1st August 2010 @ 11:06am
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Volume 6, Number 3, Jul-Aug-Sep 2009


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BACK TO BASICSUrine tests for renal function
Jan Procter-King

Urine tests for renal function: What tests detect different levels of damage?

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DIABETES MANAGEMENTHelping patients with diabetes to win the battle to control their weight
Sandra Waddingham

Many people with type 2 diabetes are overweight or obese at diagnosis and continue to struggle to control their weight. This article looks at why people with diabetes find weight control more of a challenge than the rest of us and how practice nurses can help patients to remain positive, particularly when starting insulin to optimise blood glucose control.

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EDITORIALWhen to use aspirin in CVD prevention: acting on the latest evidence
Professor Roger Boyle, Jan Procter-King

FOOD FOR THOUGHTWhat factors influence what we choose to eat and how can we improve choices?
Alison Shepherd

Obesity is, quite literally, the big health problem of the 21st century, with rapidly increasing rates in both adults and children. In this article we explore why obesity is such a challenge and the role of primary healthcare professionals in addressing the problem. We try to unravel the wide range of factors that cause obesity before focusing on why people eat what they do and how we can help patients to review their eating habits, introduce changes to eat more healthily and then sustain those changes.

EVIDENCE IN PRACTICEEvidence in practice
Susan Mayor

There are just not enough hours in the day to read all the research journals, even if you wanted to. This section of BJPCN – Evidence in Practice – will keep you on top of relevant research without having to spend hours in the library. Each review gives you a bite-size summary of new research, pulling out key points for primary care and recommending the action that you might consider taking.

HAVE YOU HEARD?Have you Heard?

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MONITORINGMaking sense of HDL cholesterol in cardiovascular risk
Dr Jonathan Morrell

Lowering LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) with statins for the prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD) has rightly become a core activity for primary care health professionals. However, despite effective lowering of LDL-C, many patients still suffer cardiovascular events. Experts have called this ‘the residual risk’ and have speculated whether further cardiovascular events can be prevented by attention to other lipoprotein fractions, particularly HDL cholesterol (HDL-C).

PREVENTION IN PRACTICEVenous thrombosis and thromboembolism
Professor David Fitzmaurice

Venous thromboembolism (VTE), comprising deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE), is a major public health problem affecting around 100 per 100,000 population per year and causing thousands of deaths annually. Large population-based studies have shown that factors associated with hospitalisation account for half of the attributable risk of VTE.

THERAPEUTICS REVIEWWhat is the evidence for statins in the secondary prevention of stroke?
Professor Mike Kirby

The Stroke Association estimates that about 150,000 people suffer a stroke in the UK each year. Stroke is the third commonest cause of death in developed countries and the leading cause of disability. So can we reduce this burden? In this article, we look at the evidence for statins in the secondary prevention of stroke.

WHAT'S THE PROBLEM?Swollen ankles: preventing, detecting and managing oedema
Susan Knight

It is Friday afternoon and, checking your screen, you see your last free appointment has been given to a patient you have seen in the past for routine blood tests. This time when she enters the room you observe that her legs are covered with what looks like kitchen roll, and she is wearing supermarket carrier bags over her feet to protect her shoes. For many of us, this is a ‘heart sink’ patient – with heavy, wet and oedematous legs that are difficult to manage. To be able to manage this type of condition we first need to understand the possible causes of oedema, to identify patients who may be at risk for developing the problem, and to be aware when early intervention could be of benefit.

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HANDS ONStanding up, sitting or lying down: what do these BP readings mean?
Bev Cox

Maintaining a healthy blood pressure (BP) is important in preventing cardiovascular events such as heart attack and stroke, and measuring BP is a key step in cardiovascular risk assessment. However, it is not always measured correctly. Readings should be taken from both arms and the higher reading of the two, if there is a difference, should be used and a record should be kept of the preferred arm for future readings. But what about the patient’s position? Does a lying and standing measurement need to be done in all patients? What is an ‘acceptable’ difference? And does it matter?