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Specialty: Internal Medicine
Source: Evidence-Based Medicine
Education: Learning

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Total 3 results found since Jan 2013.

Low to moderate quality evidence demonstrates the potential benefits and adverse events of cannabinoids for certain medical indications
Commentary on: Whiting PF, Wolff RF, Deshpande S, et al.. Cannabinoids for medical use: a systematic review and meta-analysis. JAMA 2015;313:2456–73. Context As of September 2015, 23 states and the District of Columbia in the USA legalised the medicinal use of marijuana, underscoring the need for physicians to understand the science underlying medical marijuana as well as the practical issues associated with it. For years policymakers, scientists and physicians alike have debated the potential risks associated with marijuana use.1 Now marijuana's utility as a treatment for certain medical indications has taken focus....
Source: Evidence-Based Medicine - January 22, 2016 Category: Internal Medicine Authors: Hill, K. P., Hurley-Welljams-Dorof, W. M. Tags: Sexual transmitted infections (viral), Clinical trials (epidemiology), General practice / family medicine, Genetics, Immunology (including allergy), HIV/AIDS, Drugs: CNS (not psychiatric), Pain (neurology), Sleep disorders (neurology), Stroke, Ophthalmolo Source Type: research

Neither ibuprofen nor steam improves symptom control compared with paracetamol in patients with acute respiratory tract infections in primary care
Commentary on: Little P, Moore M, Kelly J, et al.. Ibuprofen, paracetamol, and steam for patients with respiratory tract infections in primary care: pragmatic randomised factorial trial. BMJ 2013;347:f6041. Context The achievement of symptom control in patients with respiratory infections is an ongoing challenge, particularly within primary care. Patients and clinicians often view antibiotics, alongside other supportive medication, as the most expeditious intervention to achieve this goal. While we have learnt that antibiotics provide only very limited benefit in cases when bacterial infection is not suspected,1 2 the effe...
Source: Evidence-Based Medicine - May 19, 2014 Category: Internal Medicine Authors: Schuetz, P. Tags: General practice / family medicine, Influenza, Otitis, Pain (neurology), Stroke, Ischaemic heart disease, Pain (palliative care), Drugs: musculoskeletal and joint diseases, Ear, nose and throat/otolaryngology Therapeutics Source Type: research

Single surgical procedure with general anaesthesia early in life is associated with subsequent impaired language development and cognitive function
Commentary on: Ing C, Dimaggio C, Whitehouse A, et al.. Long-term differences in language and cognitive function after childhood exposure to anesthesia. Pediatrics 2012;130:e476–85. Context Thus far, more than 250 studies in immature animals have demonstrated that exposure to commonly used anaesthetics produces neuronal cell death, alters brain development and may lead to neurocognitive impairment.1 2 Similarly, in humans, an association between learning disabilities and two or more anaesthetic exposures has been observed in some studies, as most recently reported in children under 2 years of age.3 Methods Ing a...
Source: Evidence-Based Medicine - July 5, 2013 Category: Internal Medicine Authors: Loepke, A. W. Tags: Rehabilitation medicine, Stroke, Developmental paediatrics, Child and adolescent psychiatry, Other anaesthesia Harm Source Type: research