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September 19, 2012
Vol 308, No. 11
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In the Media
Association Between Urinary Bisphenol A Concentration and Obesity Prevalence in Children and Adolescents. Trasande et al.

Coverage by:
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Wall Street Journal
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The Role of Government in Preventing Excess Calorie Consumption: The Example of New York City. Farley.

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Health Benefits of Gastric Bypass Surgery After 6 Years. Adams et al.

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Minneapolis Star-Tribune
Scientific American

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  • Original Contribution |  September 19, 2012

    Health Benefits of Gastric Bypass Surgery After 6 Years

    To examine the association of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery with weight loss, diabetes, and other health risks 6 years after surgery, Adams and coauthors studied 1156 participants with extreme obesity with health and cardiovascular disease risks. See the related Editorial by Courcoulas.

  • Original Contribution |  September 19, 2012

    Exercise and Diabetes Risk in Overweight Children

    Davis and coauthors conducted a randomized controlled trial among 222 overweight or obese sedentary elementary school children in Georgia to test whether different durations of aerobic training improved diabetes risk, fitness, and overall and visceral adiposity.

  • Original Contribution |  September 19, 2012

    Therapy for Obstructive Sleep Apnea

    Dixon and coauthors conducted a randomized controlled trial comparing surgical with conventional therapy for weight loss treatment of obstructive sleep apnea. In an accompanying editorial, Courcoulas discusses topics related to the obesity epidemic.

  • Original Contribution |  September 19, 2012

    Urinary Bisphenol A Levels and Childhood Obesity

    To examine associations between urinary bisphenol A concentration and body mass outcomes in children, Trasande and coauthors conducted a cross-sectional analysis of 2838 participants aged 6 through 19 years in the 2003-2008 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys.

  • Original Contribution |  September 19, 2012

    Bariatric Surgery and Health Care Use

    In an ongoing prospective trial in Sweden, Neovius and coauthors report 20-year comparative hospital and primary care use among 2010 obese patients who had undergone bariatric surgery and 2037 patients who were treated conventionally. In an editorial, Courcoulas discusses progress toward an evidence-based approach to treatment of obesity.

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Articles published ahead of print

Original Contribution | 

Fractional Flow Reserve From CT Angiography

Editorial | 

Detecting Obstructive Coronary Disease

Viewpoint | 

Controlling West Nile Virus Infection

Viewpoint | 

Controlling Health Care Costs in Massachusetts

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Author Interview

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Interview with Griffin P. Rodgers, MD, author of The Next Generation of Obesity Research: No Time to Waste

RELATED ARTICLE:

The Next Generation of Obesity Research:  No Time to Waste

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Author in the Room® Teleconference

Comparison of Novel Risk Markers for Improvement in Cardiovascular Risk Assessment in Intermediate-Risk Individuals

Joseph Yeboah, MD, MS; Robyn L. McClelland, PhD; Tamar S. Polonsky, MD, MSCI; Gregory L. Burke, MD, MS; Christopher T. Sibley, MD; Daniel O’Leary, MD; Jeffery J. Carr, MD, MSc; David C. Goff, MD, PhD; Philip Greenland, MD; David M. Herrington, MD, MHS

Summary Points:

Interview with Philip Greenland, MD, author of Comparison of Novel Risk Markers for Improvement in Cardiovascular Risk Assessment in Intermediate-Risk Individuals. Summary Points:

  • In comparison with other competing biomarkers and risk factors, coronary artery calcium (CAC) is currently the most potent risk marker of subclinical coronary heart disease (CHD).
  • CAC was shown in several observational studies to improve the prediction of risk beyond traditional risk factors.
  • In this JAMA paper, CAC outperformed various competing risk assessment markers among asymptomatic people at intermediate risk for CHD. Whether CAC should be used in routine clinical practice, however, is still a matter of personal opinion or further research.


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JAMA Editor's Audio Summary

September 18, 2012

JAMA 2012-09-18, Vol. 308, No. 11,
Editor's Audio Summary

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Short Fourth and Fifth Metacarpals

A 9-year-old has uncontrolled seizures since age 7 months, brachydactyly, and x-ray evidence of fourth and fifth metacarpal shortening.

What would you do next?

Author in the Room Teleconference

Philip Greenland, MD, discusses novel risk markers to improve assessing patients at intermediate risk of cardiovascular disease on 9/19/12, 2-3 PM ET. Register to join the discussion.

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JAMA Patient Page

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For your patients: information about bariatric surgery.

Past JAMA Patient Pages are available.

Viewpoint

The Attending Physician on the Wards: Finding a New Homeostasis

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Take a video tour and read the JAMA editorial about the all-new jamanetwork.com.

Medical News

Studies Probe Mechanisms That Have a Role in Obesity-Associated Morbidities

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Visualizing Health Policy

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JAMA Report Video

Health Benefits of Gastric Bypass Surgery After 6 Years

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