In the News


At-home sleep studies may be noninferior to those at centers

Study results support the use of at-home sleep testing equipment in clinical practice, the authors wrote.

Previous asthma diagnosis may no longer be accurate in adults

A substantial proportion of adults with previously physician-diagnosed asthma may not have a current diagnosis, due possibly to spontaneous asthma remission or to misdiagnosis of asthma in the community, study authors wrote.

MKSAP Quiz: follow-up visit for gout

A 55-year-old man is evaluated during a follow-up visit for gout. Two years ago, he had been treated with allopurinol and developed a hypersensitivity reaction. Over the past several months, he has had recurrent attacks of acute, episodic swelling of the first metatarsophalangeal joints with increasing involvement of other joints, including the ankles and knees. Laboratory studies showed significant hyperuricemia. History is also significant for Crohn disease, hypertension, chronic kidney disease (estimated glomerular filtration rate of 55 mL/min/1.73 m2), and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. Current medications are diltiazem and azathioprine, which he has been taking for the past 9 months. Which of these is a contraindication to the use of febuxostat in this patient?

Annals launches redesigned website

The new article layout makes it easier for users to navigate through content and its associated elements, from abstracts and tables and figures to CME/MOC and related articles, as well as makes it easier to view Annals' growing online offerings and multimedia features, including web-exclusive content.

Migraine may be linked to perioperative stroke, hospital readmission

Use of high-dose vasopressors during surgery and history of a possible right-to-left shunt might be modifiable risk factors in patients who have migraine with aura, and close postoperative monitoring for early detection of stroke symptoms in high-risk patients is essential, researchers said.

New ACP Practice Advisor Module addresses medication management

Physicians can learn how to develop collaborative medication management care plans and identify barriers to appropriate medication use consistent with patients' strengths, needs, preferences, and values.

Put words in our mouth

ACP Internist Weekly wants readers to create captions for our new cartoon and help choose the winner. Pen the winning caption and win a $50 gift certificate good toward any ACP product, program, or service.