"This blog was developed to provide medical updates that are important and have my perspective as additional insight."
Author: Douglas Lakin, M.D.
Born in Michigan, but raised in the Scottsdale/Paradise Valley area, Dr. Lakin earned his undergraduate degree at Arizona State University in 1983. Graduating first in his class of 6,000 as a Philosophy major in the Honor’s Program, he was the recipient of the Mouer Award for outstanding scholarship. He was the first person in the history of ASU to earn a coveted spot at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, entering in the fall of 1983.
Originally intending to become a medical research scientist, Dr. Lakin developed a greater interest in patient care. Inspired by his father, Dr. Mervyn Lakin and Sir William Osler, the founder of modern internal medicine and first Chief of Medicine at The Johns Hopkins Hospital, he focused on clinical medicineAfter completing his medical school training from Hopkins in 1987, Dr. Lakin performed his Internship and Residency in Internal medicine at the University of Iowa’s Hospitals and Clinics, among the premier Internal Medicine programs in the country. Dr. Lakin excelled to the highest levels of clinical scholarship, achieving among the highest scores in the country on his Internal Medicine Board Examinations.
With his training complete, Dr. Lakin joined his father in practice in 1990. Shortly thereafter, Dr. Lakin senior retired. Dr. Douglas Lakin continues his practice in the tradition of his excellent training, and provides the quality of patient care established by his father before him.
Why would you give mice Prozac? Well……not to improve their moods. Have you ever seen a depressed mouse??? I didn’t think so. Researchers used Citalopram (a medication quite similar to Prozac as it is an SSRI….Selective Serotonin Uptake Inhibitor) in mice to see if this reduced the production of Beta-Amyloid protein in their brains, as …
With the passing of Gene Wilder, I wanted to reprise this old blog-post……..in his honor. Gene Wilder is among my favorite actors….for many reasons: Young Frankenstein and Blazing Saddles…amazing. Also, he was at University of Iowa….which always interested me (so was another of my favorites…Kurt Vonnegut)….but I digress. This short video provides some …
I think I’m like most people….in that I have a feeling about most of the foods I eat. What I mean by that is not….oh, this is tasty….but rather that I have a feeling about whether I’m eating healthy or not. If I eat a burger….I feel like ‘that’s not good for me’, while if …
The truth is….medical care is expensive and it’s getting more so each year. In addition, with the aging of the population, medical costs in total continue to climb at a rapid rate. It is important to us all to try to control costs, for ourselves as individuals, and for the system in general. Due to …
Does anybody remember the short-lived TV show THE IMMORTAL. It revolved around a dying aged millionare who needed the blood of Christopher George to survive, because he was ill and Christopher George had blood that uniquely gave the power of good health. Well, it now appears researchers have found a similar effect in mice. Young …
As a medical student and medical intern, I prided myself on my ability to get blood samples from ‘difficult to stick’ patients, and I can remember IV drug abusers teaching us students how to find their veins, as they were the most expert of all in finding a difficult to stick vessel. Now, today, two …
Measles is an extremely contagious virus that has virtually been eliminated from the United States since the 1990’s due to broad-ranging immunization of children throughout the country. Now, with the desire to avoid immunizations for their children, we are seeing a resurgence of this illness. To understand the history of this disease and to get …
Among the best parts of this time of year is all of the graduations going on around us, and the best part of graduations are the ‘best of the best’ commencement addresses that are given. There have been many especially good ones over the years, although I’ve never been privy to personally seeing one given, …
Well….my title for this piece is not quite accurate, but it rhymes! I’m talking about the famous patient from the past, Phineas Gage. His story if one of the ‘classics’ of neurology, as he had a severe injury from an explosion that damaged his brain, and he lived to tell about it. Although never formally …
I always liked that saying about the canary. Perhaps it wasn’t such a good job being the canary, but the idea of a simple measure to assess a situation is a great idea, and the latest information on diabetic patients gives us just such information. Diabetic complications have fallen sharply over the past few decades, …
A patient told me about a 60-minutes piece on the over 80 population, covering the 90+ project at University of Irvine in California. There are many findings from the study that are contrary to population belief and expectation, and which they feel are revealed in the data they have collected to residents of Leisure World, …
There was a recent research article that I reviewed about smoking and the aging effects it has on the skin. It reappeared with some good pictures in the NY TIMES, so take a look and see how smoking makes one twin look older than the other. Here are the pics>>>>>>HERE
I just heard a ‘wild’ report from a newly pregnant woman when I asked her about all the new issues that pregnant woman have to deal with. I was thinking of issues of genetic screening, and cord blood banking….how woman were handling these new issues that had not confronted my wife and I when we …
This year’s LASKER -DEBAKEY AWARD was given to the researchers who developed the cochlear implant. This implant allows the profoundly deaf people to hear again, and was the result of multiple collaborators over the past few decades. To hear the story of these researchers and the dramatic impact they have had on deaf people’s lives …
As most of you know, I am not a huge proponent of vitamins, based on concerns about the potential negatives they can cause, as well as the lack of evidence for their general effectiveness. That said, there are situations in which vitamins can be considered and here is a list of my current recommendations, with …