Latest Articles
- Odontogenic cutaneous fistula
A 55-year-old woman with a history of systemic lupus erythematosus and secondary Sjögren syndrome presented with a 2-year history of facial swelling and intermittent drainage from a skin lesion on her left jaw.
- Immunotherapy meets William Shakespeare
Immune checkpoint inhibitors are potentially life-saving therapies that can trigger a wide range of autoimmune pathology.
- Amoxicillin rash in infectious mononucleosis
A 23-year-old woman developed a rash on the day she completed a 10-day course of amoxicillin for group A streptococcal infection.
- High-output heart failure from arteriovenous dialysis access: A structured approach to diagnosis and management
Arteriovenous high-output heart failure is likely underdiagnosed because many clinicians are uncertain about when and how to evaluate for it.
- Direct oral anticoagulants: Challenging prescribing scenarios in everyday practice
Preapproval trials of direct oral anticoagulants excluded patients with extreme body weight and advanced kidney and liver disease and those who had undergone bariatric surgery. Cautious decision-making in these patients is warranted.
- My adult patient’s hypercholesterolemia is not responding to statins—what’s next?
Further investigation is needed when patients do not meet their target low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels with statin therapy alone.
- Nitrogen: The unsung hero of vascular physiology
The seventh element on the periodic table—nitrogen—may not come to mind often in day-to-day medical practice, but it is more exciting than you might think.

