Articles Tagged With:
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Chest Pain and Giant T Wave Inversion
Chest pain (rather than shortness of breath) and ST elevation (rather than T wave inversion) in leads V1 and V2 make massive pulmonary embolism unlikely.
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Clinical Briefs
In this section: the insulin misadministration problem; comparing smoking cessation pharmacotherapies; more support for ambulatory BP monitoring.
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Tenofovir Alafenamide vs Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate
Tenofovir alafenamide has replaced the tenofovir disoproxil fumarate component of two commonly used drug combinations for HIV-1 infection.
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ICH May Clinically Mimic TIA
In a large retrospective review of 2137 patients with intracerebral hemorrhage, 34 presented with transient symptoms that could have been misclassified as “transient ischemic attack” if brain imaging had not been performed.
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Selecting Patients for Statin Primary Prevention
The new vascular disease risk calculator discriminates who will experience a vascular event in the near future better than using a trial entry criteria approach or a hybrid approach.
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Is Anticoagulant Bridging Needed in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation Going to Surgery?
In patients with atrial fibrillation who had warfarin treatment interrupted for an elective operation or other elective invasive procedure, forgoing bridging anticoagulation was not inferior to perioperative bridging with low molecular weight heparin for the prevention of arterial thromboembolism and decreased the risk of major bleeding.
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The Nation Flunks Yet Another Health Test
Will Americans ever be able to underingulge in pain pills, bad TV, sugary sodas, and cake?
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Obama: 'We’re Seeing More People Killed Because of Opioid Overdoses than Traffic Accidents'
President Obama today announced proposals to combat the rapidly rising number of opioid overdose deaths -- currently at the highest rate in history. -
ED nurses ID barriers to ethical end-of-life care
Emergency department nurses reported lack of space, time, and staff as challenges to providing good end-of-life care, according to a recent study.
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Hospital LOS confirmed to worsen hip fracture outcomes
Hospital length of stay has been thought to affect a patient’s odds of surviving a hip fracture, and investigators from the University of Rochester Medical Center Department of Orthopedics created a new research tool to determine just how much.