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| [[Image:Brian Blank.jpg|50px|left|Brian Blank]] '''Jannuary 17, 2009: Brian Blank Formerly of CNN, Fox Becomes First WikiDoc Scholar in Medical Journalism'''
| | '''Jannuary 17, 2009: Brian Blank Formerly of CNN, Fox Becomes First WikiDoc Scholar in Medical Journalism''' |
| *[[User:Brian Blank| Brian Blank has joined WikiDoc as its inaugural Scholar in Medical Journalism. Blank will be heading WikiDoc's international news bureau. Blank graduated from the University of Missouri-Columbia in 2003 with a degree in broadcast journalism. After working in local TV and radio, he moved to CNN in Atlanta as a researcher. There he assisted reporters and producers in CNN’s duPont award-winning coverage of the 2004 South Asia tsunami disaster and Peabody award-winning coverage of 2005’s Hurricane Katrina. He went on to do some reporting for CNN Radio in New York before moving to FOX in 2007. There he helped start the FOX Business Network as anchor Neil Cavuto’s producer. In 2008 he left that and moved to Cambridge, MA to complete a post-baccalaureate pre-med program at Harvard University in hopes of attending medical school in the future.]]
| | Brian Blank has joined WikiDoc as its inaugural Scholar in Medical Journalism. Blank will be heading WikiDoc's international news bureau. Blank graduated from the University of Missouri-Columbia in 2003 with a degree in broadcast journalism. After working in local TV and radio, he moved to CNN in Atlanta as a researcher. There he assisted reporters and producers in CNN’s duPont award-winning coverage of the 2004 South Asia tsunami disaster and Peabody award-winning coverage of 2005’s Hurricane Katrina. He went on to do some reporting for CNN Radio in New York before moving to FOX in 2007. There he helped start the FOX Business Network as anchor Neil Cavuto’s producer. In 2008 he left that and moved to Cambridge, MA to complete a post-baccalaureate pre-med program at Harvard University in hopes of attending medical school in the future. |
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| '''January 16, 2009: Popular Health Risk Tools Don’t Find Heart Disease''' | | '''January 16, 2009: Popular Health Risk Tools Don’t Find Heart Disease''' |
Jannuary 17, 2009: Brian Blank Formerly of CNN, Fox Becomes First WikiDoc Scholar in Medical Journalism
Brian Blank has joined WikiDoc as its inaugural Scholar in Medical Journalism. Blank will be heading WikiDoc's international news bureau. Blank graduated from the University of Missouri-Columbia in 2003 with a degree in broadcast journalism. After working in local TV and radio, he moved to CNN in Atlanta as a researcher. There he assisted reporters and producers in CNN’s duPont award-winning coverage of the 2004 South Asia tsunami disaster and Peabody award-winning coverage of 2005’s Hurricane Katrina. He went on to do some reporting for CNN Radio in New York before moving to FOX in 2007. There he helped start the FOX Business Network as anchor Neil Cavuto’s producer. In 2008 he left that and moved to Cambridge, MA to complete a post-baccalaureate pre-med program at Harvard University in hopes of attending medical school in the future.
January 16, 2009: Popular Health Risk Tools Don’t Find Heart Disease
January 16, 2009: Cholesterol Levels May Not Help Either
January 16, 2009: Heparin-Induced Antibodies Point To Thrombosis Risk
January 16, 2009: Superbugs Vs. Cancer Drugs
January 16, 2009: Senator: Schools Failing to Regulate Medical Conflicts of Interest
January 16, 2009: Coffee Can Reduce Alzheimer’s, Cause Hallucinations
January 6, 2009: Cytochrome P450 2C19 polymorphism linked to poor outcomes for young MI patients treated with clopidogrel
- Patients who had CYP2C19*2 genetic variant in the CYP2C19 gene and were treated with clopidogrel after a myocardial infarction (MI) demonstrated worse cardiovascular outcomes than patients with a normal copy of the cytochrome P450 2C19 encoding gene, according to a study published in the Lancet. The study population was composed of 259 patients, all under the age of 45, who received clopidogrel treatments for at least one month (median exposure time was 1.07 years (IQR 0.28-3.0)). Patients who were carriers of the CYP2C19*2 genetic variant had 15 primary endpoint events, which was a composite of death, MI, and urgent revascularisation during treatment with clopidogrel, while non-carriers had only 11 primary endpoint events (HR 3.69 (95% CI 1.69-8.05), p=0.0005). Further, the study demonstrated that the CYP2C19*2 genetic variant "was the only independent predictor of cardiovascular events (HR 4.04 (1.81-9.02), p=0.0006)." The investigators noted that additional genetic variants, such as CYP2C19*17, may play a role in the reduced responsiveness to clopidogrel and that it remains unclear if a higher maintenance dose could overcome this reduced clopidogrel responsiveness.(Lancet by Jean-Philippe Collet, et al.)
December 22, 2008: Tenecteplase did not improve outcomes compared to placebo during CPR for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
December 22, 2008: Diabetes Drugs to Face Tougher Risk Scrutiny
December 12, 2008: Arthritis Patients Remain at 50% Higher Risk of Cardiovascular Disease Death
December 11, 2008: Backward health-care reform
December 10, 2008: Sex Differences in Medical Care and Early Death After Acute Myocardial Infarction
- In an analysis of data from the Get With the Guidelines - Coronary Artery Disease (GWTG- CAD) registry, researchers investigated gender differences in methods of care and in-hospital deaths based on 78,425 acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patients in 420 US hospitals between 2001 to 2006. After multivariable adjustment, there were no significant differences found for in-hospital mortality between men and women overall; however, in an analysis of the STEMI subpopulation, researchers reported that women had a 12% greater risk of in-hospital mortality (p=0.015). Additional differences were found in issues of medical care. Females were less likely to be treated within 24 hours with aspirin (adjusted odds ratio: 0.86, p <0.0001) or beta-blockers (adjusted odds ratio: 0.90, p <0.0001), were less likely to receive reperfusion therapy within 30 minutes of arriving at the hospital (adjusted odds ratio: 0.78, p=0.004) and were less likely to undergo catheterization after their MI (adjusted odds ratio: 0.91, p<0.0001). These differences in guidelines-based treatment and outcomes reveal "the existing opportunities to improve the provision of healthcare among women hospitalized with AMI." (Circulation by Hani Jneid et al.)
December 10, 2008: Drugmakers Tap the Brakes on Ad Spending
December 9, 2008: Irbesartan does not benefit heart failure patients with preserved LVEF: Results of I-PRESERVE
- For heart failure patients with preserved left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), irbesartan therapy did not improve clinical outcomes, according to results published in the New England Journal of Medicine. The Irbesartan in Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction Study (I-PRESERVE) enrolled 4128 patients in 25 countries. Heart failure patients with LVEF >= 45% were randomized to either 75mg irbesartan or placebo daily, with the dosage doubling every 1-2 weeks. Irbesartan, an angiotensin II receptor antagonist, is used as a treatment for hypertension. Researchers hypothesized that because the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system plays a role in heart failure, irbesartan therapy might provide a benefit to the 50% of heart failure patients with a preserved LVEF. At a mean follow-up of 49.5 months, however, there was no significant difference in rates of all-cause death or cardiovascular-related hospitalization between drug and placebo groups (100.4/1000 patient-years vs 105.4/1000 patient-years, p=0.35). Researchers suggested that the negative results may have been due to a suboptimal drug dosage, a high rate of drug discontinuation (34%), as well as high rates of patients taking other renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors. (NEJM by Barrie Massie et al.)
December 9, 2008: Sex Differences in Morphology and Outcomes of Mitral Valve Prolapse
- In a retrospective cohort study at the Mayo Clinic, researchers found that mitral valve prolapse (MVP) occurs more frequently in females but that surgery for severe mitral valve regurgitation occurs more frequently in men. In an examination of echocardiograms from 1989 through 1998, 4461 women and 3768 men were diagnosed with MVP. 52% of females and 60% of males with severe regurgitation underwent surgery (adjusted risk ratio: 0.79) and women in this category of severe regurgitation had a lower survival rate compared to men (60% vs 68% respectively, adjusted risk ratio: 1.13). Women also had lower posterior leaflet prolapsed (22% vs 31%, p<0.001), greater thickening (32% vs 28%, p<0.001), and less flail (2% vs 8%, p<0.001). Importantly, the difference in survival at 10 years was not statistically significant between women and men who underwent mitral valve surgery (77% vs 79%, p=0.14). These results suggest that the benefits in outcome arising from surgery occur for both genders. Future studies of MVP and severe mitral regurgitation should further elucdiate the gender-specific differences (Annals of Internal Medicine by Jean-Francois Avierinos et al.)
December 2, 2008: Arrogant, Abusive and Disruptive -- and a Doctor
December 1, 2008: Scrutiny Grows of Drug Trials Abroad
- Drug companies are being placed under the microscope by regulatory agencies and consumer watchdog groups to ensure that clinical trials in developing countries are being conducted in accordance with currently accepted medical and ethical practices. Pharmaceutical companies are increasingly carrying out clinical trials in low-income countries because of benefits, such as lower cost, faster enrollment, and greater patient willingness to participate, offered within these nations. Along with these benefits, though, there are a number of concerns. Within the past year, patient deaths in clinical trials testing new vaccines by Wyeth and Novartis have raised questions about the recruitment and screening of patients. Many regulators and watchdog groups are concerned that investigators in developing countries may improperly recruit patients to boost enrollment or produce questionable data in order to gain the favor of large drug manufacturers. Additionally, critics of this practice are concerned that patients in low-income countries will be unable to afford the study drugs when they become available on the open market. (Wall Street Journal by Shirley S. Wang, Geeta Anand, and Jeanne Whalen))
December 1, 2008: Heart disease 'reversed in mice'
November 25, 2008: New Arena for Testing of Drugs: Real World
November 25, 2008: Subtle Science: Heading Off Heart Attacks in Women
November 24, 2008: Studies Say Private Medicare Plans Have Added Costs, for Little Gain
November 11, 2008: A Call for Caution in the Rush to Statins
November 10, 2008: Adjusting Clopidogrel loading dose according to platelet reactivity monitoring is associated with a decreased rate of stent thrombosis and no increase in bleeding
November 10, 2008: JUPITER Trial Demonstrates Effectiveness of Statin Therapy in Reducing Cardiovascular Events among Healthy Patients
November 10, 2008: GWAS results about susceptibility loci for intracranial aneurysm in European and Japanese populations are released
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