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Family Medicine

Dietary Fats and Cardiovascular Disease: A Presidential Advisory From the American Heart Association

19 Jun, 2017 | 13:00h | UTC

Dietary Fats and Cardiovascular Disease: A Presidential Advisory From the American Heart Association (free PDF)

Invited Commentary: Trimming the Fat on Diet Recommendations for a Healthy Heart: Emphasis on Eating Patterns over Dietary Restrictions (free)

Top Ten Things to Know: Dietary Fats and Cardiovascular Disease: A Presidential Advisory from the American Heart Association (free PDF)

AHA News: Advisory: Replacing saturated fat with healthier fat could lower cardiovascular risks (free)

News release: Replacing saturated fat with healthier fat may lower cholesterol as well as drugs in context of a healthy diet (free)

AHA no longer recommends decreasing total fat, but to replace saturated fats with polyunsaturated or monounsaturated fats. “Replacing saturated fat with healthier fat in the diet lowers cardiovascular disease risk as much as cholesterol-lowering statin drugs”

 


Comparison of sputum collection methods for tuberculosis diagnosis

19 Jun, 2017 | 13:01h | UTC

Comparison of sputum collection methods for tuberculosis diagnosis: a systematic review and pairwise and network meta-analysis – The Lancet Global Health (free)

Invited commentary: Remembering the basics: interventions to improve sputum collection for tuberculosis diagnosis (free)

Pooled sputum collection (sputum that was pooled from each spontaneous expectoration into the same sputum container over a period of several hours) increased the diagnostic performance of smear microscopy 1.6 times and the delivery of standardized instruction emphasizing the difference between sputum and saliva (verbally or visually) increased the odds of a positive microscopy result 1.4 times. “The effect of these simple, inexpensive strategies on diagnostic performance was similar to that of the relatively expensive GeneXpert MTB/RIF test, which, in the largest published studies, increased the odds of diagnosing tuberculosis by 1.3–1.5 times”

 


Evolocumab for Treatment of High Cholesterol: Clinical Effectiveness

19 Jun, 2017 | 12:55h | UTC

Evolocumab for Treatment of High Cholesterol: Clinical Effectiveness (free PDF) (RT @AnilMakam see Tweet 1, Tweet 2, Tweet 3 and Tweet 4)

News release: Institute for Clinical and Economic Review’s “New Evidence Update” on PCKS9 Inhibitors Highlights Lack of Mortality Benefit With Evolocumab (free)

Lack of mortality benefit in a recent large trial is highlighted in this updated review. Se more on the FOURIER trial and commentaries in our March 20th issue, see #2.

 


Racial Differences in the Relationship of Glucose Concentrations and Hemoglobin A1c Levels

19 Jun, 2017 | 12:59h | UTC

Racial Differences in the Relationship of Glucose Concentrations and Hemoglobin A1c Levels – Annals of Internal Medicine (link to abstract – $ for full-text)

Commentaries: Glycation of Hemoglobin Differs by Race – Physician’s Briefing (free) AND Hemoglobin A1c Overestimates Average Glucose in Blacks – Medscape (free registration required) AND Why a key diabetes test may work differently depending on your race – CNN (free)

In this study with 104 black patients and 104 white patients with type 1 diabetes, HbA1c values in black persons were 0.4 percentage points higher than those in white persons for a given mean glucose concentration.

 


Free online course. Starts today! Improving the Health of Women, Children and Adolescents

19 Jun, 2017 | 12:58h | UTC

Free online course. Starts today! Improving the Health of Women, Children and Adolescents: from Evidence to Action – London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, via FutureLearn (free)

 


EULAR/EFORT recommendations for the management of fragility fractures

19 Jun, 2017 | 12:54h | UTC

EULAR/EFORT recommendations for management of patients older than 50 years with a fragility fracture and prevention of subsequent fractures (free)

 


Guideline for the Perioperative Management of Antirheumatic Medication in Patients With Rheumatic Diseases Undergoing Elective Total Hip or Total Knee Arthroplasty

19 Jun, 2017 | 12:57h | UTC

2017 American College of Rheumatology/American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons Guideline for the Perioperative Management of Antirheumatic Medication in Patients With Rheumatic Diseases Undergoing Elective Total Hip or Total Knee Arthroplasty (free)

Press release: New Guideline Aims to Reduce Infections in Total Hip & Knee Replacement Patients (free)

Commentaries: New medication guidelines for rheumatic disease patients having joint replacement – Hospital for Special Surgery, via EurekAlert (free) AND New Guidelines Issued on Antirheumatic Drugs for Patients Undergoing Knee or Hip Replacement – Physician’s First Watch (free)

 


Why are doctors killing themselves

19 Jun, 2017 | 12:55h | UTC

Why are doctors killing themselves? – by Anne Malatt, via MJA Insight (free)

Related: Why are doctors plagued by depression and suicide? A crisis comes into focus – STAT News (free)

 


PSA Test for Prostate Cancer

19 Jun, 2017 | 12:50h | UTC

Opinion: Why I Won’t Get a PSA Test for Prostate Cancer – Scientific American (free)

 


Family planning, assisted reproduction, pregnancy and menopause in patients with SLE and/or antiphospholipid syndrome

19 Jun, 2017 | 12:49h | UTC

EULAR recommendations for women’s health and the management of family planning, assisted reproduction, pregnancy and menopause in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and/or antiphospholipid syndrome (free)

Commentary: EULAR: Guidance for Managing Lupus Pregnancy – MedPage Today (free registration required)

 


Guidelines for the Chronic Use of Opioid Analgesics

19 Jun, 2017 | 12:50h | UTC

Guidelines for the Chronic Use of Opioid Analgesics – Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB) (free PDF)

Commentary: Chronic Pain Opioid Guidelines Updated for State Medical Boards – Medscape (free registration required)

 


Hundreds died while taking an arthritis drug, but nobody alerted patients

19 Jun, 2017 | 12:47h | UTC

Failure to warn: Hundreds died while taking an arthritis drug, but nobody alerted patients – STAT News (free)

 


Managing epilepsy in women of childbearing age

19 Jun, 2017 | 12:45h | UTC

Managing epilepsy in women of childbearing age – Polish Society of Epileptology and Polish Gynecological Society Guidelines – Ginekologia Polska (free)

 


Pain and Opioids in Cancer Care: Benefits, Risks, and Alternatives

16 Jun, 2017 | 01:24h | UTC

Pain and Opioids in Cancer Care: Benefits, Risks, and Alternatives – 2017 ASCO Educational Book (free)

 


Chronic Myeloid Leukemia: What Every Practitioner Needs to Know in 2017

16 Jun, 2017 | 01:26h | UTC

Chronic Myeloid Leukemia: What Every Practitioner Needs to Know in 2017 – 2017 ASCO Educational Book (free)

 


American Society of Health-System Pharmacists – Five Things Physicians and Patients Should Question

16 Jun, 2017 | 00:59h | UTC

New Choosing Wisely List: American Society of Health-System Pharmacists – Five Things Physicians and Patients Should Question (free)

See more on the Choosing Wisely initiative in our April 5 issue, see #6.

“Great choosing wisely list from @ASHPOfficial. Great doctoring tips for physicians & trainees” (RT @AnilMakam see Tweet)

 


Age-specific risks, severity, time course, and outcome of bleeding on long-term antiplatelet treatment after vascular events

15 Jun, 2017 | 00:47h | UTC

Age-specific risks, severity, time course, and outcome of bleeding on long-term antiplatelet treatment after vascular events: a population-based cohort study – The Lancet (free)

Invited commentary: Preventing major gastrointestinal bleeding in elderly patients (free)

Commentaries: Aspirin Bleeding Risk in Over 75s Higher Than Thought – Medscape (free registration required) AND Aspirin linked to higher risk of serious bleeding in the elderly – Reuters Health News (free)

In this cohort, the risk of major bleeding increased sharply in patients above 75 years.

 


Non–Vitamin K Antagonist Oral Anticoagulant Dosing in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation and Renal Dysfunction

15 Jun, 2017 | 00:50h | UTC

Non–Vitamin K Antagonist Oral Anticoagulant Dosing in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation and Renal Dysfunction – Journal of The American College of Cardiology (link to abstract – $ for full-text)

Commentary: NOAC Doses: Just Stick to the Label – MedPage Today (free registration required)

“Among the 1,473 patients with a renal indication for dose reduction, 43.0% were potentially overdosed, which was associated with a higher risk of major bleeding”

 


Low-Dose Ferrous Sulfate vs Iron Polysaccharide Complex for Iron-Deficiency Anemia

15 Jun, 2017 | 00:48h | UTC

Effect of Low-Dose Ferrous Sulfate vs Iron Polysaccharide Complex on Hemoglobin Concentration in Young Children With Nutritional Iron-Deficiency Anemia: A Randomized Clinical Trial – JAMA (link to abstract – $ for full-text)

The JAMA Network – For the Media: Treating Nutritional Iron-Deficiency Anemia in Children (free)

Commentaries: Ferrous Sulfate Drops Tied to Higher Hemoglobin Increases in Kids with Anemia – Physician’s First Watch (free) AND Traditional treatment is better for iron-deficiency anaemia in children – OnMedica (free) AND Ferrous Sulfate Effective for Iron-Deficiency Anemia in Kids – Medscape (free registration required)

Researchers expected that Iron Polysaccharide Complex would restore hemoglobin more effectively, because it is designed to be tolerated better, but the proportion of infants and children with a complete resolution of iron-deficiency anemia was higher in the ferrous sulfate group (29 percent vs 6 percent).

 


Canagliflozin and Cardiovascular and Renal Events in Type 2 Diabetes

14 Jun, 2017 | 00:43h | UTC

Canagliflozin and Cardiovascular and Renal Events in Type 2 Diabetes – New England Journal of Medicine (free)

Commentary: CANVAS: Canagliflozin Reduces CV Events, but at Cost of Amputations – Medscape (free registration required)

Patients treated with canagliflozin had a lower risk of cardiovascular events than those who received placebo but a greater risk of amputation and fractures. The benefits and harms were likely small. See interesting commentaries on the trade-offs by @AnilMakam, see Tweet 1Tweet 2Tweet 3Tweet 4Tweet 5Tweet 6Tweet 7Tweet 8; and Tweet 9.

 


Combination inhaler treatment in emergency departments may reduce admissions for asthma attacks

14 Jun, 2017 | 00:35h | UTC

Combination inhaler treatment in emergency departments may reduce admissions for asthma attacks – NIHR Signal (free)

Original article: Combined inhaled beta-agonist and anticholinergic agents for emergency management in adults with asthma – Cochrane Library(link to abstract – $ for full-text)

 


Guidelines for the Management of Hypertension

13 Jun, 2017 | 20:03h | UTC

The 2017 Focused Update of the Guidelines of the Taiwan Society of Cardiology (TSOC) and the Taiwan Hypertension Society (THS) for the Management of Hypertension (free)

 


Drugs may help people pass larger kidney stones

13 Jun, 2017 | 20:00h | UTC

Drugs may help people pass larger kidney stones – NIHR Signal (free)

Original article: Alpha blockers for treatment of ureteric stones: systematic review and meta-analysis – The BMJ (free)

Related meta-analysis: Effect of Tamsulosin on Stone Passage for Ureteral Stones: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis – Annals of Emergency Medicine (free)

 


Is the finger-stick blood test necessary for type 2 diabetes treatment?

12 Jun, 2017 | 19:58h | UTC

Glucose Self-monitoring in Non–Insulin-Treated Patients With Type 2 Diabetes in Primary Care Settings: A Randomized Trial – JAMA Internal Medicine (free)

Editorial: The Need to Test Strategies Based on Common Sense (free)

The JAMA Network – For the Media: Home Monitoring of Blood Sugar Did Not Improve Glycemic Control After 1 Year (free)

Commentary: Is the finger-stick blood test necessary for type 2 diabetes treatment? – University of North Carolina Health Care, via EurekAlert(free)

Related: Self-Monitoring of Blood Glucose – Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (free)

“Another RCT showing no benefit for Glucose Self-monitoring in Non–Insulin-Treated Patients with Type 2 Diabetes” (RT @PaulGlasziou see Tweet)

 


‘How long have I got?’: Why many cancer patients don’t have answers

12 Jun, 2017 | 19:55h | UTC

‘How long have I got?’: Why many cancer patients don’t have answers – USA Today (free)

Related: Integration of Palliative Care Into Standard Oncology Care: American Society of Clinical Oncology Clinical Practice Guideline Update(free)

See more on Standardized Criteria for Palliative Care Consultation in our April 24 issue, see #8

“ASCO now recommends that everyone with advanced cancer receive palliative care within eight weeks of diagnosis.” (RT @cancerassassin1 see Tweet)

 


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