Latest Articles
- Hypertension in elderly patients: Treatment reduces mortality, but is underused
Despite compelling evidence that treatment reduces mortality, hypertension is undertreated, and especially so in older patients. A step-by-step approach, based on the latest recommendations from the NIH.
- The role of the maternal-fetal medicine specialist
What this new type of specialist can offer, and when to call one in.
- Subacute care: Which patients benefit?
For patients with special needs, a subacute care unit is the bridge between the acute hospital setting and home.
- Transplantation without immunosuppression: What the future may hold
Findings in noncompliant allograft recipients may ultimately allow transplant recipients to avoid taking immunosuppressive drugs long-term.
- Late-stage emphysema: When medical therapy fails
Medical therapy is the cornerstone, but surgery may benefit some patients.
- Intracoronary stenting: An overview for the clinician
More than 60% of patients undergoing angioplasty now receive stents. Do the benefits outweigh the risks?
- Aneurysms and hypermobility in a 45-year-old woman
What is the likely cause of this patient's symptoms? A self-test on a clinical case.
- Treatment of Helicobacter pylori in nonulcer dyspepsia: Should we or shouldn't we?
Although it may be tempting to treat for Helicobacter pylori in every patient with dyspepsia, two recent trials indicate we should temper our enthusiasm.
- Should hypercholesterolemia be treated in patients older than 65?
Recent studies have tipped the balance in favor of treatment in older patients with high cholesterol and known atherosclerosis.