Cleveland Clinic journal of medicine
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Randomized Controlled Trial
The METEOR trial: no rush to repair a torn meniscus.
It is uncertain whether arthroscopic partial meniscectomy is better than physical therapy in patients who have a symptomatic torn meniscus on top of osteoarthritis of the knee. The Meniscal Repair in Osteoarthritis Research (METEOR) trial concluded that physical therapy is acceptable at first, and that surgery is not routinely needed. In patients assigned to physical therapy who eventually needed surgery, the delay resulting from a trial of conservative management did not impair outcomes at 12 months from the initial presentation. Here, we analyze the background, design, findings, and clinical implications of the METEOR trial.
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Antiplatelet and anticoagulant drugs are the mainstay of treatment of acute coronary syndrome (ACS). The last 30 years have seen the development of various agents, a deeper understanding of the pathobiology of this disease, and an evolution in its treatment. We review the role of contemporary agents in ACS and highlight key clinical trials of these agents.
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The number of obese older adults is on the rise, although we lack a proper definition of obesity in this age group. The ambiguity is primarily related to sarcopenia, the progressive loss of muscle and gain in fat that come with aging. Whether to treat and how to treat obesity in the elderly is controversial because of a paucity of established guidelines, but also because of the obesity paradox-ie, the apparently protective effect of obesity in this age group.