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'''March 20, 2009: FDA Panel Votes 15-2 in Favor of Rivaroxaban, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - The FDA's Cardiovascular and Renal Advisory committee voted 15-2 in favor of rivaroxaban. At least two Wall Street analysts have suggested, however, that the FDA may delay approval until it receives more data, pushing final approval into next year.  CardioBrief received detailed comments on the meeting from two panel members. Darren McGuire and Sanjay Kaul.  Click here to read their comments, as well as the Johnson & Johnson press release.]


'''March 20, 2009: Meta-Analysis: CABG Beats PCI in Diabetics and Elderly, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - Overall, CABG and PCI have similar death rates in patients with multivessel disease, but the results heavily favor CABG when it comes to diabetics and elderly patients, according to a new meta-analysis led by Mark Hlatky published in ''The Lancet''.  The reasons for CABG's better outcome are unclear, but "intuitively such mechanisms are most likely to reflect more advanced coronary disease," notes David Taggart in an accompanying editorial. Extrapolating from the analysis, as well as the recent COURAGE and SYNTAX trials, Taggart concludes:]
:* [http://cardiobrief.org For less severe coronary disease (mainly one-vessel or two-vessel disease and normal left ventricular function), there is little prognostic benefit from any intervention over optimum medical therapy. In such patients who do require intervention, perhaps for symptomatic reasons, there is no obvious survival advantage for either PCI or CABG (at least in patients who are not diabetic), but there is a significantly higher risk of repeat revascularisation with PCI. In patients with more severe coronary artery disease, and especially those with diabetes, CABG is superior in terms of survival and freedom from reintervention. (''The Lancet'')]
'''March 20, 2009: Cardiovascular Research: Does Pharma See a Future?, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - Pfizer's decision to abandon research in cardiovascular drugs is the occasion for a perspective by Alan Garber in the ''New England Journal of Medicine''. Garber asks: "Did the decision reflect only the strengths and weaknesses of Pfizer's pipeline, or have the commercial prospects soured so much that we can expect an industrywide decline in innovation in cardiovascular drugs?"  Generics and safety concerns with new drugs are big obstacles to successful research, he notes. "Pfizer's decision is a reminder that pharmaceutical innovation is vulnerable to market forces, changes in medical practice, and regulatory requirements." (''New England Journal of Medicine'')]
'''March 20, 2009: Young Blacks More Likely to Develop Heart Failure, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - Blacks young than 30 years old are 20 times more likely to develop heart failure over the next 20 years than whites, according to a new study published in the New England Journal of Medicine. Hypertension, obesity, and systolic dysfunction were significant predictors of heart failure. The study, write Clyde Yancy and Eric Peterson in an accompanying perspective, "raises the possibility that a proactive approach to diet, lifestyle, and weight management might avert the development of hypertension; and more complete control of hypertension, once it is present, might reduce the downstream disparity in the incidence of heart failure. Such an opportunity should not be missed." (''New England Journal of Medicine'')]
'''March 18, 2009: Have the results of the AURORA study been leaked?, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - Although the AURORA study, which is comparing rosuvastatin to placebo in hemodialysis patients, is not scheduled to be  presented until March 30 at the ACC scientific sessions in Orlando, at least one analyst is claiming he “understands” that the results are negative, according to a Reuters story by Ben Hirschler. Here is what Hirschler writes: “Our understanding is that AURORA may have failed to show a benefit,” Tim Anderson of Sanford Bernstein said in a research note.]
'''March 17, 2009: Rivaroxaban May Face Tough Questions About Bleeding Risk, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - The bleeding risk of rivaroxaban may be a significant focus of the FDA’s Cardiovascular and Renal Advisory Committee when it meets on Thursday. Briefing documents for the meeting posted this morning on the FDA website indicate that the FDA has significant safety concerns about the bleeding risk of rivaroxaban.]
'''March 17, 2009: Normal ABI Isn’t Really Normal, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - Patients who have borderline or low normal ankle-brachial index (ABI) ratios are at elevated risk for functional decline and disability, according to a new study appearing online in ''JACC''. The 5-year prospective, observational study found that patients with ABI values between 0.90 and 1.09 “appear to be at significantly greater risk of functional declines, including losing the ability to walk up a flight of stairs or walk a quarter of a mile without assistance, compared to people who have no evidence of PAD based on ABI values between 1.10 and 1.30,” said study author Mary McDermott, in a ''JACC'' press release.]
'''March 17, 2009: Exercise: Don’t Stop or You Just Might Drop, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - A new study published online in ''Circulation'' provides further evidence that exercise after MI is benefical, improving endothelial function as measured by flow mediated dilation, but also shows that the benefits drop rapidly after exercise is stopped. The results were the same whether patients took up aerobic training, resistance training , or a combination regimen. “This should be an additional reason to encourage patients to carry out several types of physical activity to avoid exercise boredom and promote better long-term adherence to exercise programs,” said Margherita Vona, lead author of the study and a cardiologist and director of the Cardiac Rehabilitation Center, Clinique Valmont-Genolier in Glion sur Montreux, Switzerland, in an AHA press release.]
'''March 16, 2009: FDA Reviewers Give Green Light for Dronedarone, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - Ahead of Wednesday's meeting of the Cardiovascular and Renal Advisory Committee meeting, FDA reviewers have recommended approval of Sanofi's dronedarone to delay recurrence of and hospitalization for atrial fibrillation.  FDA observers will be pleased to learn that Sanjay Kaul is listed on the roster as a committee member. CardioBrief is willing to bet that Sanjay Kaul will in fact appear as scheduled at this meeting...]
*[http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/ac/cdrh09.html#circulatory Also, on Wednesday the Circulatory System Devices Panel will meet to discuss the PMA for the TherOx Aqueous Oxygen System for use in acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patients, who have undergone successful revascularization. Click here for the FDA briefing documents, etc.]
'''March 16, 2009: Statins May Help Fight Severe Asthma Attacks, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - A retrospective analysis of more than 12 million people in an insurance database has provided evidence that the anti-inflammatory effects of statins may help reduce the severity of asthma attacks, according to a new study presented at the 2009 Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Asthma, Allergy and Immunology (AAAAI).]
*[http://aaaai.org/members/annual_meeting/am2009/ You can find the abstract by going to the AAAAI meeting website, clicking on "Itinerary Planner" and searching for "statins."]
'''March 13, 2009: Demolition Derby: ''JAMA'', ''BMJ'', and ''Wall Street Journal'' Health Blog, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://blogs.wsj.com/health/2009/03/13/jama-editor-calls-critic-a-nobody-and-a-nothing/ (CardioBrief) - It's not a cardiology issue, but we can't help being amazed at some of the "frank" talk and raw emotions on display in a new post by David Armstrong in the ''Wall Street Journal'' health blog. Armstrong recounts what happens when he spoke to ''JAMA'' editors about a letter that appeared on the ''British Medical Journal'' website criticizing a ''JAMA'' study on the antidepressant Lexapro. We won't go into details here, but strongly recommend you read Armstrong's account in which ''JAMA'' editor Catherine DeAngelis tells Armstrong that the ''BMJ'' letter writer is a "nobody and a nothing." This demolition derby is far from being over, we predict.  Click here to see the post & read comments on the ''WSJ's'' Health Blog.]
'''March 13, 2009: New Diabetes Drugs Juggled by FDA, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - The FDA's Endocrinologic and Metabolic Drugs Advisory Committee will review BMS's saxagliptin tablet and Novo Nordisk's liraglutide injectionon April 1-2. Saxagliptin is a DPP-4 inhibitor, liraglutide is a long-acting form of GLP-1. Noticeably absent from the advisory committee meeting is Takeda's alogliptin, another DPP-4 inhibitor. According to Takeda, the company was informed by the FDA that alogliptin will be subject to guidelines issued after Takeda had already filed its NDA, and that the drug's existing clinical data will not be sufficient for approval.]
'''March 13, 2009: BIDMC Head Avoiding Layoffs, by BRIAN BLANK'''
*[http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2009/03/12/a_head_with_a_heart/?p1=Well_MostPop_Emailed1 (Wiki''Doc'') - The President and CEO of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston seems to be doing everything possible to avoid job cuts.  In what was the most popular story on the ''Boston Globe's'' website Friday night, columnist Kevin Cullen profiles BIDMC chief Paul Levy and his efforts to forego layoffs.  Levy has asked higher wage earners to make sacrifices for the greater good of the entire hospital.  Click here to check out the column.]


'''March 13, 2009: Europe Losing Battle Against Heart Disease, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
'''March 13, 2009: Europe Losing Battle Against Heart Disease, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
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*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - To no one's surprise except all the patients who are convinced that their cardiologists saved their lives, elective PCI over the last 20 years has had no discernible effect on mortality or MI when compared to medical therapy, according to a new network meta-analysis by Thomas Trikalinos and colleagues in ''The Lancet''. (The beneficial effects of PCI in the setting of ACS are commonly accepted.) (''The Lancet'')]
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - To no one's surprise except all the patients who are convinced that their cardiologists saved their lives, elective PCI over the last 20 years has had no discernible effect on mortality or MI when compared to medical therapy, according to a new network meta-analysis by Thomas Trikalinos and colleagues in ''The Lancet''. (The beneficial effects of PCI in the setting of ACS are commonly accepted.) (''The Lancet'')]


'''March 13, 2009: Phase 2 Data on Schering's TRA Published in Lancet, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
'''March 13, 2009: Phase 2 Data on Schering's TRA Published in ''Lancet'', by LARRY HUSTEN'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - Two years after its initial presentation at the ACC in 2007, the promising phase 2 results on Schering's novel thrombin receptor antagonist (TRA) in the setting of elective PCI have been published in ''The Lancet''. The results were promising enough - good efficacy and low rate of bleeding events - to generate a lot of buzz in 2007. (''The Lancet'')]
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - Two years after its initial presentation at the ACC in 2007, the promising phase 2 results on Schering's novel thrombin receptor antagonist (TRA) in the setting of elective PCI have been published in ''The Lancet''. The results were promising enough - good efficacy and low rate of bleeding events - to generate a lot of buzz in 2007. (''The Lancet'')]
'''March 12, 2009: New Test Can Diagnose ARVC, by LARRY HUSTEN'''
'''March 12, 2009: New Test Can Diagnose ARVC, by LARRY HUSTEN'''

Latest revision as of 13:19, 20 March 2009

March 20, 2009: FDA Panel Votes 15-2 in Favor of Rivaroxaban, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 20, 2009: Meta-Analysis: CABG Beats PCI in Diabetics and Elderly, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 20, 2009: Cardiovascular Research: Does Pharma See a Future?, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 20, 2009: Young Blacks More Likely to Develop Heart Failure, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 18, 2009: Have the results of the AURORA study been leaked?, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 17, 2009: Rivaroxaban May Face Tough Questions About Bleeding Risk, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 17, 2009: Normal ABI Isn’t Really Normal, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 17, 2009: Exercise: Don’t Stop or You Just Might Drop, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 16, 2009: FDA Reviewers Give Green Light for Dronedarone, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 16, 2009: Statins May Help Fight Severe Asthma Attacks, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 13, 2009: Demolition Derby: JAMA, BMJ, and Wall Street Journal Health Blog, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 13, 2009: New Diabetes Drugs Juggled by FDA, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 13, 2009: BIDMC Head Avoiding Layoffs, by BRIAN BLANK

March 13, 2009: Europe Losing Battle Against Heart Disease, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 13, 2009: ABSORB This: Bioabsorbable Stent Remains Promising at 2 Years, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 13, 2009: Elective PCI for Stable Angina: No Impact on Mortality or MI, No Surprise, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 13, 2009: Phase 2 Data on Schering's TRA Published in Lancet, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 12, 2009: New Test Can Diagnose ARVC, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 11, 2009: Statins Reduce Energy and Interest in Activty, New Study Suggests, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 10, 2009: Dronedarone, Rivaroxaban, Post-MI Hyperoxygenation System, Face FDA Panels Next Week, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 10, 2009: Appending Thrombus on Ulceration of the Ascending Aorta: A Rare Cause of Acute ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction, by BRIAN BLANK

March 9, 2009: JUPITER, USA: 6.5 Million Adults Could Benefit from Statins, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 9, 2009: Depression - and Antidepressants - Tied to Cardiac Events, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 9, 2009: Angry Men and Bad Hearts, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 6, 2009: Treating Flu with Oseltamivir Reduces CV Events, Military Study Finds, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 6, 2009: Generic Simvastatin Cost Effective in Wider Population than Current Guidelines Indicate, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 5, 2009: Philip Poole-Wilson, Leading British Cardiologist, Dies Suddenly, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 5, 2009: Obama: Time to Reform Health Care, by BRIAN BLANK

March 4, 2009: Supreme Court: Drugmakers Can be Sued, by BRIAN BLANK

March 4, 2009: MTWA May Help Low-Risk Patients Avoid ICD Implantation, by LARRY HUSTEN

March 4, 2009: Depression A Better Predictor of Heart Disease than Genetics, Environment, by BRIAN BLANK

March 3, 2009: Don’t Mix PPIs and Clopidogrel in ACS by LARRY HUSTEN

March 3, 2009: WSJ Writer Calls for Trial Comparing Statins, Surgery & Stent by BRIAN BLANK

March 3, 2009: Working Overnights May Hurt Your Heart by BRIAN BLANK

March 3, 2009: Public Reporting of PCI Outcomes: Unintended Consequences by LARRY HUSTEN

March 2, 2009: FDA Approves New Magnetically Steered, Irrigated Tip RF Ablation Catheter by LARRY HUSTEN

February 27, 2009: NY Times: Why is the ICD Registry Languishing? by LARRY HUSTEN

February 27, 2009: Study Finds Link Between Sleepiness and Heart-Related Deaths by BRIAN BLANK

February 27, 2009: Astellas Launches Hostile Takeover for CV Therapeutics by LARRY HUSTEN

February 27, 2009: Speaking of Prasugrel: TRITON-TIMI 38 STEMI Substudy Published in Lancet by LARRY HUSTEN

February 27, 2009: New Predictive Tool Helps Identify Risk of AF by LARRY HUSTEN

February 26, 2009: $634 Billion "Down Payment" for Goverment's Health Fund by BRIAN BLANK

February 26, 2009: Lowering Blood Pressure May Cut Dialysis Deaths by BRIAN BLANK

February 26, 2009: Paclitaxel- Versus Sirolimus-Eluting Stents for uLMCA by BRIAN BLANK

February 26, 2009: No Difference in Weight Loss After 2 Years on Different Diets by LARRY HUSTEN

February 25, 2009: Califf Now Reportedly Out of Running for FDA Commissioner by LARRY HUSTEN

February 24, 2009: ACC/AHA Guidelines: Not Enough Evidence by LARRY HUSTEN

February 24, 2009: Sprint Fidelis Leads: Is the Risk Greater than Feared? by LARRY HUSTEN

February 24, 2009: Cardiology $$$: Mt Sinai’s Samin Sharma Tops Columbia’s Moses by LARRY HUSTEN

February 24, 2009: Anger Increases Risk for Sudden Death by LARRY HUSTEN

February 23, 2009: Dr. Duane Pinto on SYNTAX by BRIAN BLANK

February 23, 2009: Medtronic Gobbles Up 2 Aortic Valve Companies by LARRY HUSTEN

February 23, 2009: Prasugrel Gains European Approval by LARRY HUSTEN

February 23, 2009: Dr. Jeffrey Moses Ranks #8 on Chronicle’s Salary List by LARRY HUSTEN

February 20, 2009: Promising Phase 2 Results for Anti-Atherosclosis Drug by LARRY HUSTEN

February 20, 2009: Low-Income Status Best Predictor of Strokes by BRIAN BLANK

February 20, 2009: Statins Shown to Reduce Strokes in Healthy Patients by BRIAN BLANK

February 19, 2009: US Justice Dept. Joins Lawsuit Against Scios/J&J

February 19, 2009: Questions Raised Over Globalization of Clinical Research

February 19, 2009: Alzheimer's Research Looks at Prenatal Brains

February 19, 2009: SYNTAX Published in NEJM

February 19, 2009: OAT: No Improved Quality of Life Found for Late Opening of Occluded Arteries

February 19, 2009: Pharmacogenetics: A Better Path to Warfarin Dosing?

February 18, 2009: New Analysis Casts Doubt on HDL as Target for Therapy

February 17, 2009: New Data on Sudden Death in Young Athletes Published

February 17, 2009: PFO and Migraine: The Next Chapter

February 17, 2009: Elderly in Cardiogenic Shock Benefit from Early PCI

February 17, 2009: Researchers Identify First Common Genes Variants that Regulate Blood Pressure

February 17, 2009: SALT II: Letter Writers React to Alderman’s NY Times Op-Ed Piece

February 17, 2009: Stent Wars: Abbott Wins and Medtronic Loses

February 13, 2009: FDA Advisory Committee to Consider Dronedarone in March

February 13, 2009: Judge Who Ruled in Favor of Medtronic Failed to Disclose Family Link to Company

February 13, 2009: Women With NSTE ACS Don't Benefit From Invasive Procedures

February 12, 2009: Registry Sheds Light on Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy

February 12, 2009: After FAME: New Study Offers Clues to Utility of FFR

February 12, 2009: Stem Cell Drug for Heart Attacks Shown Safe in Early Testing

February 12, 2009: Genetic Code of Cold Virus Mapped

February 12, 2009: ATHENA Published in NEJM: Dronedarone Benefits AF Patients

February 12, 2009: Contrast Echo Found Useful in Technically Difficult Cases

February 11, 2009: Prasugrel: Now the Real Work Starts

February 10, 2009: David Sabiston Jr, Pioneering Surgeon, Dead at 84

February 10, 2009: PCI for MI: Experienced Hospitals and Physicians are Best

February 10, 2009: Expensive Urine: Multivitamins Have No Effect on Major Endpoints

February 10, 2009: Study Finds Lower Risk of Death for Primary Prevention Use of Statins

February 9, 2009: No Connection Between Vaccines & Autism, Original Data Faked in Lancet

February 9, 2009: Mass General Under Scrutiny for High Mortality Rate in Cath Lab

February 9, 2009: Doctors Too "Cavalier" in Prescribing Narcotics: FDA

February 9, 2009: Increased Mortality and Cardiovascular Morbidity Associated with the Use of Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs in Chronic Heart Failure by Dr. Michael W. Tempelhof

February 9, 2009: 5 New Studies Shed New Light on the Genetics of MI

February 9, 2009: FDA Approves 2 Ablation Catheters for AF

February 6, 2009: Do beta blockers inhibit the anti-inflammatory effect of statins?

February 6, 2009: Alderman questions NYC efforts to cut salt in NY Times opinion piece

February 6, 2009: Early study finds anacetrapib safe and effective

February 6, 2009: Sir James Black, pioneer of propranolol, pans state of pharma

February 5, 2009: New DES studies add new understanding about clopidogrel duration, LAD usage, and ISR

February 5, 2009: Google & IBM Partner to Improve Online Health Records

February 4, 2009: Many Diabetics Ignore Doctor's Orders

February 4, 2009: Tomaselli Named Director of Cardiology at Johns Hopkins

February 4, 2009: BIDMC Physician Opens Mail, Finds $1 Million

February 3, 2009: FDA Panel Unanimously Recommends Approval of Prasugrel

February 3, 2009: The Uninvited: Sanjay Kaul Removed from Prasugrel’s FDA Advisory Panel

February 3, 2009: Amid Washington Uncertainty, Califf Reportedly Still in Running to be FDA Commissioner

February 3, 2009: AHA: Doctors Should Avoid Unnecessary Heart Scans

February 3, 2009: T-wave alternans may help identify some patients who don’t need an ICD

February 3, 2009: Erectile Dysfunction-Heart Disease Link Shown

February 2, 2009: Atorvastatin Gets Its Own Planetoid

February 2, 2009: Synthetic HDL Molecules Feature Heart of Gold

February 2, 2009: Noisy Traffic Can Hurt Your Heart

January 30, 2009: Prasugrel’s FDA Outlook Appears Brighter

January 30, 2009: NT-proBNP Guided vs. Symptom-Guided Heart Failure Therapy by Michael W. Tempelhof

January 30, 2009: Lancet editorial: OTC Orlistat Not in the Public Interest

January 29, 2009: Heartburn Drugs May Interfere with Plavix, Lead to 2nd Heart Attack

January 29, 2009: Generic Metoprolol Succinate Shortage Causing Problems

January 29, 2009: Urine Test for CAD in the Future?

January 29, 2009: Outpatient Surgery Skyrockets

January 28, 2009: SPECT-MPI May Be Useful in New Onset HF

January 28, 2009: FDA Warning: Dietary Supplement Contains Sibutramine

January 28, 2009: CV Therapeutics Rejects Buyout Offer From Astellas Pharma (Updated)

January 28, 2009: New Slides on ClinicalTrialResults.org

January 28, 2009: Medicare Increasing Unable to Tamp Down Cancer Costs

January 27, 2009: TIME-CHF: BNP-guided therapy misses the boat

January 27, 2009: Uric acid and insulin levels linked to risk of hypertension

January 27, 2009: Tech-Savvy Hospitals, Better Hospitals?

January 26, 2009: Larry Husten, the former editor of TheHeart.Org, will serve as WikiDoc's first Director of Medical Journalism

January 26, 2009: FDA Announces Ongoing Safety Review of Clopidogrel

January 26, 2009: Danish Researchers Recommend Avoiding NSAIDs in HF

January 26, 2009: Innovative stent company seeks emergency intervention

January 26, 2009: Evidence-Based Treatment for HF Sees Improvements

January 26, 2009: Follow-Up: Surgeons Adopting Strict Rules on Payments

January 26, 2009: Measuring Fractional Flow Reserve During PCI Improves 1-Year Outcomes

January 23, 2009: Citing Costs, Younger Americans Skipping Meds

January 23, 2009: Women with Heart Problems Often Left Waiting

January 23, 2009: 4,000-Person Drug Trial Scrapped After Sponsor Declares Bankruptcy

January 23, 2009: MA State Ethics Law Scuttles Plans for Medical Meeting

January 22, 2009: Gifts to Doctors Must Be Disclosed

January 22, 2009: Stroke Survivors with AF Have Greater Risk of Death

January 22, 2009: Women Make Better Heart Care Doctors?

January 22, 2009: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition

January 21, 2009: Pictures of a Bleeding Heart

January 21, 2009: More Doctors E-Mailing It In

January 21, 2009: Problems Pumping Iron? Maybe You’ve Got a Problem Pumping Blood

January 21, 2009: Bill Gates, Others Pledge $630 Million to End Polio

January 20, 2009: With a New President, a New Worry

January 20, 2009: First Time Heart Attacks Not as Severe

January 20, 2009: The “Sure Thing” Gene

January 20, 2009: Men Better at Resisting Temptation

January 20, 2009: Drug-Resistant Staph Infections Rising in Kids

January 16, 2009: Brian Blank has joined WikiDoc as its inaugural Scholar in Medical Journalism

January 16, 2009: Popular Health Risk Tools Don’t Find Heart Disease

January 16, 2009: Heparin-Induced Antibodies Point To Thrombosis Risk

January 16, 2009: Superbugs Vs. Cancer Drugs

January 16, 2009: Senator: Schools Failing to Regulate Medical Conflicts of Interest

January 16, 2009: Coffee Can Reduce Alzheimer’s, Cause Hallucinations

January 6, 2009: Cytochrome P450 2C19 polymorphism linked to poor outcomes for young MI patients treated with clopidogrel



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