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Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine
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Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine

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    • Kidney Week 2024
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    • ACR Convergence 2023
    • Kidney Week 2023
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Latest Articles

  • How should we screen for breast cancer? Mammography, ultrasonography, MRI
    You have access
    How should we screen for breast cancer? Mammography, ultrasonography, MRI
    Carolyn F. Nemec, MD, Jay Listinsky, MD, PhD and Alice Rim, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine December 2007, 74 (12) 897-904;

    Mammography remains the mainstay of breast cancer screening, but recent guidelines have included magnetic resonance imaging for some women at high risk. Ultrasonography has not been established as useful for screening.

  • You have access
    Testis cancer: Rare, but curable with prompt referral
    Timothy Gilligan, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2007, 74 (11) 817-825;

    Even patients with distant metastases can usually be cured, but a delay in diagnosis and inadequate or inappropriate treatment increase the risk of death.

  • You have access
    CT screening for lung cancer (June 2007)
    Peter B. Bach, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2007, 74 (11) 769-770;
  • Treating pulmonary arterial hypertension: Cautious hope in a deadly disease
    You have access
    Treating pulmonary arterial hypertension: Cautious hope in a deadly disease
    Omar A. Minai, MD and Marie M. Budev, DO, MPH
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2007, 74 (11) 789-806;

    Advances have brought cautious hope for patients with this progressive and deadly disease. Intravenous prostanoids are still the most effective drugs for long-term treatment, but oral options are available for some patients who can be closely monitored.

  • You have access
    Getting the iron out: Preventing and treating heart failure in transfusion-dependent thalassemia
    Danish A. Jabbar, MD, Glenn Davison, MD and Anthony J. Muslin, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2007, 74 (11) 807-816;

    Chronic accumulation of iron due to regular blood transfusions leads to heart failure and death at a very young age, but chelation can avert this fatal outcome.

  • You have access
    In reply: Necrotizing soft-tissue infections (supplement 4 to volume 74, August 2007)
    James I. Merlino, MD and Mark A. Malangoni, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2007, 74 (11) 768-769;
  • You have access
    Electronic health records: A primer for practicing physicians
    Neil B. Mehta, MD and Mary H. Partin, PhD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2007, 74 (11) 826-830;

    Electronic health records have the potential to improve the quality of patient care, reduce the cost of health care, and expedite the transfer of information. Yet fewer than 20% of hospitals and physician practices now use them.

  • You have access
    A 19-year-old man with oral ulcers, pulmonary infiltrates, and rash
    Maria Clarinda A. Buencamino, MD, Sachin S. Goel, MD, Ralph J. Tuthill, MD and Alan Taege, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2007, 74 (11) 773-785;

    What is the likely cause of this patient’s symptoms? A self-quiz based on an actual case.

  • You have access
    The arrival of ‘hunt-and-peck’ medicine
    Brian F. Mandell, MD, PhD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2007, 74 (11) 767;

    I initially had concerns when told that we would be typing all of our visit notes directly into the computer, but I was pleasantly surprised by the benefits of adopting electronic health records.

  • Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring: An argument for wider clinical use
    You have access
    Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring: An argument for wider clinical use
    Aparna Padiyar, MD and Mahboob Rahman, MD, MS
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 2007, 74 (11) 831-838;

    Though ambulatory blood pressure monitoring currently has only a limited clinical role, it can be considered in many common situations, such as resistant hypertension, transplantation, pregnancy, chronic kidney disease, and dialysis.

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