Latest Updates

Neuroimaging for the Clinician

    • Advances in CT technology have led to the development of multidetector scanners, which can be used to obtain  dynamic images of blood flow, thus noninvasively approximating the data obtained from catheter-based angiography. Selective vessel angiography is not yet possible with this technique because contrast administration is intravenous.
    • Functional MRI allows for anatomic localization of neurons activated during specific tasks by measuring the hemodynamic response coupled to increased brain activity. Functional MRI can assist in localization of the primary and supplementary motor cortices, somatosensory cortices, visual cortices, Broca and Wernicke areas, and other brain regions. 
    • The conventional angiographic technique used in the North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial (NASCET) compared lumen caliber at the point of maximal stenosis (often at or near the carotid bifurcation) with lumen caliber within a superior nonstenotic segment of the internal carotid artery to calculate  the percentage of stenosis. This approach could have greater spatial resolution than the more currently used  CT or MR angiography techniques.

Neuroimaging for the Clinician

    • Advances in CT technology have led to the development of multidetector scanners, which can be used to obtain  dynamic images of blood flow, thus noninvasively approximating the data obtained from catheter-based angiography. Selective vessel angiography is not yet possible with this technique because contrast administration is intravenous.
    • Functional MRI allows for anatomic localization of neurons activated during specific tasks by measuring the hemodynamic response coupled to increased brain activity. Functional MRI can assist in localization of the primary and supplementary motor cortices, somatosensory cortices, visual cortices, Broca and Wernicke areas, and other brain regions. 
    • The conventional angiographic technique used in the North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial (NASCET) compared lumen caliber at the point of maximal stenosis (often at or near the carotid bifurcation) with lumen caliber within a superior nonstenotic segment of the internal carotid artery to calculate  the percentage of stenosis. This approach could have greater spatial resolution than the more currently used  CT or MR angiography techniques.

Neuroimaging for the Clinician

    • Advances in CT technology have led to the development of multidetector scanners, which can be used to obtain  dynamic images of blood flow, thus noninvasively approximating the data obtained from catheter-based angiography. Selective vessel angiography is not yet possible with this technique because contrast administration is intravenous.
    • Functional MRI allows for anatomic localization of neurons activated during specific tasks by measuring the hemodynamic response coupled to increased brain activity. Functional MRI can assist in localization of the primary and supplementary motor cortices, somatosensory cortices, visual cortices, Broca and Wernicke areas, and other brain regions. 
    • The conventional angiographic technique used in the North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial (NASCET) compared lumen caliber at the point of maximal stenosis (often at or near the carotid bifurcation) with lumen caliber within a superior nonstenotic segment of the internal carotid artery to calculate  the percentage of stenosis. This approach could have greater spatial resolution than the more currently used  CT or MR angiography techniques.

Neuroimaging for the Clinician

    • Advances in CT technology have led to the development of multidetector scanners, which can be used to obtain  dynamic images of blood flow, thus noninvasively approximating the data obtained from catheter-based angiography. Selective vessel angiography is not yet possible with this technique because contrast administration is intravenous.
    • Functional MRI allows for anatomic localization of neurons activated during specific tasks by measuring the hemodynamic response coupled to increased brain activity. Functional MRI can assist in localization of the primary and supplementary motor cortices, somatosensory cortices, visual cortices, Broca and Wernicke areas, and other brain regions. 
    • The conventional angiographic technique used in the North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial (NASCET) compared lumen caliber at the point of maximal stenosis (often at or near the carotid bifurcation) with lumen caliber within a superior nonstenotic segment of the internal carotid artery to calculate  the percentage of stenosis. This approach could have greater spatial resolution than the more currently used  CT or MR angiography techniques.

Successful Aging

    • By 2050, the older population is projected to double from 40.3 million in 2010 to 83.7 million in 2050. Because age-related diseases are now the leading causes of death in developed countries, some have begun to view aging as a major public health issue.
    • There are now multiple theories regarding the processes underlying biological aging. For example, the inflammatory theory of aging, or “inflammaging,” posits that the proinflammatory response required to repair cellular damage inflicted by infectious diseases becomes detrimental in later life, contributing to age-related diseases such as obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. Another theory of aging is that attrition of telomeres, the protective end complexes at the termini of eukaryotic chromosomes, leads to maladaptive cellular changes that in turn promote the development of a number of age-related diseases.
    • In theory, the complex mixture of genes influencing successful aging could include those involving emotion regulation and stress tolerance. For example, the alpha-2B-adrenergic receptor gene (ADRA2B) encodes a subtype of the adrenergic receptor family that plays a critical role in regulating neurotransmitter release from adrenergic neurons in the central nervous system. 

Pain Relief in Labor

    • Labor pain is a complex entity, and no single therapy is right for all patients.
    • Inhalation of nitrous oxide and intramuscular/intravenous opioids provide mild to moderate pain relief with side effects of nausea and sedation.
    • The development of low-dose epidural medications has decreased the side effects of this modality while still providing excellent pain relief.
    • Short-acting, lipophilic opioids administered by patient-controlled analgesia can provide good pain relief for many patients.
    • Providing analgesic medications, whether inhalational, intramuscular/intravenous, or neuraxial, does not affect the duration of labor or the mode of delivery in randomized studies.

Contraception

    • Clinicians may often be able to initiate all types of contraception safely during a patient’s initial office visit, even outside the first week of menses.
    • The CDC issues guidelines to assist with choosing a suitable contraceptive method in the setting of coexisting medical problems.
    • Long-acting reversible contraception such as intrauterine devices and the subdermal contraceptive implant are highly effective and require little action on the user’s part. Clinicians should offer them as first-line options whenever possible.

Contraception

    • Clinicians may often be able to initiate all types of contraception safely during a patient’s initial office visit, even outside the first week of menses.
    • The CDC issues guidelines to assist with choosing a suitable contraceptive method in the setting of coexisting medical problems.
    • Long-acting reversible contraception such as intrauterine devices and the subdermal contraceptive implant are highly effective and require little action on the user’s part. Clinicians should offer them as first-line options whenever possible.
« Previous | Next »
Updates per yearSpecialty updatesNumber of sections