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box In this Issue
  arrow Articles
  arrow Brief Communications
  arrow Clinical Reviews
  arrow Editorials
  arrow On Being a Doctor
  arrow On Being a Patient
  arrow Letters
  arrow Medical Writings: Book Notes
  arrow Currents
  arrow Ad Libitum
  arrow Ancillary Content
  arrow Summaries for Patients
  arrow UPDATES FROM THE ANNUAL SESSION
  arrow PDF of Contents
box Services
  arrow Subscribe
  arrow One-time access
  arrow Activate online subscription
  arrow Access Personal Archive
 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

19 October 1999 Volume 131 Issue 8
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Articles Back

Timothy F. Jones, Allen S. Craig, Sarah E. Valway, Charles L. Woodley, and William Schaffner

Traditional and molecular epidemiologic investigations indicate that tuberculosis was widely transmitted among inmates and guards in an urban jail. Aggressive measures to screen for active tuberculosis upon incarceration are important for preventing spread of disease in jails and to the surrounding community.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Summary for Patients

Jennifer E. Liu, Mary J. Roman, Riccardo Pini, Joseph E. Schwartz, Thomas G. Pickering, and Richard B. Devereux

"White coat normotension"—elevated ambulatory blood pressure but normal office blood pressure—is associated with left ventricular mass and carotid wall thickness similar to those in patients with sustained hypertension. The association of white coat normotension with prognostically important target organ damage may partly explain the ability of high normal left ventricular mass and high normal clinical blood pressure to predict subsequent hypertension in patients with clinical normotension.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Summary for Patients

Paul M. Ridker, Charles H. Hennekens, Julie E. Buring, Ruth Kundsin, and Jessie Shih

In apparently healthy postmenopausal women, little evidence was found to support the notion that previous infection (as measured by IgG antibody titers to Chlamydia pneumoniae, Helicobacter pylori, herpes simplex virus, and cytomegalovirus) is associated with subsequent risk for cardiovascular disease.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Summary for Patients

Barbara Gerbert, Nona Caspers, Amy Bronstone, James Moe, and Priscilla Abercrombie

Identifying domestic abuse is difficult even for physicians committed to helping victims. The reports from expert physicians in this study illustrate the need to frame questions and develop indirect approaches that foster patient trust. It may be more productive to redefine the goals of universal screening so that compassionate asking in and of itself is the first step in helping battered patients.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Summary for Patients

Constantine A. Stratakis, Nicholas Sarlis, Lawrence S. Kirschner, J. Aidan Carney, John L. Doppman, Lynnette K. Nieman, George P. Chrousos, and Dimitris A. Papanicolaou

Patients with primary pigmented nodular adrenocortical disease responded to dexamethasone with a paradoxical increase in glucocorticoid excretion during the Liddle test. This feature distinguishes such patients from those with the Cushing syndrome and may lead to timely detection of the Carney complex in asymptomatic patients.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Summary for Patients


Brief Communications Back

Yo-ichi Takei, Shu-ichi Ikeda, Yasuhiko Hashikura, Toshihiko Ikegami, and Seiji Kawasaki

Preoperative clinical severity and duration of illness are associated with the nature of outcomes after liver transplantation for familial amyloid polyneuropathy.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Summary for Patients


Clinical Reviews Back

Sally E. McNagny

This evidence- and case-based discussion covers the clinical presentation of menopause, pretreatment assessment for hormone replacement therapy, benefits and risks of this treatment, common hormone replacement regimens and their side effects, and patient management.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF


Editorials Back

Lee B. Reichman

In this issue, Jones and colleagues starkly document that a jail was the major reservoir of tuberculosis in their community. Their study shows that enhanced targeted screening may have a major effect on total tuberculosis morbidity.

Full Text | PDF

Carole Warshaw and Elaine Alpert

Gerbert and colleagues' study in this issue found that even expert physicians do not always ask their patients about abuse. What keeps physicians from routinely inquiring about abuse, and what can be done to change this?

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Robert B. Belshe

Significant new tools to prevent and treat influenza will become available to clinicians this year, and additional advances in vaccine are on the horizon. Currently available vaccine is effective, and the time to use it is now.

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On Being a Doctor Back

Karl Lorenz

Master Gunnery Sergeant's medals commemorated duty on every continent. "Yes, Lieutenant," he would answer. He was respectful, but I felt ludicrous. He was Experience, and I was Ingenue.

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On Being a Patient Back

Deborah Young Bradshaw

At that visit to my doctor, I learned what it is to be in need and be taken care of, and I was left with a new awareness of the awesome gift I had been given as a physician.

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Letters Back

Prediction Equation for Glomerular Filtration Rate

Biliary Sludge

When Doctors Marry Doctors

White Coat Pockets

Subjective Compared with Objective Sleepiness

    Selim R. Benbadis and Edward Mascha—RESPONSE

    Full Text | PDF

Ocular Venous Occlusion and Hyperhomocysteinemia

Late Clonal Complications in Older Patients Receiving Immunosuppressive Therapy for Aplastic Anemia

    Masahiro Kami, Utako Machida, and Hisamaru Hirai

    Full Text | PDF

    André Tichelli, Michel Henry-Amar, and Gérard Socié—RESPONSE

    Full Text | PDF

Autoimmune Skin Rashes Associated with Etanercept for Rheumatoid Arthritis

    Paul H. Brion, Anuja Mittal-Henkle, and Kenneth C. Kalunian

    Full Text | PDF

Correction: The Wenckebach Phenomenon



Medical Writings: Book Notes Back

Felix O. Kolb

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Margaret R. Rukstalis and Robert Weinrieb

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Kenneth Hess and Walter Pagel

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Sharon J. Parish and William H. Salazar

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Currents Back

Brigid Kane

Full Text

Linda Gundersen

Full Text


Ad Libitum Back

Susan Rakley

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Ancillary Content Back

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Summaries for Patients Back

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UPDATES FROM THE ANNUAL SESSION Back

Ashok M. Karnik

The articles selected for this Update cover asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, pulmonary infections, interstitial and occupational lung diseases, pulmonary embolism, solitary pulmonary nodules, and lung carcinoma.

Full Text | PDF



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