Latest Articles
- Insulin treatment for type 2 diabetes: When to start, which to use
Many patients with type 2 diabetes eventually need insulin. This review addresses practical approaches.
- Tinnitus: Patients do not have to ‘just live with it’
Physicians should actively listen to the patient and provide hope and encouragement, balanced with realistic expectations. Specialists can help.
- Nausea, vomiting, and panic attacks in a 50-year-old woman
Six months ago she started to have panic attacks that roused her from sleep. Lately, they have become more frequent and more severe. What is the cause?
- Pharmacogenomics for the primary care provider: Why should we care?
Personalized medicine promises to improve the quality and lower the cost of care if physicians integrate into practice useful new findings, such as information gleaned from pharmacogenomic testing.
- Ending LGBT invisibility in health care: The first step in ensuring equitable care
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender individuals experience health care disparities that will be eliminated only if clinicians elicit information in a thoughtful, nonjudgmental way.
- Leukemia cutis
This condition occurs in 10% to 15% of patients with acute myeloid leukemia and is a poor prognostic sign.
- Pharmacogenomic testing: Relevance in medical practice
Knowing their patients’ genetic status, physicians could predict their response to certain drugs, such as clopidogrel (Plavix), warfarin (Coumadin), tamoxifen (Nolvadex), codeine, and psychotropic medications.
- Giant cell arteritis: Suspect it, treat it promptly
Giant cell arteritis is the most common form of vasculitis affecting older people. Physicians should be familiar with its variety of clinical presentations.