Articles Tagged With:
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Preterm Birth and the RSV Vaccine During Pregnancy
The follow-up MATISSE study explored the safety of the respiratory syncytial virus prefusion F (RSVpreF) vaccine in pregnant women and demonstrated no significant increase in preterm birth rates compared to the placebo, although it highlighted geographical and socioeconomic disparities in outcomes.
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Wine Consumption and Cardiovascular Health
A case-cohort subgroup of the PREDIMED study of older Mediterranean subjects at high cardiovascular disease risk, which used urinary tartaric acid to quantitate wine consumption, has shown over an almost five-year follow-up that light to moderate wine consumption was associated with a significant reduction in cardiovascular disease events.
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Combustible vs. Electronic Cigarettes Post-PCI
A large, nationwide South Korean study of smokers undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) has shown that electronic cigarette use and smoking cessation resulted in similarly lower subsequent major adverse cardiac events compared to continued smoking.
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Cardiovascular Risk with mRNA COVID Vaccines
A large, nationwide population study in Sweden of the risk of adverse cardiovascular events after messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) COVID-19 vaccinations has shown that, except for rare cases of myopericarditis, severe cardiovascular events, such as myocardial infarction, heart failure, and stroke, are reduced, probably because of the prevention of COVID infection.
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Indications for Bioprosthetic vs. Mechanical Aortic Valve Replacement
A large U.S. database study comparing mechanical vs. bioprostheses for surgical aortic valve replacement in patients 40 to 75 years of age has shown that all-cause mortality is reduced with a mechanical valve in those age 60 years or younger.
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POPular PAUSE TAVI Trial Supports Interrupting Oral Anticoagulation Before TAVR in Patients with Afib
In this investigator-initiated, open-label trial, continuing oral anticoagulation leading up to a transcatheter aortic valve replacement procedure led to more bleeding and no reduction in thromboembolic events compared with interrupting anticoagulation.
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Evaluation and Management of Elbow Injuries in the Emergency Department
Elbow injuries continue to be a very common complaint that presents to the emergency department. These injuries involve a complex joint that includes many important structures, with injuries that vary greatly. It is important that emergency medicine clinicians remain prepared to evaluate, diagnose, and treat these various elbow injuries.
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Self-Testing for STIs Can Help Improve Access and Reduce Outbreaks
The increasing cases of syphilis, congenital syphilis, and some other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in the post-pandemic era suggest clinicians and public health departments need additional strategies and tools to combat the problem.
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Vaccine Hesitancy Could Dampen Enthusiasm for Vaccines to Combat STIs
While the sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention world’s research pipeline contains new vaccines to fight major STIs — a potentially exciting development — there also is concern about growing vaccine hesitancy and misinformation in the United States.
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Abortion Training Increasingly Affected by Dobbs Decision
OB/GYN abortion training programs have been negatively affected by logistical and financial burdens in the nearly three years since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and universal abortion access rights with its decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization on June 24, 2022.