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December 12, 2002  Vol. 347 No. 24

Perspective
1906-1907

In the opening scene of the movie “Dances with Wolves,” dazed Union Army soldiers with mangled limbs are laid out, resigned to their turn at the surgeon's cleaver. This scene is typical of health care in the mid-19th century, when severe leg trauma would ...

Original Articles
1909-1915

At a day-care center in New Hampshire, an outbreak of varicella affected 25 healthy young children, including 17 who had been vaccinated against varicella. The index patient was a four-year-old who had been vaccinated three years earlier. In this outbreak, the effectiveness of previous varicella vaccination was only 44 percent against disease of any severity, but it was 86 percent against moderate or severe disease.

1916-1923

The risk of myocardial infarction is known to be influenced by genetic factors, but few such factors have been identified. This study found that a polymorphism in the connexin 37 gene in men and polymorphisms in the plasminogen-activator inhibitor type 1 gene and the stromelysin-1 gene in women were associated with an increased risk of myocardial infarction.

1924-1931

This observational study compared two-year outcomes of patients with severe leg injuries who underwent reconstruction or amputation. The health status (as measured by a multidimensional instrument) of patients who had undergone reconstruction was similar to that of patients who had undergone amputation.

Images in Clinical Medicine
1932
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Figure 1. A 45-year-old man with a biopsy-proven pineal tumor was on the seventh day of his first cycle of chemotherapy when symptoms of meningeal irritation and confusion developed. Polymerase chain reaction of cerebrospinal fluid revealed herpes simplex ...

Special Article
1933-1940

According to this national survey, neither the public nor physicians view medical errors as one of the most important problems of the U.S. health care system. Practicing physicians and the public believe individual health care professionals are responsible for most errors. These findings are in sharp contrast to the Institute of Medicine's report that medical errors are widespread and the result of failures in systems, not individuals. The discrepancy between these views is likely to impede the success of efforts to reduce medical errors.

Review Article
1941-1951

    Claudication, a manifestation of systemic atherosclerosis and accompanying peripheral vascular disease, is characterized by pain induced by walking in one or both legs; it primarily affects the calves. Claudication usually does not abate with continued walking and is relieved only by rest. Since the effects of approved medication are usually limited, exercise programs have been developed to treat this painful condition. This review discusses the rationale for an exercise program for the patient with claudication, with a focus on pathophysiology and the effect of training.

    Case Records of the Massachusetts General Hospital
    1952-1960

    Presentation of Case

    A 54-year-old man was admitted to the hospital because of possible metastatic carcinoma with hypercalcemia and renal dysfunction.

    The patient had been in good health until about six weeks earlier. At that time, he began a reduced-...

    Editorials
    1962-1963

    The live attenuated varicella vaccine was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 1995 for routine use in healthy persons older than one year of age who are susceptible to varicella. Children are given one dose of vaccine; two doses one to two ...

    1963-1965

    Today, a person's genetic background is considered in every aspect of clinical medicine, ranging from susceptibility to diseases, pathogenesis, and clinical outcome to diversity in responses to drug treatment (pharmacogenomics). The new panoramic look at ...

    1965-1967

    No one disputes the goal — a health care system that can reliably provide high-quality care with minimal waste to all in need. Disagreement begins with the question of which problems are most urgent. Some cite inequities in access to care; others ...

    Clinical Implications of Basic Research
    1968-1970

    Apoptosis causes the death of photoreceptors in macular degeneration and retinitis pigmentosa and the death of retinal ganglion cells in glaucoma. Receptors for erythropoietin are present in both types of cells, and in mice, erythropoietin blocks light-induced apoptosis of these cells. Erythropoietin has potential as a treatment for degenerative retinal diseases.

    Sounding Board
    1971-1975

    In this Sounding Board article, the author describes the changes in public policy and in the marketplace that have placed stress on the U.S. health care system over the past decade. The system has showed considerable homeostasis, and its structure has not changed dramatically. The author contends, however, that we have not addressed the underlying problems and that the turbulence of the past 10 years has left our health care system with little reserve and vulnerable to collapse.

    Correspondence
    1976-1978

    To the Editor: Maisel et al. (July 18 issue)1 suggest the usefulness of measurement of B-type natriuretic peptide in the diagnosis of left ventricular dysfunction in patients with acute dyspnea, but their conclusions must be challenged. With a cutoff ...

    1978-1980

    To the Editor: Kiechl and colleagues (July 18 issue)1 provide interesting evidence that the toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) 896G (299Gly) polymorphism may confer susceptibility to bacterial infection. As part of ongoing collaborative projects,24 we have ...

    1980-1982

    To the Editor: Kreiss et al. (Aug. 1 issue)1 report a high incidence of bronchiolitis obliterans at a microwave-popcorn factory. The chemical diacetyl (2,3-butanedione) was singled out as a possible causal agent of this deadly condition and other medical ...

    1982-1984

    To the Editor: In his review of inflammatory bowel disease (Aug. 8 issue),1 Podolsky refers to interleukin-10 as a down-regulatory cytokine, citing findings in murine models. However, recent data do not support an antiinflammatory role for interleukin-10 ...

    1984

    To the Editor: The review by Ryan and colleagues (Aug. 15 issue)1 about illness after international travel focuses mainly on tropical diseases, but common bacterial infections are a leading cause of illness in travelers.

    Of 779 American travelers in one ...

    1984-1985

    To the Editor: The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 5 million unsafe abortions are performed annually in Africa, resulting in the deaths of an estimated 34,000 women.1 In Africa, abortion is illegal or very restricted, making it difficult ...

    Book Reviews
    1986

    This book is an autobiographical account by a classicist and fellow of St. Catherine's College, Oxford, who received a diagnosis of multiple myeloma. He refused conventional medical treatment yet has survived for more than eight years. His case was ...

    1986-1987
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    Myeloma is a comprehensive overview of multiple myeloma and related plasma-cell disorders. Almost all the international experts in the field have contributed to this book. The numerous remarkable figures, schematic diagrams, photographs, and tables make ...

    1987-1988
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    The past three decades have witnessed substantial advances in our knowledge of the pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of colorectal cancer. Despite these developments, colorectal cancer remains a considerable public health problem, with an estimated ...

    1988
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    This book on prostate cancer is the latest in a series of books published on behalf of the American Cancer Society. It is a formidable task to provide a comprehensive overview of all aspects of prostate cancer in a single volume, and the authors, led by ...

    Correction
    1990

    Case Records of the Massachusetts General Hospital (Case 22-2002) Case Records of the Massachusetts General Hospital, N Engl J Med 2002:347;200-206.. Line 1 of the right-hand column of page 204 should have read “Brucella abortus in the case of cows and B. ...

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