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Academic Journals
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- 2From:Patient Care (Vol. 20) Peer-ReviewedIdentifying high-risk colorectal polyps Moderator Early detection of colorectal cancer has been said to be one of the gravest imperatives for primary care physicians today, since these cancers, caught early enough, are...
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- 4From:Patient Care (Vol. 20) Peer-ReviewedWhen urologic ailments mask diabetes EXPRESS STOP Diabetes vs urologic etiology: Seemingly healthy persons who come in with what they consider minor urologic complaints may have complications of long-standing...
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- 8From:Patient Care (Vol. 20) Peer-ReviewedDetecting and treating anal fissures EXPRESS STOP Simple anal fissures: Even a very small acute fissure can cause such intense pain and spasm that some patients may require local anesthesia before examination. Most...
- 9From:Patient Care (Vol. 20) Peer-ReviewedProviding relief for pruritus ani Moderator Pruritus ani is often a perplexing problem because it has a great many etiologies, most of them troublesome or difficult to isolate [see "Checklist of possible causes of...
- 10From:Business & Health (Vol. 10, Issue 2)The word "eldercare" hasn't yet made it into standard dictionaries. Nevertheless, it's a word with which corporate executives are rapidly becoming fimiliar. Basically, the term covers the range of services a company...
- 11From:Patient Care (Vol. 19) Peer-ReviewedDiagnosing prostate ills EXPRESS STOP Prostate/rectal examination: Up to 75% of prostatic cancers have progressed beyond the prostate at the time of diagnosis. If more physicians did a prostate/rectal examination...
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- 14From:Patient Care (Vol. 21) Peer-ReviewedDiagnosing upper abdominal pain quickly EXPRESS STOP Evaluating telephoned complaints: Only when a non-threatening cause can be confidently assumed is it safe not to see a patient who reports distressing upper...
- 15From:Patient Care (Vol. 19) Peer-ReviewedPatient Care Is the bacterial picture changing in urinary tract infection [UTI]? Rous Yes, but only slightly. Escherichia coli is still far and away the most common infecting organism; it accounts for 80%-90% of acute...
- 16From:Patient Care (Vol. 19) Peer-ReviewedYour first reaction to a patient's complaint of impotence may be the most important factor in your investigation of his problem. If he senses--from your facial expression, body language, or manner of speaking--any...
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