in osteoporosis or Paget disease of the bone.
- Carcinoid tumors: What should increase our suspicion?
Patients often present with vague, nonspecific symptoms, and unless the primary care physician suspects that the patient has a carcinoid tumor, the appropriate testing is seldom ordered.
- 2008–2009 Influenza update: A better vaccine match
Last flu season, some people may have lost their faith in flu shots. In the 2008–2009 flu season, we hope to do better.
- Parkinson disease: Not just a movement disorder
Nonmotor symptoms—sensory, autonomic, and behavioral—are common and important to recognize, as they can lead to even more serious complications and impair quality of life.
- Percutaneous treatment of aortic valve stenosis
This less-invasive approach may become an option for patients with severe symptomatic aortic valve stenosis who cannot undergo surgery.
- Update on constipation: One treatment does not fit all
Since constipation has a variety of causes and forms, one treatment does not fit all patients. Often, the key to improvement and patient satisfaction is to understand the mechanism and the patient.
- Skin manifestations of diabetes
Almost all diabetic patients eventually develop skin complications from the disease itself or as a side effect of glucose-lowering drugs.
- Evaluation and management of pituitary incidentalomas
A surprising number of apparently healthy people harbor unsuspected pituitary tumors, which are being discovered incidentally on computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging.
- Using biochemical markers of bone turnover in clinical practice
Although no guidelines to date recommend the widespread use of these markers in clinical practice, we believe they will eventually be accepted.
- Which patients benefit from carotid stenting? What recent trials show
Whether carotid stenting has any advantage over carotid surgery and which patients should undergo it are still topics of study and debate.