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Perspectives in Circulation Today is a newsletter designed to examine the science of peripheral vascular clinical medicine, diabetic foot care and wound healing. In addition, it seeks to properly evaluate the medical evidence justifying the practices and procedures of the physicians involved in patient care. Factors of monetary costs, patient risks, quality of life and procedure effectiveness are considered. Guest contributors are invited to submit one to three page articles to Circulator Boot Corporation. Publication of such submissions will depend on their documentation and originality."
Perspectives in Circulation Today
- Vol 1, #1: Age and Medicare Amputations
- Vol 1, #2: Overall Diabetic Medicare Amputations
- Vol 1, #3: Incidence of Contralateral Amputations
- Vol 1, #4: The Gangrenous Foot. A simple classification (dry gangrene) and its Treatment with the End-diastolic pneumatic boot
- Vol 1, #5: The Gangrenous Foot. A simple classification (wet gangrene) and its Treatment with the End-diastolic pneumatic boot
- Vol 1, #6: Osteomyelitis
- Vol 1, #7: Electrolytes, Trace Elements and Fluid Compartments
- Vol 2, #1: Venous Ulcers and Stasis Dermatitis, Pathophysiology and Treatment of the Difficult Patient
- Vol 2, #2: Primo Non Nocere. The Femoral Arteriogram, A Needed Road Map for Needed Procedures?
- Vol 2, #3: Risks of Vascular Surgery
- Vol 2, #4: A Crisis: Obesity, Diabetes and Its Complications
- Vol 2, #5: A Wound Care Meeting. What's New in Commercial Displays.
- Vol 2, #6: Peripheral Vascular Tests and Long Term Prognosis of Claudication and Critical Leg Ischemia.
- Vol 2, #7: The Endothelium: An Organ with Many Special Functions.
- Vol 2, #8: Fogarty Catheters
- Vol 2, #9: Critical Leg Ischemia?
- Vol 2, #10: Where are we with infrainguinal angioplasty?
- Vol 2, #11: Circulator Boot Clinical Treatment Records
- Vol 2, #12: Renal Failure, PVD and End-Diastolic Boot Therapy
- Vol 3, #1: Osteomyelitis and Cellulitis Revisited - Neuropathic Ulcers
- Vol 3, #2: NO! NO! NO! All Boots Are Not Created Equal!
- Vol 3. #3: Gangrenous Feet Salvaged by Circulator Boot and Drs. Calhoun and Lieberman
- Vol 3. #4: Ulcerated Feet Salvaged by Circulator Boot and John F. Boyle, D.P.M.
- Vol 3. #5: Are the Circulator Boot Systems Unique? What do people ask us? Vol 3. #6: Third Congress of the World Union of Wound Healing Societies - Toronto, Canada, 2008 - Industry Contributions and Exhibitors
- Vol 3. #7: Some Problems in Wound Healing
- Vol 3. #8: Acute Painful Diabetic Neuritis, Retinopathy and the Circulator Boot
- Vol 3. #9: ICD-9-CM Codes for Circulatory Disorders of the Lower Extremity
Potentially Useful in Circulator Boot Clinics - Vol 3. #10: Follow-up of Osteomyelitis Treated by Local Antibiotics and the Circulator Boot
The Sed rate and C-Reactive Protein - Vol 3. #11: The Acute Phase Reaction - Relevance to Arteriosclerosis and Inflammatory Conditions in the Arteries and the Lower Extremity
- Vol 3. #12: Temperature and Wound Healing
- Vol 4. #1: Cold Damage, Hypothermia, Exposure and Frost Bite
- Vol 4. #2: Significance of Tests of Endothelial Function - Booting Safer than Exercise for Claudicators?
- Vol 4. #3: Should Systemic Antibiotics be Avoided if Locally-injected Antibiotics are a Possibility?
- Vol 4. #4: Swollen Legs - Multiple Etiologies - Sometimes Lymphedma of One Kind or Another
- Vol 4. #5: Diabetes Control, Complications of hyperglycemia, NICE-Sugar Study and Wound Healing
- Vol 4. #6: National Diabetes Surveillance System and Newsletters Updated on
Amputations, Obesity, Diabetes and Complications of Systemic Antibiotics - Vol 4, #7: Should Systemic Antibiotics be Avoided if Locally-Injected Antibiotics are a Possibility?
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