Asthma is a common, variable condition which in the UK is treated largely in primary care. Most adults who suffer from it don’t want to be using continuous treatment, but those with persisting mild asthma are usually solemnly admonished to use a steroid inhaler twice daily. […]
Category: Richard Lehman’s weekly review of medical journals
JAMA 16 May 2007 Vol 297
The origins of the English adjective “fit” are obscure, but over the last century it has come to mean “in good physical condition […]
BMJ 19 May 2007 Vol 334
Anyone mapping the patterns of diagnostic thinking in primary care must give a prominent place to the concept of alarm symptoms, often known as “red flags […]
Lancet 19 May 2007 Vol 369
One week after the New England Journal published the two FUTURE studies, The Lancet publishes three trials of a quadrivalent vaccine against human papillomavirus types 6,11, 16 and 18. And it is indeed a case of back to the FUTURE – the vaccine shows protection against new high-grade vulval and vaginal lesions when given before, […]
Arch Intern Med 14 May 2007 Vol 167
I suppose that I receive about half a dozen autoanalyser reports of serum phosphorus levels from my patients every day, but I can’t remember ever having made a clinical decision based on them. I don’t think this paper from Framingham will change that: […]
Ann Intern Med 15 May 2007
At first glance, the message from the abstract of this paper is startling: an in-practice intervention can reduce 5-year mortality in seriously depressed elderly patients by 40%, entirely due to a reduction in cancer deaths. […]
Plant of the Week: Clematis “Warszawska Nike
The Monument to the Heroes of Warsaw 1939-45, which now stands in front of the beautiful rebuilt Grand Theatre, is known locally as “Nike […]
JAMA 9 May 2007 Vol 297
After myocardial infarction, areas of the myocardium may remain ischaemic without producing any symptoms – this is known as silent ischaemia and is revealed by sophisticated forms of stress imaging. Between 1991 and 1997, well before it became clear that all patients with MI do better with immediate percutaneous intervention (PCI), a group of Swiss […]
NEJM 10 May 2007 Vol 356
In the USA, there is much debate about compulsory vaccination of girls at the age of 11 or 12 against the most oncogenic strains of human papillomavirus (HPV). Opposition comes from the religious right who believe that this undermines the message of chastity before marriage and faithfulness thereafter. […]
BMJ 12 May 2007 Vol 334
This is one of three important papers on aspirin to appear this week and it shows that whatever the merits of this drug in other contexts, it does not prevent cognitive decline in women over 65. […]