Articles Tagged With:
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Supreme Court Ruling Could Be ‘Sea Change’ for Healthcare
The Supreme Court ruling reversing the earlier Chevron determination giving deference to federal agencies to interpret rules will have a significant impact on the healthcare industry, but the effects will not come all at once.
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Changes to Substance Abuse Disorder Records Rules
Health and Human Services recently made changes to the confidentiality of substance use disorder records, providing that Part 2 violations now will be subject to both criminal and civil penalties.
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CrowdStrike Crisis Leaves Lessons for Healthcare
The CrowdStrike debacle affected many health systems and hospitals, shutting down critical systems and forcing many to delay or cancel procedures.
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‘Doc, I Can’t See’: The Emergency Medicine Approach to Acute Atraumatic Vision Loss
This article will discuss the various emergent causes of vision loss, including necessary diagnostic testing, imaging, and needed interventions and consultations. Most importantly, emergency medicine clinicians must be sensitive to the goal of restoration and preservation of as much vision as possible.
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CSF Analysis May Help in the Diagnosis of Dementia with Lewy Bodies
This paper demonstrated that cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) alpha-synuclein seeding assays can distinguish between clinically diagnosed dementia with Lewy bodies and controls, and that the presence of hyposmia with core clinical features had the highest predictive value of detecting CSF alpha-synuclein.
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Anchoring Alzheimer’s Disease Along an Amyloid Timeline
In 601 individuals from Wisconsin-based cohorts with amyloid-beta and tau positron emission tomography scans, the magnitude and topographical spread of tau pathology increased with longer duration of amyloid-beta positivity, and the cognitive decline was steepest in those with the longest duration of amyloid-beta positivity and elevated entorhinal tau.
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Clinical Criteria for a Limbic-Predominant Amnestic Neurodegenerative Syndrome
Predominant limbic degeneration in older geriatric patients (ages 75 years and older) with slowly progressive episodic memory loss with fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography medial temporal hypometabolism limbic-predominant age-related TDP-43 encephalopathy (LATE) involves a progressive degeneration of the amygdala, then hippocampus, then middle frontal gyrus.
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Can Large Vessel Strokes Be Treated with IV Thrombolysis in an Extended Time Window?
In this trial involving Chinese patients with ischemic stroke caused by large vessel occlusion, treatment with tenecteplase administered 4.5 to 24 hours after stroke onset resulted in less disability and similar survival compared to standard medical treatment.
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Incidental Cerebral Microinfarcts in Patients with Active Cancer
In this study of patients with active cancers, 3.6% had asymptomatic, incidental acute ischemic stroke lesions on magnetic resonance imaging and had three times the risk of having a subsequent clinical stroke in the next month.
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Anesthesiologists Encounter Unique Ethical Issues
There currently is no standardized ethics curriculum for anesthesiology training programs in the United States. Thus, the ethics education trainees receive varies depending on the institution.