Join the 200th Anniversary Celebration

Issue IndexA searchable index of tables of contents

Find An Issue

By Volume and Issue
By Date

Table of contents for

July 18, 2002  Vol. 347 No. 3

Perspective
158-159

Left ventricular dysfunction, regardless of its cause, results in characteristic hemodynamic derangements and a process of neurohormonal activation. Among the neuronal and hormonal pathways activated are the sympathetic nervous system, the renin–...

Original Articles
161-167

B-type natriuretic peptide is released from the ventricles of the heart in response to hemodynamic stress, and blood levels of B-type natriuretic peptide may be useful in the diagnosis of heart failure. In this study, a rapid, bedside immunoassay for B-type natriuretic peptide was used to make or exclude the diagnosis of heart failure in patients with acute dyspnea from various causes. The assay was found to have good sensitivity and excellent specificity in the diagnosis of heart failure.

168-174

This prospective cohort study of 11,893 men in Taiwan examined the relation between the base-line prevalence of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) and the subsequent development of hepatocellular carcinoma. There were 39 cases of hepatocellular carcinoma per 100,000 person-years of follow-up among men who were negative for both antigens at enrollment, 324 cases per 100,000 person-years among men who were positive for HBsAg but negative for HBeAg, and 1169 cases per 100,000 person-years among those who were positive for both HBsAg and HBeAg.

175-184

Juvenile Paget's disease is an autosomal recessive osteopathy characterized by rapidly remodeling woven bone, osteopenia, fractures, and progressive skeletal deformity. Its molecular basis is not known. Since osteoprotegerin suppresses bone turnover, functioning as a decoy receptor for osteoclast differentiation factor, the authors sought to identify mutations in the gene for this protein (TNFRSF11B) in two unrelated Navajo patients. Studies that included polymerase-chain-reaction amplification followed by direct sequencing, as well as Southern blotting of genomic DNA, revealed a homozygous deletion of TNFRSF11B in both patients.

185-192

Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) mediates the innate immune response to gram-negative bacteria and other pathogens. This study found that a common polymorphism of TLR4 (Asp299Gly), which attenuates receptor signaling, is associated with an increased risk of systemic infection, lower circulating levels of certain inflammatory markers, and a reduced risk of atherosclerosis.

Images in Clinical Medicine
193
  • Free Full Text

Figure 1. A 62-year-old former smoker presented with a 20-year history of breathlessness that worsened when she lay flat and particularly when she swam. Chest radiography (Panel A) showed an elevated left hemidiaphragm and a mediastinal shift to the ...

Clinical Practice
194-199

    A woman visits the doctor for her six-week postpartum evaluation. She reports that she cannot sleep even if her baby sleeps. She cries daily and worries constantly. She does not feel hungry and is not eating regularly. Making decisions is overwhelming. How should she be evaluated and treated?

    Case Records of the Massachusetts General Hospital
    200-206

    Presentation of Case

    A 37-year-old man was admitted to the hospital because of three weeks of intermittent fever and abdominal and back pain.

    The patient had been well until about seven months earlier, one month after he had begun a difficult trip by land ...

    Editorials
    208-210

    The external pernicious influences of wind and dampness cause liver Qi to stagnate, and excess damp heat in liver and weakness of spleen Qi result.

    — From the teachings of traditional Chinese medicine

    Just as traditional Chinese medicine teaches us to ...

    210-212

    Over the past decade, we have learned a great deal about how skeletal development and remodeling are controlled.1 Some of our knowledge has been derived from genetic analysis of diseases in humans, whereas other important information has come from ...

    Clinical Implications of Basic Research
    213-215

    In a recently published study, investigators at Columbia University reported on a mouse model in which the forebrain serotonin-1A receptor was knocked out. The mice demonstrated inhibition of certain aspects of behavior. For example, when placed in an open area the affected mice were less likely to explore than normal mice. In this commentary, Dr. Freedman discusses the implications of this provocative research for the genetic control of human behavior.

    Correspondence
    216-218

    To the Editor: Côté et al. (March 14 issue)1 propose that the mitochondrial DNA level in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) be measured as a marker of nucleoside toxicity. The fact that nucleoside analogues can cause a ...

    218-220

    To the Editor: Körbling et al. (March 7 issue)1 report that some cytokeratin-positive epidermal cells are of donor origin in recipients of peripheral-blood stem-cell allografts.1 Because of the technical limitations of identifying epidermal cells of ...

    220

    To the Editor: With regard to the study by Bergqvist et al. (March 28 issue),1 since cancer is a risk factor for thromboembolism2,3 and postsurgical immobilization adds to the risk, was it ethical to conduct a double-blind trial comparing low-molecular-...

    220-222

    To the Editor: In his review of chronic urticaria and angioedema (Jan. 17 issue),1 Kaplan recommends doses of fexofenadine, cetirizine, and loratadine as high as twice the doses recommended on the package labels for the control of pruritus and hives. The ...

    222-223
    • Free Full Text

    To the Editor: Mazzone and Dal Canton describe a case of hypercarotenemia in a young woman (March 14 issue).1 If a young female patient presents with hypercarotenemia, anorexia nervosa should be considered.2 A history of a low-calorie diet composed of ...

    223

    To the Editor: In their letter about aortic pseudocoarctation as a cause of refractory hypertension, Joseph et al. (March 7 issue)1 describe aortic narrowing by an intraluminal mass associated with a pressure gradient and weak femoral pulses. ...

    223

    To the Editor: I recently treated an Army Special Forces soldier who presented with a three-month history of purulent sinusitis that was not responding to self-medication. After much prodding, he related that he had been taking a combination of ...

    Book Reviews
    224-225

    Since the mid-1960s, Congress has passed a plethora of bills intended to protect Americans against addictive drugs, toxic substances, and defective consumer products. An alphabet soup of agencies with regulatory authority for health and safety has banned ...

    225-226

    Relapse is a persistent feature of addiction. Relapse seems so self-destructive that persons who are not addicted have difficulty understanding it, whereas those who are addicted know it all too well. Clinicians struggle with the problem of relapse and ...