June 12th 2025
Cycling and mixed cycling were associated with a reduced risk of all-cause dementia, including of young onset, as well as increased hippocampal volume.
BURST Expert Illustrations and Commentaries™: Visualizing FcRn as a Therapeutic Target in Neurological Disease
View More
Burst Expert Illustrations & Commentary™: Visualizing the Role of FcRN in Neurological Disorders
View More
BURST Expert Illustrations and Commentaries™: Visualizing the Implications of FcRN-Targeted Therapies on Generalized Myasthenia Gravis
View More
Burst Expert Illustrations & Commentary™: Visualizing the Role of Subcutaneous Infusion as an Alternate Administration Route for Medical Interventions
View More
Clinical Consultations™: Navigating the Evolving Treatment Landscape in Generalized Myasthenia Gravis
View More
SimulatED™: Diagnosing and Treating Alzheimer’s Disease in the Modern Era
View More
SimulatED™: Understanding the Role of Genetic Testing in Patient Selection for Anti-Amyloid Therapy
View More
Expert Illustrations & Commentaries™: New Targets for Treatment in Cognitive Impairment in Schizophrenia – The Role of NMDA Receptors and Co-agonists
View More
BURST CME™ Part I: Understanding the Impact of Huntington’s Disease
View More
Burst CME™ Part II: The Evolving Treatment Landscape for Huntington Disease
View More
Carolina Neuromuscular Disease Summit
September 27, 2025
Register Now!
Evolving Perspectives in Alzheimer's Disease: Reaching an Earlier Diagnosis, Understanding Neuroinflammation, and Exploring Therapeutic Advances
View More
Clinical ShowCase: Developing a Personalized Treatment Plan for a Patient with Huntington’s Disease Associated Chorea
View More
SimulatEd™ From Discomfort to Relief: Acute Pain Management Essentials
View More
Medical Crossfire® - Optimizing Management for Patients With Generalized Myasthenia Gravis: Focus on Complement Inhibitors
View More
Medical Crossfire®: Integrating Real-World Data to Improve Outcomes for Patients With Multiple Sclerosis
View More
Burst CME™: The Patient Journey – Unmet Needs From Diagnosis Through Management of Migraine
View More
Burst CME™: Setting the Stage – Individualizing Migraine Care for Diverse Populations Across Care Settings
View More
Evolving Perspectives in Alzheimer Disease : Reaching an Earlier Diagnosis, Understanding Neuroinflammation, and Exploring Therapeutic Advances
View More
Burst CME™: Optimizing the Use of CGRP Targeted Agents for the Treatment of Migraine
View More
Burst CME™: Optimizing Migraine Management – Addressing Unmet Needs, Individualizing Care for Diverse Populations, and Utilizing CGRP Targeted Agents
View More
Community Practice Connections™: Optimizing the Management of Tardive Dyskinesia—Addressing the Complexity of Care With Targeted Treatment
View More
Cases and Conversations™: Applying Best Practices to Prevent Shingles in Your Practice
View More
Patient, Provider, and Caregiver Connection™: Pediatric Myasthenia Gravis—Current Treatment and Emerging Concepts
View More
Mind Moments™: Optimizing Management for Patients with Generalized Myasthenia Gravis
View More
Identifying and Treating CIDP in the Modern Era
View More
Cases and Conversations™: Navigating the Complexities of Managing Myasthenia Gravis in Pediatric and Pregnant Patient Populations
View More
Cases and Conversations™: Little Voices, Big Challenges – Comprehensive Care for Pediatric Spinal Muscular Atrophy
View More
Medical Crossfire®: Optimal Approaches to Evaluating and Addressing Pain in the Patient With Sickle Cell Disease
View More
A Breath of Strength: Managing Cancer Associated LEMS and Lung Cancer as One
View More
Breast Cancer Survivor With Fatigue and Musculoskeletal Pain
December 31st 2006For 2 weeks, a 58-year-old woman has experienced increasingfatigue with activity. She has needed to nap duringthe day, has not been able to perform her usual activities,and has missed 3 days of work. She also complains of“muscle aches”-mainly in her back. She denies headache,dyspnea, fever, hot or cold intolerance, and alteredmentation.
Acute Liver Failure in a Previously Healthy Young Woman
December 31st 2006A 32-year-old woman is admitted to the hospital because of nausea, vomiting,and mild jaundice. For 4 days, her health has steadily deteriorated: hepatictransaminase and bilirubin levels are elevated, prothrombin time is prolongedand, most recently, obtundation and changes in mentation have developed.Serologic studies for infection with hepatitis A, B, and C viruses are negative,as are tests for Epstein-Barr virus mononucleosis.
Rebound Headache: Keys to Effective Therapy
December 31st 2006Which of these scenarios is familiarto you? •A local pharmacist calls to say thatyour patient wants another refill for thecombination analgesic containing aspirin,caffeine, and butalbital that youprescribed last week. Pharmacy recordsindicate that this patient has received250 tablets of this medication inthe last 34 days.
Memory Problems in the Elderly: What’s Significant-What’s Normal?
December 31st 2006Q:Recent research has defined mild cognitiveimpairment as a transitional state between thecognitive changes of normal aging and Alzheimerdisease (AD) and other dementing illnesses. Whatcriteria are used to differentiate mild cognitiveimpairment from more innocuous syndromes, such asbenign senescent forgetfulness? Are patients with mildcognitive impairment considered to have incipientclinical AD?
Temporal Arteritis in a 60-Year-Old Man
December 31st 2006A 60-year-old man has had anterior neck discomfort for the pastseveral weeks. He also has right-sided cephalalgia and occasional jaw discomfortwhile eating but no dysphagia or odynophagia. The cephalalgia, which hasbeen present for the past week, is moderately severe and is associated withblurred vision.
Can You Identify These Facial Findings?
December 31st 2006A 24-year-old African American man presents for a routine eye examination. Theocular findings are unremarkable; however, well-circumscribed areas of whitenedskin are noted on his forehead and hands (A and B). The patient reportsthat the patchy loss of pigment has been progressing over a number of years.
Middle-aged Woman With Headache,Middle-aged Woman With Headache,
December 31st 2006A 54-year-old Hispanic housewife presents to the emergencydepartment with a 3-week history of moderatelysevere, progressive, generalized, pulsating headache.The headache, which is partially relieved by propoxyphenenapsylate, is associated with weakness, vomiting of recentonset, and intermittent bilateral blurred vision. The symptomsbegan after an incident in which the patient’s sonwas stabbed.
Woman With Dull Daily Headaches and Episodic “Knockout” Attacks
December 31st 2006A 40-year-old woman reports increasingly frequent and severe headaches during the past few months. She has had boutsof severe headaches since college, and episodic migraine was diagnosed a decade ago. She uses over-the-counter products(ibuprofen, ketoprofen, or aspirin) at the onset of an attack; if these fail to relieve symptoms, she takes hydrocodone/acetaminophen. During her worst attacks, she is typically forced to halt her activities, is unable to eat or drink, and mayvomit. For unresponsive or persistent (more than 24-hour) attacks, her husband drives her to the urgent care centerfor intravenous hydration, intramuscular promethazine, and additional doses of hydrocodone/acetaminophen. Accordingto the patient, a visit to the urgent care center “completely ruins our day.”
Strategies for Optimal Care of the Elderly
December 31st 2006An 84-year-old woman presents with a 3-year history of slowly progressivememory impairment accompanied by functional decline. Thepatient lives alone but has been receiving an increasing amount of support from her 2 daughters,who accompany her to the appointment. The daughters first noticed that their mother was havingtrouble driving. About a year ago, she started forgetting family recipes. She also left food cookingon the stove unattended and burned several pans. Currently, the daughters are providing mealsand transportation, assisting with housework, and doing their mother’s laundry. They have becomeincreasingly alarmed because she takes her medications only sporadically, despite the factthat they fill her pillboxes and call her regularly with reminders. Their chief concern is whether itis safe for their mother to continue to live alone.
Diagnostic Images, Treatment Issues
December 31st 2006A39-year-old man is brought to theemergency department (ED)after his car struck a tree. He experienceda transient loss of consciousnesswith a 3-minute episode of retrogradeamnesia at the scene of the accident,despite wearing a seat belt andshoulder harness. He was disorientedto date and place.
Alzheimer Disease: A Commonsense Approach to Evaluation and Management
December 31st 2006An 84-year-old woman presents with a 3-year history of slowly progressivememory impairment accompanied by functional decline. Thepatient lives alone but has been receiving an increasing amount of support from her 2 daughters,who accompany her to the appointment. The daughters first noticed that their mother was havingtrouble driving. About a year ago, she started forgetting family recipes. She also left food cookingon the stove unattended and burned several pans. Currently, the daughters are providing mealsand transportation, assisting with housework, and doing their mother’s laundry. They have becomeincreasingly alarmed because she takes her medications only sporadically, despite the factthat they fill her pillboxes and call her regularly with reminders. Their chief concern is whether itis safe for their mother to continue to live alone.
Sorting Out the Complexities of an Elderly Woman's Fall
December 1st 2006I enjoyed Dr Henry Schneiderman’s “What’s Your Diagnosis?” case of an elderly woman with severe facial ecchymoses from a fall. Would Dr Schneiderman elaborate on several points about that case? This woman did not trip or complain of dizziness before she fell. What caused her to fall?
Middle-Aged Man With Recurring Facial Pain
December 1st 2006A 49-year-old man presents with recurring facial pain of 6 months' duration. The pain initially occurred several times per week; it now occurs as often as several times per day. The paroxysmal pain is intense and incapacitating but abates within several minutes. It occurs in the right maxillary region and lower jaw and is sharp and lancinating. Hard chewing and teeth cleaning are the usual precipitating events. Between episodes, the patient is asymptomatic, without numbness or deficit in the affected region.
Young Man With Fever, Headache, and Seizures
November 1st 2006A 28-year-old man is hospitalized because of highfever with rigors and chills and rapid weight loss(5.4 kg [12 lb] in 2 weeks). During the past 48 hours,generalized throbbing headache, intermittent vomiting,blurry vision, and seizures have developed. The progressiveseizures started in the left hand and have becomegeneralized grand mal.
Woman With Worsening Headaches and Neurologic Symptoms
October 1st 2006A 37-year-old woman complains of frequent, severe headaches. She describes the pain as a pressure-like feeling that is usually located at the top of her head and occasionally spreads to one of her temples; she rates its intensity as 9 on a 10-point visual analog scale. The pain becomes throbbing when she tries to engage in any kind of physical activity.
Woman With Frequent Severe Headaches
September 1st 2006The patient is a 47-year-old white woman with frequent, intensely painful unilateral or bilateral headaches that occur behind her left eye or temporal area. These headaches cause throbbing pain that lasts about 40 to 50 minutes: the patient rates the pain severity as a 7 or 8 on a 10-point visual analog scale.
Young Man With Chest Pain, Headache, and Muscle and Joint Pain
May 1st 2006Which test--antistreptolysin O titers, coronary angiography, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), Western blot testing for Borrelia burgdorferi, or genetic testing for long QT syndrome--would help you diagnose a young man with worsening chest pain, frontal headache, and diffuse muscle and joint pain?
Coping With Postherpetic Neuralgia
April 15th 2006A 79-year-old woman with a 37-year history of type 2 diabetes mellitus complains of head pain that began more thana month ago and is localized to the left frontotemporal region. She characterizes the pain as constant and burning, with minimalfluctuations in intensity. The pain does not increase with any particular activity but is quite disabling; it has causedemotional lability and insomnia. She denies nausea, visual disturbances, weakness of the extremities, dizziness, or tinnitus.Her appetite is depressed; she has experienced some weight loss.