

December 2000 Table of Contents
THE PHYSICIAN AND SPORTSMEDICINE - VOL 28 - NO. 12 - DECEMBER 2000
NEWS AND ANALYSIS
Editor's Notes
Athletic Gain at What Cost?
Gordon O. Matheson, MD, PhD
Best of the Literature
Eating Disorders in Wrestlers
A Better Rehabilitation Method for Anterior Knee Pain
News Briefs
When to Suspect Muscle Dysmorphia: Bringing the 'Adonis Complex' to Light
Norwalk-like Virus Strikes on Field
Lead Contamination of Calcium Supplements
REVIEW ARTICLES
Osteolysis of the Distal Clavicle
Readily Detected and Treated Shoulder Pain
Seen most often in weight lifters, osteolysis of the distal clavicle can follow repetitive microtrauma or an acute shoulder injury. The condition must be differentiated from other causes of pain near the acromioclavicular (AC) joint, such as AC separation, AC arthritis, and referred pain from the glenohumeral joint.
Melissa Stephens, MD; Preston M. Wolin, MD; Joyce A. Tarbet, MD; Mohammed Alkhayarin, MD
Type 1 Diabetes and Sports Participation
Strategies for Training and Competing Safely
Through careful matching of insulin treatment schedules and the timing of exercise, athletically inclined patients who have type 1 diabetes can participate in sports at high levels. Patients' quality of life often benefits significantly from this effort, and objective health benefits have been measured as well.
Martin B. Draznin, MD
RESEARCH TO PRACTICE: SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Promoting Cessation of Tobacco Use
Glen D. Morgan, PhD; Brion J. Fox, JD
Reducing Alcohol Abuse in Active Patients
Lymperis (Perry) Koziris, PhD
Anabolic-Androgenic Steroid Abuse
Lymperis (Perry) Koziris, PhD
CLINICAL PRACTICE
Pearls
What Can Timing of Syncope Tell?
Fuel by Day, Not by Night
A Screen for Syndesmosis Sprain
When Scaphoid Fractures Don't Heal
READER SERVICE
Editorial Board
Staff
CME Self Test
This test has expired, but additional CME credit available at http://www.physsportsmed.com/cme.htm
Index to Advertisers
Classified Advertising
In an effort to provide information that is scientifically accurate and consistent with accepted standards of medical practice, the editors and publisher of The Physician and Sportsmedicine routinely consult sources believed to be reliable. However, readers are encouraged to confirm this information with other sources. For example and in particular, physicians are advised to consult the prescribing information in the manufacturer's package insert before prescribing any drug mentioned.
RETURN TO BACK ISSUES INDEX
|