Index by author
May 01, 2011; Volume 78,Issue 5
Cherian, Kay
- You have accessTinnitus: Patients do not have to ‘just live with it’Craig W. Newman, PhD, Sharon A. Sandridge, PhD, Scott M. Bea, PsyD, Kay Cherian, PT, MPT, Cert MDT, Neil Cherian, MD, Karyn M. Kahn, DDS and James Kaltenbach, PhDCleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine May 2011, 78 (5) 312-319; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3949/ccjm.78a.10136
Physicians should actively listen to the patient and provide hope and encouragement, balanced with realistic expectations. Specialists can help.
Cherian, Neil
- You have accessTinnitus: Patients do not have to ‘just live with it’Craig W. Newman, PhD, Sharon A. Sandridge, PhD, Scott M. Bea, PsyD, Kay Cherian, PT, MPT, Cert MDT, Neil Cherian, MD, Karyn M. Kahn, DDS and James Kaltenbach, PhDCleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine May 2011, 78 (5) 312-319; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3949/ccjm.78a.10136
Physicians should actively listen to the patient and provide hope and encouragement, balanced with realistic expectations. Specialists can help.
Coats, Walter
- You have accessA 46-year-old man with fever, ST-segment elevationAtul Singla, MD, Walter Coats, MD and Gregory C. Flaker, MDCleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine May 2011, 78 (5) 286-288; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3949/ccjm.77a.10099
ST-segment elevation commonly represents acute myocardial infarction, but it is also associated with other conditions.
Cordova, Juan P.
- You have accessVisceral angioedema due to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor therapyAleksandr Korniyenko, MD, Carlos L. Alviar, MD, Juan P. Cordova, MD and Franz H. Messerli, MDCleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine May 2011, 78 (5) 297-304; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3949/ccjm.78a.10102
If a middle-aged woman taking an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor presents with abdominal pain and emesis, the differential diagnosis should include this uncommon but serious complication.