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Internal Medicine Alert

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Articles

  • Carbs are OK: Certainly for Women

    In the largest randomized dietary intervention trial conducted to date, a low-fat predominately carbohydrate diet resulted weight maintenance over 7.5 years in postmenopausal women compared with a control diet higher in fat.
  • Fitness Now Comes in a Pill!

    Rosiglitazone improves exercise capacity in individuals with Type 2 Diabetes.
  • Pharmacology Watch

    Treating Opioid-Dependent Patients with OAT; Long-Term Effects of Warfarin Use; Statins Multiple Benefits; FDA Actions
  • ECG Review: Those First 4 Beats

    The ECG in the Figure was obtained from a 70-year-old woman in heart failure. There are at least 6 findings that we feel are worthy of mention. Can you identify them? Clinically, what is your concern?
  • Pharmacology Update: Rotavirus Vaccine, Live, Oral, Pentavalent (Rota Teq®)

    The FDA has approved a live, oral, vaccine for the prevention of rotavirus gastroenteritis in infants. An earlier vaccine approved for this indication (RotaShield®) was withdrawn in 1999 due to an increased risk of intussusception. In a large trial, of more than 70,000 children, risk of intussusception was not observed with the new vaccine. The new oral rotavirus vaccine will be marketed by Merck & Co., Inc. as Rota Teq®.
  • Under Pressure to Heal an Ulcer?

    Healing of Stage II-IV pressure ulcers is associated with use of moist dressings and adequate nutrition. An additional factor for Stage III and Stage IV ulcers is cleansing with soap and water or saline.
  • This Cup is Way Less than Half Full

    Three simultaneously published reports from the Women's Health Initiative demonstrate that a low-fat diet did not reduce the risk of breast cancer, colorectal cancer, or cardiovascular disease over 8 years of follow-up.
  • Clinical Briefs By Louis Kuritzky, MD

    Use of High-Dose Acyclovir in Pityriasis Rosea; Rimonabant in Overweight or Obese Patients; Watchful Waiting vs Repair of Inguinal Hernia in Minimally Symptomatic Men
  • S. aureus: The Nose Knows

    In 2001-2002, an estimated 89.4 million individuals in the United States were nasally colonized with S. aureus and 2.3 million with MRSA.
  • Clinical Briefs By Louis Kuritzky, MD

    Although aspirin (ASA), particularly low-dose ASA 81 mg/d (LD-ASA), is well established as an appropriate agent for secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease, recent results from the Women's Health Study (WHS) about the impact of ASA in primary prevention came as a surprise...