DIC: Treat the cause, not the lab values

   Intimate partner violence: An epidemic hiding in plain sight

   Better treatment for varicose veins

   Erectile dysfunction for the primary care physician

   Angioplasty for acute MI: The best therapy gets better

   Demystifying triglycerides: A practical approach

   How to test adrenal function in ICU patients

   Depression: What to do when the first step fails

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine
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New CCJM policy: No manufacturer involvement in the preparation of articles
We will not consider for publication any review article in which the manufacturer was involved in the preparation of the manuscript, either directly or through payment to the author or a surrogate.
B.F. MANDELL

 

Bovine spongiform encephalopathy and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease: How safe is eating beef?
Bovine spongiform encephalopathy, commonly known as mad cow disease, has appeared in the United Sates, raising concern about the possible appearance of its human counterpart, variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
A.A. ROMA and R.A. PRAYSON

 

Liver biopsy 2005: When and how?
Imaging and blood tests are increasingly replacing biopsy for diagnosing liver diseases, but more biopsies are being done to help guide the management of hepatitis C and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis.
C.A. SIEGEL, A.A. SURIAWINATA, A.M. SILAS, and D.J. VAN LEEUWEN

 

The impact of stress urinary incontinence on sexual activity in women
Stress urinary incontinence is common, but patients are reluctant to talk about it and the problems it causes in their sex life.
M.D. BARBER, S.A. DOWSETT, K.J. MULLEN, and L. VIKTRUP

 

The emergence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in the community
MRSA infections, long endemic in hospitals and nursing homes, are now being reported outside the hospital, as well.
R.A. PADMANABHAN, and T.G. FRASER

 
Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome: Recent findings on managing this challenging condition
High-intensity treatment with warfarin is not better than standard-intensity warfarin treatment. Basic questions about this disease remain unanswered.
M.A. CROWTHER
 

Do hip fractures need to be repaired within 24 hours of injury?
There is considerable debate on this point. The answer hinges on whether the patient is medically stable and can undergo surgery.
C.M. WHINNEY

 

Cholesterol guidelines update: More aggressive therapy for higher-risk patients
As new evidence comes in, guidelines for treating elevated cholesterol keep getting more aggressive-and more complicated. The 2001 guidelines were updated in 2004.
J.C. HUANG and B.J. HOOGWERF

 

Bariatric surgery effective for weight loss, diabetes, and hypertension at 10 years

Changes to guidelines for sepsis management

Lipid-lowering prevents stroke in patients with or without coronary heart disease

 

Letter to the Editor
Physical examinations for young athletes.

 

Parkinson-plus syndromes
(Cleve Clin J Med 2005; 72:57-63).