Volume 18 - Number 02 - February, 2010

Clinical Geriatrics

02/12/2010
Melinda S. Lantz, MD
Depressive features are relatively common among patients who have dementia.
02/12/2010
02/12/2010
Evelyn Gleeson, MBBCh; Leslie Wolfson, MD
Neuromuscular disease is both common in older persons and often treatable.
02/12/2010
02/12/2010
Daniel DeJoseph, MD; Amber Stonehouse, MD; Beth Careyva, MD; James Studdiford, MD
Clinicians should educate their patients about safe sex, inquire about their patients’ sexual practices, and assess their patients’ risk for STDs and HIV.
02/12/2010
02/12/2010
Carla Aresco, RN, MS, CRNP; Steven R. Gambert, MD, AGSF, MACP; Deborah M. Stein, MD, MPH, FACS
Many elderly patients with SCI have incomplete injuries and can recover significant neurologic function.
02/12/2010
02/12/2010
Patrick Griffith, MD, FAAN
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is especially prevalent, underdiagnosed, and undertreated in African-American and Hispanic-American populations.
02/12/2010
02/12/2010
Stephanie C. McClure, MD, FACP; Katherine Chauncey, PhD, RD; Ryan D. Nipp
Vitamin A has several medicinal uses; however, many older adults also use vitamin A prophylactically.
02/12/2010
02/12/2010
Mahesh Krishnamurthy, MD, FACP
There is increasing evidence that, rather than being benign and self-limiting, AKA may be a significant cause of mortality in patients with alcohol dependence.
02/12/2010
02/12/2010
Steven R. Gambert, MD, AGSF, MACP
Any traumatic injury may result in many liters of blood hidden in body cavities or as hematomas in fracture sites and soft tissues.
02/12/2010
02/12/2010
Daniel J. Luchins, MD
In medicine, we tend to think about end-of-life issues as ethical or legal concerns.
02/12/2010
12/09/2009
Suzanne V. Arnold, MD, MHA; Michael W. Rich, MD
Would non–high-density lipoprotein (HDL) or APO-B have a role in risk assessment of hyperlipidemia in older adults?
12/09/2009