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box In this Issue
  arrow Articles
  arrow Updates
  arrow Reviews
  arrow Position Papers
  arrow Editorials
  arrow On Being a Doctor
  arrow Letters
  arrow Ad Libitum
  arrow Ancillary Content
  arrow Summaries for Patients
  arrow In the Clinic
  arrow PDF of Contents
box Services
  arrow Subscribe
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TABLE OF CONTENTS

1 January 2008 Volume 148 Issue 1
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Articles Back

Anna N.A. Tosteson, Natasha K. Stout, Dennis G. Fryback, Suddhasatta Acharyya, Benjamin A. Herman, Lucy G. Hannah, Etta D. Pisano for the DMIST Investigators

Digital mammography is more accurate than film mammography in younger women and in women with dense breasts. In a cost-effectiveness analysis, Tosteson and colleagues estimate that using digital mammography in all women would cost more than $300 000 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained compared with film mammography. Targeting digital mammography on the basis of age or both age and breast density would cost $26 500 to $84 500 more per QALY gained than film mammography. In women age 65 years or older, the cost-effectiveness of density-targeted digital mammography is much less certain. Relative to film mammography, digital mammography for everyone is not cost-effective. Targeting it to certain subgroups can be cost-effective.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF

Daniel W. Wheeler, Joseph J. Carter, Louise J. Murray, Beverley A. Degnan, Colin P. Dunling, Raymond Salvador, David K. Menon, and Arun K. Gupta

In this study, 28 physicians used epinephrine ampules labeled with either a mass concentration (mg/mL) or a ratio (1:1000) to manage a simulated pediatric acute anaphylaxis scenario. Fourteen percent of those using ratios and 79% of those using mass concentration gave an epinephrine dose that was within 10% of the correct dose. When physicians used ampules labeled with a ratio, the mean overdose was 231 µg and the mean delay before administration was 91 seconds compared with physicians using ampules labeled with a mass concentration. Labeling ampules with mass concentrations would increase patient safety.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Summary for Patients


Updates Back

Stanley Goldfarb

This Update in Nephrology features 9 articles published in 2005 and 2006. Topics include acute and chronic renal failure, radiographic contrast and renal disease, renal artery stenosis, and kidney donation.

Full Text | PDF


Reviews Back

David B. Matchar, Douglas C. McCrory, Lori A. Orlando, Manesh R. Patel, Uptal D. Patel, Meenal B. Patwardhan, Benjamin Powers, Gregory P. Samsa, and Rebecca N. Gray

The authors systematically reviewed trials that directly compared angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors with angiotensin-receptor blockers (ARBs) in adults with essential hypertension. They found good evidence that the 2 classes of agents had similar long-term effects on blood pressure, with no consistent differences in mortality, cardiovascular events, progression to diabetes, left ventricular function, and kidney disease. The ACE inhibitors caused chronic cough more often than ARBs.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Audio Summary | CME

Regina Kunz, Chris Friedrich, Marcel Wolbers, and Johannes F.E. Mann

The authors performed a meta-analysis of randomized trials comparing ARBs with placebo or alternative treatments for proteinuria. They also reviewed combination therapy (ARBs plus ACE inhibitors) versus monotherapy for proteinuria. Pooled data from 49 studies involving 6181 participants and 72 comparisons showed that ARBs and ACE inhibitors were equally effective in reducing proteinuria compared with placebo or a calcium-channel blocker. Combination therapy with ARBs and ACE inhibitors reduced proteinuria more than either agent alone.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF | Audio Summary


Position Papers Back

American College of Physicians

Many industrialized countries have health care systems that provide universal access to care that is better and less expensive than U.S. health care. This policy paper from the American College of Physicians seeks to learn from the lessons provided by these countries. It describes health care in the United States, compares U.S. health care with health care in other countries, describes the lessons these countries can teach, and recommends actions to develop a high-performance health care system in the United States.

Abstract | Full Text | PDF


Editorials Back

Patrick S. Parfrey

The most important contribution of the systematic reviews by Matchar and colleagues and Kunz and associates is that they tell us what we do not know, which is the adverse effects of long-term therapy with these agents. We need a large, long-term, 3-group, randomized, controlled trial involving monotherapy and combination therapy with angiotensin-receptor blockers and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors. Until then, physicians should closely monitor patients with late-stage kidney disease who are using combination therapy with these 2 drug classes.

Full Text | PDF | Audio Summary

Harold C. Sox

This issue includes a policy paper from the American College of Physicians on effective health care systems in other countries and what the United States might learn from them. During 2008, Annals will publish a series of articles and commentaries that further discuss the health care systems of some exemplar countries. These successful national health care systems share 1 essential characteristic: The government guarantees that every citizen will have health insurance.

Full Text | PDF


On Being a Doctor Back

Paul Moorehead

Once upon a time, Abra and I met in the emergency room. She had no hair and the side of her head was scarred from surgery, but she was pretty anyway. Soft in her voice and sweet of nature, she was helpful as I examined her, even though she wasn't feeling well. Abra wore her toque elegantly, as though it were a crown. This is the kind of child who gets cancer.

Full Text | PDF


Letters Back

Prescriber Profiling

Fever-Induced ST-Segment Elevation with a Brugada Syndrome–Type Electrocardiogram

    Sumit Kalra, Said B. Iskandar, Sonia Duggal, and Roger D. Smalligan

    Full Text | PDF


Ad Libitum Back

George N. Braman

Full Text | PDF


Ancillary Content Back

Full Text


Summaries for Patients Back

Full Text | PDF


In the Clinic Back

This issue provides a clinical overview of insomnia, focusing on prevention, diagnosis, treatment, practice improvement, and patient information. Readers can complete the accompanying CME quiz for 1.5 credits.

Description | PDF | PIER module | CME



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