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department:Medicine. General Internal Medicine

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14543


CLOTTING CONCERNS LEAD TO CHANGE IN ARTIFICIAL HEART [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Abiomed said that because it had found evidence of clots on struts in the AbioCor hearts removed at autopsy from two patients, it was changing the design to remove a plastic cage on a surgical cuff that attaches to tissue in the recipient
PROQUEST:101902234
ISSN: 0744-8139
CID: 83543

When statistics provide unsatisfying answers: revisiting the breast self-examination controversy [Comment]

Lerner, Barron H
PMCID:99275
PMID: 11826945
ISSN: 0820-3946
CID: 170784

Arne H. W. Larsson, 86; Had First Internal Pacemaker [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
The two scientists rigged a device about the size of a thin hockey puck, and on Oct. 8, 1958, Dr. [Ake Senning] cut open Mr. [Arne H. W. Larsson]'s chest to implant it. Eight hours later, the pacemaker failed. Dr. Senning then implanted the only backup, one with batteries that had to be recharged every few hours. The pacemaker worked, on and off, for three years. Subsequently, Mr. Larsson underwent 25 operations and procedures to replace pacemakers that failed for one reason or another and to receive newer devices that were smaller, smarter, safer and more durable and versatile. Implanting a pacemaker no longer requires the chest surgery that Mr. Larsson underwent
PROQUEST:100463006
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 83544

Bush to Be Monitored in Wake of Fainting Episode [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Mr. [Bush] fainted after a pretzel stuck in his throat and he gagged and coughed. Dr. Richard J. Tubb, the White House physician, said pressure from the pretzel on Mr. Bush's esophagus stimulated the vagal nerve, which connects the brain and the heart and other organs. The vagal action slowed Mr. Bush's heartbeat and lowered his blood pressure, making him faint, a reaction that is called vaso-vagal syncope. Dr. Tubb said in an interview that he based the diagnosis on his examination on findings from several standard tests. Dr. Tubb said a cardiologist and neurologist who had examined Mr. Bush during an extensive medical checkup on Aug. 4, Mr. Bush's first as president, concurred in the diagnosis. Ms. [Cindy Wright] checked Mr. Bush's blood pressure, which was 111/70 and pulse, which was 51, both normal levels for him. After Ms. Wright paged him and another White House doctor, Bill Lang, at 5:48 p.m., Dr. Tubb said, he drove to the White House and found Mr. Bush ''sitting on his couch.'' Mr. Bush was wearing his reading glasses, which were twisted, but the lenses were intact
PROQUEST:99637478
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 83545

Anthrax missteps mold future plan ; Health officials dissect reaction to bioterror threat [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K; Kolata, Gina
[Robert Stevens] worked in a state where no anthrax had been reported in years. Inhalation anthrax was virtually unknown in the United States. [Larry M. Bush] interviewed Stevens' wife, who said her husband opened letters all day, and concluded that the anthrax had come through the postal system. Bush said he told local health officials, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the FBI about his suspicions
PROQUEST:98313418
ISSN: 1085-6706
CID: 83546

Anthrax missteps provide lessons / Officials study handling of outbreak [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K; Kolata, Gina
[Robert Stevens] worked in an office, in a state where no anthrax had been reported in years. And inhalation anthrax was virtually unknown in the United States. [Larry Bush] interviewed Stevens' wife, who said her husband opened letters all day, and concluded that the anthrax had come through the postal system. Bush said he told local health officials, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the FBI about his suspicions. Scientists knew that anthrax spores could lie dormant in soil for decades and then cause disease. They also knew that inhalation anthrax occurred when spores entered the lungs and were swept into lymph nodes in the mediastinum, in the middle of the chest, where they germinated and pumped out toxins. But scientists still had much to learn. Medical experts also misjudged the difficulty that doctors would have in diagnosing inhalation anthrax, assuming that a sophisticated surveillance system was needed to detect an attack. But Bush, the Florida infectious disease expert, said he knew immediately what was wrong with Stevens, the first patient with inhalation anthrax
PROQUEST:98379591
ISSN: 1074-7109
CID: 83547

Anthrax Missteps Offer Guide To Fight Next Bioterror Battle [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K; Kolata, Gina
Mr. [Robert Stevens] worked in an office, in a state where no anthrax had been reported in years. And inhalation anthrax was virtually unknown in the United States; almost all of the very few cases had occurred in workers exposed to airborne spores -- by working with hides of infected animals, for example. Dr. [Larry M. Bush] interviewed Mr. Stevens's wife, who said her husband opened letters all day, and concluded that the anthrax had come through the postal system. Dr. Bush said he told local health officials, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Federal Bureau of Investigation about his suspicions. Medical textbooks say that inhalation anthrax starts with mild, flulike symptoms that are hard to recognize, and that by the time it progresses to its severe phase, it is easy to diagnose but virtually impossible to cure. But the two postal workers who came to the emergency room at Inova Fairfax in October did not have textbook symptoms. The first patient did not even seem very ill, but a CT scan of his chest showed telltale signs of anthrax. The second patient complained of the worst headache of his life. But he did not have the classic signs of inhalation anthrax -- bacteria in his spinal fluid and abnormalities in a chest scan. Doctors learned he had anthrax only when they examined his blood and saw the characteristic boxcar-shaped anthrax bacteria. Dr. Larry M. Bush diagnosed anthrax in a Florida patient in October. (Alex Quesada/Matrix, for The New York Times)(pg. 1); Dr. [Julie L. Gerberding] -- Acting deputy director, Center for Infectious Diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: ''In retrospect, we were certainly not prepared for layers and levels of collaboration that would be required.'' (Alan S. Weiner for The New York Times); Dr. [D. A. Henderson] -- Director, federal Office of Public Preparedness: ''Everything we knew about the disease just did not fit with what was going on. We were totally baffled.'' (Carol T. Powers for The New York Times); Dr. [John F. Eisold] -- The Capitol physician, on the anthrax mailed to Senator [Tom Daschle]'s office: ''People thought each spore was plutonium.'' (Stephen Crowley/The New York Times)(pg. 16)
PROQUEST:98305800
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 83548

Obesity

Wolf, Corri; Tanner, Michael
PMCID:1071649
PMID: 11788535
ISSN: 0093-0415
CID: 39729

American project: The rise and fall of a modern ghetto. [Book Review]

Conley, D
ISI:000176739000022
ISSN: 0002-9602
CID: 1952862

Common ground [General Interest Article]

Ofri, Danielle
The decision about abortion is a difficult one, not one that Ofri would wish anyone to face. While doctors often unconsciously separate themselves from patients, it is humbling to know that they are made of the same stuff as other people
PROQUEST:95894361
ISSN: 0887-9982
CID: 86152