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  arrow Letters
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TABLE OF CONTENTS

4 June 2002 Volume 136 Issue 11
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Articles Back

Craig G. Crandall, Wanpen Vongpatanasin, and Ronald G. Victor

In humans, impaired heat dissipation is a major mechanism by which cocaine elevates body temperature. When healthy, cocaine-naive persons are subjected to passive heating, pretreatment with even a small dose of intranasal cocaine impairs sweating and cutaneous vasodilation (the major autonomic adjustments to thermal stress) and heat perception (the key trigger for behavioral adjustments).

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Summary for Patients

Nathorn Chaiyakunapruk, David L. Veenstra, Benjamin A. Lipsky, and Sanjay Saint

Bloodstream infections are significantly reduced in patients with central vascular lines who receive chlorhexidine gluconate versus povidone-iodine for skin site disinfection. Use of chlorhexidine gluconate rather than povidone-iodine for catheter-site care is a simple and effective means of reducing vascular catheter–related infections.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Summary for Patients

Pamela L. Owens, Elizabeth H. Bradley, Sarah M. Horwitz, Catherine M. Viscoli, Walter N. Kernan, Lawrence M. Brass, Philip M. Sarrel, and Ralph I. Horwitz

Self-reported and performance-based measures of function can differ in women who have experienced a recent cerebrovascular event. Although more difficult to collect, results of a performance-based measure may provide important information about long-term health outcomes.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Summary for Patients | Appendix Figures


Brief Communications Back

Eric J. Thomas, Stuart R. Lipsitz, David M. Studdert, and Troyen A. Brennan

Estimates of adverse event rates from medical record review, including those reported by the U.S. Institute of Medicine in its 2000 report on medical errors, are highly sensitive to the degree of consensus and confidence among reviewers.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Summary for Patients


Academia and Clinic Back

Ted J. Kaptchuk

This essay looks at the placebo effect of alternative medicine as a distinct entity by reviewing current knowledge about the placebo effect and how it may pertain to alternative medicine. Five components of the placebo effect—patient, practitioner, patient–practitioner interaction, nature of the illness, and treatment and setting—are examined.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF

Mark R. Chassin and Elise C. Becher

Among all types of medical errors, cases in which the wrong patient undergoes an invasive procedure are sufficiently distressing to warrant special attention. Nevertheless, institutions underreport such procedures, and the medical literature contains few discussions about them. This article examines the case of a patient who was mistakenly taken for another patient's invasive electrophysiology procedure.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF


Reviews Back

Nasia Safdar and Dennis G. Maki

Recent years have witnessed a rapidly growing crisis in antimicrobial resistance, especially among microorganisms that cause nosocomial infection. To better understand common risk factors among multiresistant organisms, this review explores risk factors for nosocomial infection with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, vancomycin-resistant enterococcus, Clostridium difficile, extended-spectrum ß-lactamase–producing gram-negative bacilli, and Candida.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF


Perspectives Back

Lynn A. Jansen and Daniel P. Sulmasy

This paper examines the various ways that the terms terminal sedation and refusal of hydration and nutrition have been used in the medical literature.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF


Editorials Back

Robert M. Wachter, Kaveh G. Shojania, Sanjay Saint, Amy J. Markowitz, and Mark Smith

In this issue, with the paper by Chassin and Becher, Annals launches a new series, "Quality Grand Rounds."

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Letters Back

Tobacco Use in HIV-Infected Women

    Michael B. Steinberg, Joseph A. DeSimone, and Diane AbatemarcoWeb-only lightning bold

    Full Text | PDF

Effects of Pravastatin in the Elderly

    Hiroshi Iwata, Tomonori Aoyama, and Masahiro KamiWeb-only lightning bold

    Full Text | PDF

The Heartbreak of Drug Pricing

Molecular Genetic Evidence of an Association between Nasal Polyposis and the Peutz–Jeghers Syndrome

    Josbert J. Keller, Anne Marie Westerman, Felix W.M. de Rooij, J.H. Paul Wilson, Herman van Dekken, Francis M. Giardiello, Marian A.J. Weterman, and G. Johan A. Offerhaus

    Full Text | PDF

Correction: Update in Infectious Diseases



Medical Writings: Book Notes Back

Robert H. Gifford

Full Text | PDF

Sangnya Patel

Full Text | PDF


Ad Libitum Back

Jack Coulehan

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Ancillary Content Back

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Summaries for Patients Back

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