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Articles
756 Cirrhosis and Chronic Liver Failure: Part I. Diagnosis and Evaluation
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JOEL J. HEIDELBAUGH, M.D., and MICHAEL BRUDERLY, M.D.

Most patients with cirrhosis remain asymptomatic until the occurrence of decompensation, characterized by ascites, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, hepatic encephalopathy, or variceal bleeding from portal hypertension. Liver biopsy should be considered only after serologic and radiographic evaluation has failed to confirm the diagnosis. CME

    
767 Cirrhosis and Chronic Liver Failure: Part II. Complications and Treatment
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JOEL J. HEIDELBAUGH, M.D., and MARYANN SHERBONDY, M.D.

Major complications of cirrhosis include ascites, hepatic encephalopathy, portal hypertension, and variceal bleeding. Therapy includes sodium restriction, diuretics, and abstention from alcohol, with empiric prophylaxis against spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and variceal bleeding in certain patients. Survival rates for liver transplants have improved as a result of advances in immunosuppression and risk-stratification scoring systems. CME

    Patient information: "Cirrhosis and Chronic Liver Failure: What You Should Know," p. 781
    
783 Avian Influenza: Preparing for a Pandemic
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GREGORY JUCKETT, M.D., M.P.H.

Although avian influenza A (H5N1) is not yet capable of efficient human-to-human transmission, it could become the source of the next human influenza pandemic. Pandemic preparedness involves increasing global influenza surveillance and developing strategies for containing outbreaks at the source. Prompt case recognition, isolation, and treatment, including pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic interventions, are crucial for disease control. CME

Editorial: "Keeping Up to Date on Avian Influenza," p. 719

   
793 Promoting Medication Adherence in Children
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PAULA GARDINER, M.D., and LANA DVORKIN, PHARM.D.

ACF Ensuring adherence to a medication regimen is difficult, especially when the patients are children. Simple strategies can be used by family physicians and parents to encourage adherence in young and school-age children and in teenagers. CME

Patient information: "Getting Your Child to Take Medicine," p. 800

   


Departments
  
Keeping Up to Date
803 Clinical Evidence Concise EB CME

• Acute Low Back Pain

823 POEMs and Tips from Other Journals
871 Practice Guidelines
  
Answering Clinical Questions
711 Clinical Quiz
747 Cochrane for Clinicians
807 Photo Quiz
867 Curbside Consultation

• Obesity: Psychological and Behavioral Considerations

   
  
Commentary
696 Inside AFP
715 Letters to the Editor

• Defining and Treating Constipation in Older Adults

719 Editorials

• Keeping Up to Date on Avian Influenza

   
  
Medicine and Society
703 Newsletter
707 Quantum Sufficit
   
  
Patient Information
781 Cirrhosis and Chronic Liver Failure
800 Getting Your Child to Take Medicine
813 Collection: Skin Cancer
   
 
Reader Services
699 Strength of Recommendation Taxonomy in AFP
  CME Center

• Search available CME courses

782 Change-of-Address Form
810 Evidence-Based Medicine Glossary
877 Classified Information
  Information for Authors

ACF This article exemplifies the AAFP 2006 Annual Clinical Focus on caring for children and adolescents.

CME This article is included as part of this issue's continuing medical education (CME) activity. See "Clinical Quiz," p. 711.

EB CME This logo designates clinical content that conforms to AAFP criteria for evidence-based continuing medical education (EB CME). EB CME is clinical content presented with practice recommendations supported by evidence that has been reviewed systematically by an AAFP-approved source.



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