Clinical Dilemmas in Diabetes / Edition 1

Clinical Dilemmas in Diabetes / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
1405169281
ISBN-13:
9781405169288
Pub. Date:
04/26/2011
Publisher:
Wiley
ISBN-10:
1405169281
ISBN-13:
9781405169288
Pub. Date:
04/26/2011
Publisher:
Wiley
Clinical Dilemmas in Diabetes / Edition 1

Clinical Dilemmas in Diabetes / Edition 1

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Overview

Clinical Dilemmas in Diabetes provides evidence-based clinical guidance on the most common and problematic areas of concern encountered by health professionals when diagnosing, treating, and managing patients with diabetes. Topics reflect current interest, specific recent developments, and areas of controversy. Each brief chapter opens with a learning points box to aid easy assimilation of the main issues. Contributors are international and well known diabetes specialists, thus providing a global perspective, writing under the editorial guidance of two Mayo Clinic experts, Professor Adrian Vella and a former president of the American Diabetes Association, Professor Robert Rizza.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781405169288
Publisher: Wiley
Publication date: 04/26/2011
Series: Clinical Dilemmas (UK) Series , #1
Pages: 170
Product dimensions: 7.30(w) x 9.60(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Adrian Vella Associate Professor of Medicine, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, USA

Robert Rizza Professor of Medicine and Division Chair for Endocrinology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, USA

Read an Excerpt

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Table of Contents

Part 1. Pre-Diabetes and the Diagnosis of Diabetes.

1. Is Pre-Diabetes a Risk Factor or is it a Disease? (Kalpana Muthusamy and Adrian Vella).

2. Early Diagnosis of Type 1 Diabetes – Useful or a Phyrrhic Victory? (Chiara Guglielmi and Paolo Pozzilli).

3. How Should Secondary Causes of Diabetes be Excluded? (Aonghus O’Loughlin and Sean F. Dinneen).

4. Screening Patients with Prediabetes and Diabetes for Cardiovascular Disease (Deepika S. Reddy and Vivian Fonseca).

Part 2. Initial Evaluation and Management of Diabetes. 

5. What is the Role of Self-Monitoring in Diabetes? Is there a Role for Postprandial Glucose Monitoring? How Does Continuous Glucose Monitoring Integrate into Clinical Practice? (Rami Almokayyad and Robert Cuddihy).

6. The Optimal Diet for Diabetes is? (Maria L. Collazo-Clavell).

7. How to Determine When to Pursue Lifestyle vs. Pharmacotherapy at Diagnosis? (Galina Smushkin and F John Service).

8. Insulin Sensitizers vs. Secretagogues as First Line Therapy for Diabetes: Rationale for Clinical Choice (Robert J. Richards, L. Yvonne Melendez-Ramirez and William T. Cefalu).

9. Are Insulin Sensitizers Useful Additions to Insulin Therapy? (John W. Richard III and Philip Raskin).

10. Is There a Role for Incretin-Based Therapy in Combination with Insulin? (Matheni Sathananthan and Adrian Vella).

11. HbA1c: Is it the Most Important Therapeutic Target in Outpatient Management of Diabetes? (Steven A. Smith).

Part 3. Management of Associated Risk Factors and Disease.

12. Primary Therapy for Obesity as the Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes (Manpreet Mundi and Michael D. Jensen).

13. Are Statins the Optimal Therapy for Cardiovascular Risk in Patients with Diabetes? Are Triglycerides an Important Independent Risk Factor for Diabetes? (Michael O’Reilly and Timothy O’Brien).

14. The Role of Bariatric Surgery in Obese Patients with Diabetes: Primary or Rescue Therapy? (Praveena Gandikota and Blandine Laferrère).

15. To what extent should hyperglycemia be avoided in Critical Illness and the Postoperative Period? (Kalpana Muthusamy and John M. Miles).

16. Is There an Optimal Revascularization Strategy in Diabetic Patients with Ischemic Heart Disease? (Stephen H. McKellar, Morgan L. Brown and Robert L. Frye).

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"This is most useful for practitioners who care for many diabetes patients. It is also useful for students in endocrinology who are learning the many complicated aspects of diabetes care." (Doody's, 14 October 2011)

"The authors have stuck to a common sense based approach which is to be congratulated and makes for a good educational tool to have on one's bookshelf" (Practical Diabetes, June 2011)

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