A final column full of many thanks and a few parting thoughts
Search results for: allopurinol
Drug Updates
Information on New Approvals and Medication Safety
Drug Updates
Information on New Approvals and Medication Safety
Drug UPDATES
Information on New Approvals and Medication Safety
Letter to the Editor
Feedback from our Readers
Tear Down That Wall: CME restrictions stifle speeches
The Nobel Peace Prize is one of the most prestigious awards in the world because it recognizes individuals and organizations that promote the causes of peace and human rights. In 1991, Aung San Suu Kyi received this prize for her courageous work in advancing democracy in the Republic of Myanmar. Because of her leadership of the democracy movement in Myanmar, the military regime that governs that country has gone to great lengths to gag her. Indeed, she has been under house arrest for most of the last two decades since she received the Peace Prize. An outpouring of support for Aung San Suu Kyi and demands for her freedom by human rights advocates and Western governments have sadly been to no avail.
The Expanded Role of the Inflammasome in Human Disease
Exploring advances, evaluating what remains to be done
Aggressive Urate Lowering Needed for Gout
Patients with gout at increased risk for cardiovascular disease and adverse event
Letters to the Editor: In Memoriam
One more prescribing rule [See “Rheuminations,” September 2009, p. 6], honored mainly in the breach, in our overspending climate: don’t prescribe an expensive brand when generics are as good or better, especially Nexium (which I have never prescribed) versus omeprazole, Lipitor versus simvastatin (which now costs the VA three cents a pill), and—for rheumatologists who are writing 80% Uloric—allopurinol except for the 10% who might need Uloric.
Reading Rheum
Handpicked Reviews of Contemporary Literature