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October 21, 2004  Vol. 351 No. 17

Perspective
1707-1709

On May 21, 1999, Merck was granted approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to market rofecoxib (Vioxx). On September 30, 2004, after more than 80 million patients had taken this medicine and annual sales had topped $2.5 billion, the company ...

1709-1711
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The coxibs are a subclass of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) designed to inhibit selectively cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2).1 Their development was based on the hypothesis that COX-2 was the source of prostaglandins E2 and I2, which mediate ...

1711-1713

Keith R. Yamamoto discusses the $3 billion bond measure that will be put before the California voters to provide state funds for human embryonic stem-cell research.

1714-1716

Joseph P. Newhouse writes that as the candidates confront the budget deficit, they will come eyeball to eyeball with the projected increase in federal spending that is accounted for by Medicare.

1716-1718

Enormous progress made during the past few decades has dramatically enhanced our understanding of the pathobiology and pathophysiology responsible for acute myocardial infarction. Investigations in vascular biology have elucidated the critical role of ...

1719-1720

    As is vividly illustrated by the report by Thwaites et al. in this issue of the Journal (pages 1741–1751), tuberculous meningitis continues to exact a devastating toll in developed and developing countries, despite the availability of effective ...

    Original Articles
    1721-1730

    This study examined exposure to traffic in urban areas as a potential trigger of myocardial infarction. A significant association was found between exposure to traffic and the onset of a myocardial infarction one hour later, whether the time spent in traffic was in a car, on a form of public transportation, or on a bicycle.

    1731-1740

    This randomized trial compared preoperative with postoperative chemoradiotherapy for locally advanced rectal cancer. Overall survival was similar in the two groups, but patients assigned to preoperative chemoradiotherapy had lower rates of local recurrence and fewer long-term toxic effects than patients in the postoperative group.

    1741-1751

    Even with antituberculosis therapy, tuberculous meningitis causes death or severe disability in more than half of affected adults. In this double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, conducted in Vietnam, dexamethasone treatment was associated with a reduced risk of death as compared with placebo (31.8 percent vs. 41.3 percent).

    1752-1763

    This study shows that three polymorphisms of the prostanoid prostaglandin D receptor gene (PTGDR) are associated with protection against asthma. Each of the polymorphisms affects the binding of a transcription factor that, in turn, influences the expression of PTGDR. Inheritance of the three polymorphisms that result in a low level of expression of PTGDR is associated with protection against asthma in European-American and African-American populations.

    Clinical Practice
    1764-1771

    A 42-year-old woman presents with a palpable mass on the left side of her neck. She has no neck pain and no symptoms of thyroid dysfunction. Physical examination reveals a solitary, mobile thyroid nodule, 2 cm by 3 cm, without lymphadenopathy. The patient has no family history of thyroid disease and no history of external irradiation. Which investigations should be performed? Assuming that the nodule is benign, which, if any, treatment should be recommended?

    Review Article
    1772-1777

    RNA interference (RNAi) involves the use of easily generated RNA fragments to down-regulate gene expression in a highly specific manner. Since its discovery, about seven years ago, the method has quickly evolved and is now a routine application in many molecular laboratories. Recent success in treating animal models of disease indicates that RNAi also has the potential to treat human disease.

    Images in Clinical Medicine
    1778
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    A 62-year-old woman received six cycles of docetaxel chemotherapy during a six-month period for recurrent metastatic breast cancer. She had completed treatment four weeks before this photograph was taken. Six evenly spaced, transverse lines were noted on ...

    e15
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    A 73-year-old man with colon cancer presented with pain in the right hip, without a history of trauma.

    Case Records of the Massachusetts General Hospital
    1779-1787

      A 68-year-old man was found to have a large retroperitoneal mass on routine physical examination. Biopsy disclosed a gastrointestinal stromal tumor. After four months, the tumor had increased in size, although the patient remained asymptomatic. The discussants review recent advances in diagnosis and treatment of this type of tumor as they apply to the patient.

      Editorials
      1789-1790

      Dr. Jeffrey M. Drazen asserts that if we continue to prevent federal funds from being used to support this research in the United States, the ability of our biomedical scientists to compete with other research teams throughout the world will be ...

      1790-1792

      Although colon cancer and rectal cancer share many features, clinicians should be aware of important differences in the clinical behavior and treatment of these two distinct diseases. Prominent among these is the tendency for rectal cancer — but not colon ...

      1792-1794

      Tuberculosis continues to plague global health. The World Health Organization (WHO) has estimated an annual incidence of 8.8 million cases of tuberculosis worldwide, with 1.8 million deaths. Most of the disease burden is in Africa and Southeast Asia, ...

      1794-1796

        There are two causes of asthma — the environment and genetic variants. Each cause accounts for about 50 percent of the risk of the disease. The power of the public databases and the methods of genotyping used in genetics mean that the discovery of genes ...

        Correspondence
        1797-1798

        To the Editor: It is disappointing that Daley has changed his position on embryonic stem cells to make a political statement. In his Perspective article (Aug. 12 issue),1 he makes no mention of the utility of adult stem cells, despite his previous ...

        1798-1800

        To the Editor: Hoge et al. (July 1 issue)1 assessed mental health problems in members of the U.S. Army and Marine Corps who were involved in combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. Additional analyses might further elucidate their interesting ...

        1800-1802

        To the Editor: There are some basic methodologic flaws in the work by D'Amico et al. (July 8 issue).1 In their multivariate analyses, the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) velocity was modeled as a binary variable on the basis of a threshold of 2.0 ng per ...

        1802-1803

        To the Editor: Thompson et al. (May 27 issue)1 have provided a fascinating picture of the prevalence of prostate cancer in men with “normal” prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels in the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial. They found surprisingly high ...

        1803-1804

        To the Editor: In his excellent review of flavivirus encephalitis (July 22 issue),1 Solomon asserts that Murray Valley encephalitis virus causes disease in New Zealand. Until now, we have been unaware of any reports of flavivirus encephalitis in New ...

        1804-1805

        To the Editor: In the Case Records article about the care of a young woman with pleural and pericardial effusions, pulmonary nodules, and mediastinal lymphadenopathy, described by Nardell et al. (July 15 issue),1 the eventual diagnosis was found to be ...

        Book Reviews
        1806-1807

        Virtually everything that has been learned about myelin biology has helped to resolve either a medical or a scientific mystery. Myelin Biology and Disorders, an extraordinary compilation of knowledge about myelin and myelin diseases, benefits from the ...

        1807-1808

        During the past two decades, the rate of diagnosis of primary central nervous system lymphoma has more than doubled. Yet even though nearly 3 percent of brain tumors are primary central nervous system lymphomas, the various nonsurgical treatments for this ...