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Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine

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    The end of the diet debates?
    Arthur S. Agatston, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine October 2005, 72 (10) 946-950;

    The healthiest diet is a Mediterranean type that features foods that are high in omega-3 fatty acids, unsaturated fats, and fiber, and that have a low glycemic index.

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    Managing short bowel syndrome: Making the most of what the patient still has
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    Carol A. Langford, MD, MHS
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    Although Wegener granulomatosis is uncommon, it is relevant to internists because it is a multisystem disease that presents in a variety of ways. Current treatments induce remission and allow long-term survival.

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    Treating depression in a mother of five: What to do when the first step fails
    George E. Tesar, MD
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    If depression does not respond to an antidepressant given in adequate doses for an adequate time, logical next steps include increasing the dose, adding a different medication, or adding nonpharmacologic therapy. Or one can reconsider the diagnosis.

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    Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy: Overdiagnosis is appropriate
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    Advances in the treatment of hemorrhagic stroke: A possible new treatment
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    Amir K. Jaffer, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine February 2005, 72 (2) 157-163;

    Three cases—an idiopathic deep venous thrombosis, a pulmonary embolism in a cancer patient, and scheduled surgery in a patient with a mechanical heart valve—introduce discussions of how evidence can be incorporated into clinical practice.

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    Three rheumatologic emergencies: A sore toe, a cough, hypertension
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