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June 20, 2002  Vol. 346 No. 25

Perspective
1934-1935

Angina pectoris is usually caused by myocardial ischemia due to atherosclerotic narrowing of the epicardial coronary arteries, with or without local vasoconstriction or a superimposed thrombus, that limits the supply of blood to the myocardium. This leads ...

Original Articles
1937-1947

In a large group of diffuse large-B-cell lymphomas, DNA microarrays identified three patterns of gene expression that were correlated with the likelihood of survival after chemotherapy. Individual genes within these patterns formed molecular signatures that had an even stronger correlation with survival after chemotherapy. The predictive power of the molecular signatures was independent of the international prognostic index.

1948-1953

Patients with cardiac syndrome X have angina and abnormal exercise-test results but normal findings on coronary angiography. Although myocardial ischemia has been suspected to be the cause, this has been difficult to document. In this study, myocardial-perfusion magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated abnormal subendocardial perfusion during adenosine infusion in 20 patients with the syndrome.

1954-1962

Renovascular hypertension activates the renin–angiotensin system, which can increase oxidative stress and vascular endothelial dysfunction. This study examined forearm blood flow as a marker of endothelial dysfunction before and after transluminal renal-artery angioplasty in 15 affected subjects and in 15 controls. The response of forearm blood flow to acetylcholine, an endothelium-dependent vasodilator, was diminished in subjects with renal-artery stenosis as compared with controls, and it improved after angioplasty. Responses to isosorbide dinitrate, an endothelium-independent vasodilator, were similar in all conditions in both groups. Indexes of oxidative stress such as urinary 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine and serum malondialdehyde-modified low-density lipoprotein decreased after angioplasty.

1963-1969
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This double-blind trial involved 12 immunocompromised patients with chronic diarrhea and Enterocytozoon bieneusi infection. Treatment with fumagillin (60 mg per day orally for two weeks) led to some symptomatic improvement and to clearance of the parasite in six of six patients, as compared with none of six in the placebo group (P=0.002). All patients were eventually treated with fumagillin, but severe thrombocytopenia or neutropenia developed in three patients.

Images in Clinical Medicine
1970
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Figure 1. A 24-year-old woman was evaluated because of a three-month history of cough, dyspnea, and weight loss. A chest radiograph revealed nodular pulmonary densities of various sizes and with ill-defined margins (Panel A). The pH was 7.44, the partial ...

Clinical Practice
1971-1977

A 70-year-old man with an 80-pack-year history of smoking and a history of congestive heart failure presents with increasing shortness of breath. He also has aching chest pain on the right side that worsens with deep inspiration. He is afebrile. The chest radiograph reveals asymmetrical bilateral pleural effusions, with more fluid on the right. How should this patient be evaluated?

Review Article
1978-1988

    Knowledge of the molecular and cellular events in heat stroke has advanced steadily during the past decade. It is now known that heat stroke is associated with injury to multiple tissues and organs as a result not only of the cytotoxic effect of heat, but also of the inflammatory and coagulation responses of the patient. Altered expression of heat-shock proteins may also have a role in the pathogenesis of heat stroke. This article reviews current understanding of the pathophysiology of heat stroke and advances in therapy.

    Case Records of the Massachusetts General Hospital
    1989-1996

    Presentation of Case

    A 13-year-old girl was admitted to the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary because of a mass in the left parotid gland.

    The patient had been well until four or five months earlier, when a lump in the left side of her neck was first ...

    Editorials
    1998-1999

    The utility of disease classifications depends greatly on the tools used. The lower the resolving power, the more subjective and controversial the interpretation. As has been the case throughout the history of lymphoma taxonomy, this often leads to a ...

    1999-2001

    Renovascular hypertension is a potentially curable form of secondary hypertension generally due to either atherosclerosis or fibromuscular dysplasia of one or both renal arteries.1,2 The critical element promoting hypertension in this disorder is reduced ...

    Sounding Board
    2002-2005

    The therapeutic promise of transplanting organs from cadaveric donors, as envisioned by the pioneers of transplantation,1 has never been realized because the demand for cadaveric organs has far exceeded the supply. The waiting list for organ transplants ...

    Correspondence
    2007-2008

    To the Editor: Seshadri and colleagues (Feb. 14 issue)1 report that high homocysteine levels are a risk factor for Alzheimer's disease. The effect of homocysteine on brain tissue is influenced by the absence within this tissue of two of the major ...

    2008-2010

    To the Editor: Oral et al. (Feb. 21 issue)1 demonstrate convincingly that treatment with leptin decreases triglyceride levels, improves insulin resistance, and ameliorates diabetes in patients with lipodystrophy and leptin deficiency. Minokoshi et al. ...

    2010

    To the Editor: Firschke and Zrenner (Feb. 7 issue)1 describe a case of inadvertent malposition of a right ventricular pacing lead in the left ventricle. The patient was taking aspirin for coronary artery disease. Surprisingly, the authors state, “No ...

    2010-2013

    To the Editor: There is a conflict between the conception of health care as a free-market economic process and the notion that health care represents one of society's obligations to its citizens. We cannot have it both ways. Physicians are also caught ...

    2013-2014

    To the Editor: Ley and Rosenberg (Jan. 31 issue)1 fail to note that a high average debt load is common among physicians entering private practice and those training for careers in medical science. What differentiates the two pathways financially is ...

    2014-2015

    To the Editor: Human T-cell lymphotrophic virus type I (HTLV-I) infection is uncommon in the United States. During the period from 1991 to 1996, the incidence of seropositivity for HTLV-I or human T-cell lymphotrophic virus type II (HTLV-II) in U.S. ...

    2015
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    Your sunken eyes plead with me

    Volcanic orbits wasted of sculptured fat

    Burned in failure's fire

    Your listless gaze pleads with me

    To offer a clue —

    We both know your cancer

    Sneaks about within you

    Evading my mortal knife —

    On this day as dusk settles

    ...

    Book Reviews
    2016-2017
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    Once long-term treatment of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) became an entitlement under Medicare in 1972, a disorder that had usually been fatal was magically transformed into a chronic condition, but this transformation came with the enormous logistic ...

    2017

    As stated in the introduction, Food Politics is about how the food industry influences what we eat and therefore influences our health. It discusses the history of dietary advice and guidance in the 20th century; governmental and regulatory practices; the ...

    Correction
    2018

    Tissue Plasminogen Activator in Cardiac Arrest with Pulseless Electrical Activity Original Article, N Engl J Med 2002:346;1522-1528.. In the left-hand column of page 1527, line 3 of the second full paragraph should have read “1 of 42 patients,” rather ...