Latest Articles
- In Reply: Not all joint pain is arthritis (May 2013)
Readers comment on the risk of bleeding with the new oral anticoagulants (July 2013) and on the signs of rheumatoid arthritis (May 2013).
- Another perspective: Reducing the overtreatment of pneumonia
Needed are better and faster ways to diagnose pneumonia and find the cause.
- Peripheral opacity on plain chest radiography
Sometimes, careful observation can detect unusual signs of a common and serious condition.
- A practical approach to prescribing antidepressants
Although antidepressant drugs do not differ much in their efficacy, a particular drug may be a better choice in a given patient.
- Antisynthetase syndrome: Not just an inflammatory myopathy
With its variety of clinical presentations, it should be in the differential diagnosis for patients with unexplained interstitial lung disease.
- The overdiagnosis of pneumonia
We are hospitalizing more patients with “pneumonia,” but it has not improved outcomes.
- An uncommon syndrome makes us reflect on our approach to diagnosis
Antisynthetase syndrome reminds us to stay grounded in the fundamentals of clinical care: careful listening, purposeful examination, and directed use of tests.
- Is anticoagulation appropriate for all patients with portal vein thrombosis?
No. The decision is complex and depends on whether the thrombosis is acute or chronic and on other factors.
- The jugular venous pressure revisited
Few physical findings are as useful but as undervalued as the estimation of the jugular venous pressure.
- More than skin-deep
The patient had oral ulcers, a truncal rash, and blistering lesions on his hands, all of which had been getting worse for 9 months.