Pranab Chatterjee

33 posts · 38,241 views

Musings of a Skepticemic Oslerphile...

Scepticemia
31 posts

VagusJournalis
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  • January 8, 2013
  • 11:37 AM
  • 256 views

The USA Dream for IMGs: Coming to an end? Analysing the 2012 Match

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

My attention was drawn to an article in the JAMA today (1) by one of my friends who is actively pursuing the USMLE route. And after reading this, I guess I have to admit that one now has to make haste in order to prevent waste. Now I have long been wanting to write about [...]... Read more »

Traverso G, & McMahon GT. (2012) Residency training and international medical graduates: coming to America no more. JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association, 308(21), 2193-4. PMID: 23212494  

  • September 21, 2012
  • 04:20 PM
  • 353 views

William Gosset: A True Student

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

Today I attended a Basic Epidemiology class meant for the undergraduate students as I thought it would be good to brush up on my basic knowledge. The topics for the day were Hypothesis Testing and An Introduction to Randomized Controlled Trials, both pretty important ones, no matter which level you are studying at. What struck [...]... Read more »

  • February 16, 2012
  • 05:02 AM
  • 493 views

Remembering Tinsley Harrison, the Oslerian Physician

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

The past few weeks have been very demanding on me and I have not had the best of times, either on the personal or on the professional front. So, today, I took a break from the usual drudgery of life and decided to take a step back and remind myself of the bigger picture of [...]... Read more »

  • February 14, 2012
  • 01:51 AM
  • 593 views

Valentine’s Day Kills!

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

I wish all my readers a very Happy Valentine’s Day and though I am spending it in a rather sad and loser-like fashion, I hope y’all make a day out of it! I know this is the day when pink sappiness overrules our lives and the loveless ones like myself feel rather left out of [...]... Read more »

  • February 7, 2012
  • 04:00 AM
  • 666 views

Thoughts on World Cancer Day: Part I–Unraveling Yuvraj Singh’s Cancer

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

Sorry for missing the train on this one. February 4th is the World Cancer Day and is one of the public health days that could do with some more propaganda in the public eye. I was so caught up with work and studies it just passed me by and I could not even get the [...]... Read more »

  • November 26, 2011
  • 10:26 AM
  • 755 views

Earworms: Kolaveri Di and the Pathogenesis of a Musical Malaise

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

Like the rest of the nation (and some would say, the world), I have been asking myself over and over again why this kolaveri kolaveri kolaveri di. And in addition to that I have been asking myself why the heck does this happen to us in the first place. Now if you are not aware [...]... Read more »

  • November 16, 2011
  • 03:55 PM
  • 776 views

Penile Cancer: Another Reason to Stop Banging Animals: (Insert Zoophilia Joke)

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

First up, I cannot believe the numbers! This is awe-inspiring. I read the abstract three times in order to convince myself that I was not seeing things. More than the results of the study itself what intrigues me no ends is how the researchers got the participants to open up about screwing with Billy. Billy [...]... Read more »

Zequi SD, Guimarães GC, da Fonseca FP, Ferreira U, de Matheus WE, Reis LO, Aita GA, Glina S, Fanni VS, Perez MD.... (2011) Sex with Animals (SWA): Behavioral Characteristics and Possible Association with Penile Cancer. A Multicenter Study. The journal of sexual medicine. PMID: 22023719  

  • November 10, 2011
  • 09:50 AM
  • 747 views

Trendelenberg vs Trendelenburg: What’s in a name?

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

I have a slew of exams lined up and am recovering from a (suspected) repetitive stress injury of the right wrist. Combined, they have managed to keep me offline long enough to stay off the blog. But since yesterday my wrist has been feeling a little more supple and hence, this post. Not much of [...]... Read more »

  • October 31, 2011
  • 03:54 AM
  • 759 views

Trick or Treatment: Do Doctors Encourage Poor Patient Behaviors?

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

Happy Pumpkin Day folks, and to celebrate this day of weird encounters, I am going to reel off a list of the commonest peeves I have experienced in the past couple of years I have been doing Medicine. There are obvious gaps in the stories, and many are not even unique to me, but I [...]... Read more »

Moseley, J., O'Malley, K., Petersen, N., Menke, T., Brody, B., Kuykendall, D., Hollingsworth, J., Ashton, C., & Wray, N. (2002) A Controlled Trial of Arthroscopic Surgery for Osteoarthritis of the Knee. New England Journal of Medicine, 347(2), 81-88. DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa013259  

  • October 30, 2011
  • 01:36 AM
  • 666 views

Charles Beevor: The Sign of a “Bloody” Jerk

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

Forgive the hyperbolic title. Do not take offense and read on before hating on me. Thanks. Please note the post script for added justification for this inflammatory title, if you so feel. Thanks. Now on with the main show! Charles Edward Beevor is probably the most well known for the eponymous neurological sign in his [...]... Read more »

Pearce, J. (2005) Beevor’s Sign. European Neurology, 53(4), 208-209. DOI: 10.1159/000086731  

  • October 17, 2011
  • 02:59 AM
  • 764 views

House MD 8×02: Transplant

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

As big a fan of the House MD show I am, let me start off with the disclaimer that I consider this to be one of the worst ever episodes of House MD to come on air. EVER! And that … Continue reading →... Read more »

Steen S, Ingemansson R, Eriksson L, Pierre L, Algotsson L, Wierup P, Liao Q, Eyjolfsson A, Gustafsson R, & Sjöberg T. (2007) First human transplantation of a nonacceptable donor lung after reconditioning ex vivo. The Annals of thoracic surgery, 83(6), 2191-4. PMID: 17532422  

  • August 15, 2011
  • 11:26 AM
  • 1,932 views

Answer: MediQuiz #2: The Rhythm of Life

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

Yeah, once again, almost everyone got it right. There are few songs that tend to stick in your head as much as stayin’ alive does, and indeed, it is just the right beat to make your CPR go along with. … Continue reading →... Read more »

  • August 2, 2011
  • 12:13 AM
  • 1,076 views

Are patients really “worse off” with older docs?

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

In what appears to be a largely counter intuitive result, research by the American Journal of Medicine has unearthed that patients end up faring worse when treated by older doctors or more experienced doctors. This Reuters article delves into the … Continue reading →... Read more »

  • July 24, 2011
  • 01:01 PM
  • 715 views

Blogs/Twitter in Medical Publications: Too Unreliable to Quote or A Change Waiting to Happen?

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

Just a few days ago, I was co-authoring a submission for a journal on the issue of handling social media with care and needed to cite a bunch of blogs and non-traditional online sources of information (including Tweets and Friendfeed … Continue reading →... Read more »

Mandavilli A. (2011) Peer review: Trial by Twitter. Nature, 469(7330), 286-7. PMID: 21248816  

  • July 22, 2011
  • 11:48 AM
  • 990 views

Move Over Penis Captivus, Cello Scrotum and Guitar Nipple, we have TEXTER’S THUMB!

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

The medical mind has pondered and pondered on the existence of maladies of the body and mind which are real, and sometimes, not so real. While the cynics say that the latter exist only in the realms of medical lore, … Continue reading →... Read more »

Walkinshaw, E. (2011) Thumbs up and down. Canadian Medical Association Journal. DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.109-3911  

  • July 12, 2011
  • 03:35 AM
  • 1,286 views

Harry Potter and the Missing Trauma Cases

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

With the last Harry Potter movie in the piping (due for a global release this weekend), it is understandable if the Potter craze gets a little irked this time around. And in true keeping with my Pottermania, in this post, … Continue reading →... Read more »

  • July 11, 2011
  • 12:37 AM
  • 4,503 views

Narrative Medicine Adverse Experiences = #MedEd Tool Par Excellence!

by Pranab Chatterjee in VagusJournalis

“We were determined to manage our patients’ care on the basis of data, not dogma.” In this day of evidence based medicine where all our clinical decisions are largely driven by statistical analysis, many have rued the loss of “the human touch” in the art of dispensing medical care. Time and again anecdotal evidence has [...]


No related posts.... Read more »

Stuebe AM. (2011) Level IV evidence--adverse anecdote and clinical practice. The New England journal of medicine, 365(1), 8-9. PMID: 21732832  

  • July 1, 2011
  • 01:00 AM
  • 1,264 views

When Diseases Talk: Tuberculosis and Its Impression on Literature

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

A skiagram of the chest, showing miliary mottling, suggestive of Pulmonary Koch’s Disease in both lungs. there is also an opacity of the right upper lobe suggestive of active pulmonary disease. Patient was an 84 year old man, with a … Continue reading →... Read more »

DANIEL, T. (2004) The impact of tuberculosis on civilization. Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 18(1), 157-165. DOI: 10.1016/S0891-5520(03)00096-5  

  • June 29, 2011
  • 02:23 PM
  • 1,363 views

Argyll Robertson: Better Be His Pupil, Than Have It!

by Pranab Chatterjee in Scepticemia

Argyll Robertson pupils (“AR pupils”) are bilateral small pupils that constrict when the patient focuses on a near object (they “accommodate”), but do not constrict when exposed to bright light (they do not “react” to light). This condition is colloquially … Continue reading →... Read more »

Timoney PJ, & Breathnach CS. (2010) Douglas Argyll Robertson (1837-1909) and his pupil. Irish journal of medical science, 179(1), 119-21. PMID: 20069387  

  • June 29, 2011
  • 09:22 AM
  • 1,120 views

Wait, What? They Did A Study to Find THIS Out?

by Pranab Chatterjee in VagusJournalis

Here is what the authors of a recently published research paper from the esteemed journal Pediatrics have to say about the children watching television in the evening prior to turning in (and especially if the content is violent in nature): Conclusions: Violent content and evening media use were associated with increased sleep problems. However, no such [...]


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