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Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine
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Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine

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    • Contact Us
    • Media Kit
  • Conversations with Leaders
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    • Kidney Week 2024
    • CHEST 2024
    • ACR Convergence 2023
    • Kidney Week 2023
    • ObesityWeek 2023
    • IDWeek 2023
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    • MDS 2023
    • IAS 2023
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Latest Articles

  • Gallbladder disease: An update on diagnosis and treatment
    You have access
    Gallbladder disease: An update on diagnosis and treatment
    David P. Vogt, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine December 2002, 69 (12) 977-984;

    Current diagnostic techniques and treatments offer results equal to or better than those of earlier methods, are less invasive, and allow patients to recover faster.

  • You have access
    A truly deadly quartet: obesity, hypertension, hypertriglyceridemia, and hyperinsulinemia
    Vijay Nambi, MD, Byron J. Hoogwerf, MD and Dennis L. Sprecher, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine December 2002, 69 (12) 985-989;

    The best available treatment is to control one’s weight, exercise regularly, stop smoking, and eat a healthy diet.

  • You have access
    Emphysema in nonsmokers: Alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency and other causes
    Pyng Lee, MD, Thomas R. Gildea, MD and James K. Stoller, MD, MS
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine December 2002, 69 (12) 928-946;

    The 10% of patients with emphysema who never smoked deserve a workup for its less common causes, including genetic risk modifiers and occupational exposures.

  • Which children and adults should receive the chickenpox vaccine?
    You have access
    Which children and adults should receive the chickenpox vaccine?
    Camille Sabella, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine December 2002, 69 (12) 1000-1001;

    It should be given to all seronegative children and adults in whom it is not otherwise contraindicated.

  • You have access
    Who is conducting the deadly quartet?
    Brian F. Mandell, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine December 2002, 69 (12) 927;

    The metabolic syndrome warrants aggressive intervention and prevention, even if we cannot explain it yet.

  • Bariatric surgery for morbid obesity: Why, who, when, how, where, and then what?
    You have access
    Bariatric surgery for morbid obesity: Why, who, when, how, where, and then what?
    Patricia Smith Choban, MD, Steve Poplawski, MD, Benita Jackson, MD, MPH and Peter Bistolarides, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2002, 69 (11) 897-903;

    Bariatric surgery can take weight off and keep it off, but it is not for everyone. Chances are, you will see more patients who want it or have had it.

  • You have access
    CME good and bad news: Now 1.5 hours, but you must go online
    John D. Clough, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2002, 69 (11) 831;

    Bookmark this URL: www.ccjm.org. Starting with this issue, you must go online to get your CME credit. It’s easy, you get your certificate for 1.5 CME hours right away, and it’s still free.

  • You have access
    Making good decisions about diet: Weight loss is not weight maintenance
    George L. Blackburn, MD, PhD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2002, 69 (11) 864-866;

    Lack of long-term data on very-low-carbohydrate diets makes their medically unsupervised use very troubling.

  • You have access
    Hematuria: An algorithmic approach to finding the cause
    Ramesh Mazhari, MD and Paul L. Kimmel, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2002, 69 (11) 870-884;

    Many conditions can cause hematuria, but the differential diagnosis can be simplified with a systematic approach.

  • You have access
    Mitral valve prolapse: Old beliefs yield to new knowledge
    Emil Hayek, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2002, 69 (11) 889-896;

    Many things we once believed about mitral valve prolapse have proved false.

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