From the Journals
From the Journals
Testosterone Trials’ cardiac, cognitive results disappoint
Testosterone treatment may have beneficial effects on unexplained anemia or bone density, but may increase coronary artery plaque and offer no...
From the Journals
CMS spending projections come with a caveat
The projections make no assumptions about potential repair, repeal, or replacement of the Affordable Care Act, leaving the projections to serve as...
From the Journals
CGM safe and effective without additional blood glucose testing
Is continuous glucose monitoring ready for use alone, without the addition of confirmatory blood glucose monitoring?
From the Journals
AACE: Updated lipid guidelines include ‘extreme risk’ category
Patients deemed to be at extreme risk should have their LDL cholesterol lowered below 55 mg/dL, a new standard that is supported by data from a...
From the Journals
Psoriatic arthritis raises diabetes risk
Psoriatic arthritis boosts the risk of diabetes, with higher disease activity magnifying that effect.
From the Journals
Atherosclerosis severity in diabetes can be predicted by select biomarkers
Plasma levels of specific advanced glycation end products and oxidation products are associated with future severity of subclinical measures of...
From the Journals
Heart disease risk soars in young adults with coronary calcium
Young adults with even small amounts of coronary calcium have a 5-fold higher risk of coronary heart disease and a 1.6-fold risk of death,...
From the Journals
Targeting Paget’s bone symptoms supported in long-term trial
A continued lack of difference in benefits between intensive bisphosphonate treatment of Paget’s disease of bone versus symptomatic treatment in a...
From the Journals
Updated guidelines offer insight into pediatric obesity
Pediatric obesity: Extensive clinical guidance offers tips on genetics, surgery, tests, and more.
From the Journals
Sickle cell trait artificially lowers HbA1c
HbA1c levels systematically underestimate glucose levels in black patients who carry the sickle cell trait, researchers say.
From the Journals
Unhealthy eating habits might precede depressive symptoms
Routinely skipping breakfast, eating 2 hours before bed, and engaging in other unhealthy eating behaviors may lead to depressive symptoms.