Latest Articles
- Immune thrombocytopenia: No longer ‘idiopathic’
Once regarded as idiopathic, immune thrombocytopenia is now understood to involve both accelerated platelet destruction and impaired platelet production.
- How to manage type 2 diabetes in medical and surgical patients in the hospital
Many patients admitted to the hospital have diabetes mellitus—diagnosed or undiagnosed—and others develop hyperglycemia from the stress of hospitalization.
- Subphrenic abscess from a perforated duodenal ulcer
A 55-year-old man presents after 3 weeks of sharp epigastric pain radiating to the right upper quadrant, fever, and generalized weakness.
- Statin myopathy: A common dilemma not reflected in clinical trials
When a patient taking a statin complains of muscle aches, is he or she experiencing statin-induced myopathy or some other problem? Should the statin be discontinued?
- The pain of cholesterol-lowering therapy
It seems that everyone “knows” that statins cause muscle pain, including many patients with hypercholesterolemia.
- Iron therapy and infection (March 2011)
Readers comment on iron therapy and infection (March 2011), and managing bloodstream infections (January 2011).
- Progressive muscle weakness: More there than meets the eye
A 56-year-old woman presents with proximal weakness in all four limbs. What are the possible causes?