
October 17th 2025
Undertreated acute pain can lead to life-long chronic pain but there are still few effective opioid-sparing options. A new review reinforces the persistent safety issues.
February 12th 2025
Your daily dose of the clinical news you may have missed.
January 29th 2025
Cebranopadol developer Tris Pharma expects to submit an NDA to the FDA for the dual-NMR agonist to treat moderate-to-severe acute pain later this year.
January 29th 2025
The novel dual NMR agonist was scored significantly less "likable" when crushed and taken intranasally compared with oxycodone, the company reported.
January 17th 2025
The DEA action includes 3 new telehealth rules that make permanent several flexibilities enacted during the pandemic and also establish new protections for patients.
Pseudo-MI in a Patient with Pancreatitis and Polyarteritis Nodosa
August 30th 2011A 38-year-old man with a history of alcoholism, intravenous drug use, and cerebrovascular accident was referred for assessment of possible endocarditis, based on history, fever 39 °C (102.9 °F) and mildly elevated troponin level.
What Is This Intensely Pruritic Rash?
August 5th 2010A 71-year-old woman presents to the emergency department for evaluation of a blistering, intensely pruritic generalized rash that started 5 days earlier. Multiple ruptured and intact hemorrhagic bullae are obvious on the hands, arm, neck, chest, back, and abdomen and to a lesser extent on the lower extremities. The mucous membranes are spared. The Nikolsky sign is absent. The patient reports recent use of furosemide for periodic leg swelling.
Nasal Perforation From Chronic Cocaine Abuse
January 2nd 2009Cocaine abuse is associated with many dermatological manifestations, vasculitides, and infections. Consider this diagnosis in patients with unexplained chronic skin lesions, an ambiguous medical history, previous examinations that found no source of symptoms, labile affect, and delusional behavior.
Serratia marcescens Pneumonia in an HIV-Infected Patient
August 2nd 2008For 3 days, a 45-year-old woman with HIV infection who was noncompliant with her antiretroviral medications had cough, yellowish sputum, fever, and dyspnea. She denied hemoptysis, weight loss, or recent hospitalization. She had a long history of heavy smoking and alcohol and intravenous drug abuse.
Parkinson's Pathological Gamblers Show Similar Traits
February 13th 2007BETHESDA, Md. -- When out-of-control gambling marks Parkinson's disease patients who are started on dopamine agonists, they may have a younger disease onset, with a history of thrill-seeking behaviors and a family history of substance abuse.
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