Nearly 5 years ago, CMAJ launched Clinical Vistas, a case-based imaging column,1 in order to increase the clinical and visual content of the Journal. Since that time readers have been provided glimpses of a variety of interesting and important clinical scenes. Cases have highlighted typical presentations of rare conditions2 as well as common complaints caused by unusual diseases.3 One reader recently joked that we should change the name of the column to “Infections presenting as cancer, and vice versa.” Primarily educational, but with a tone deliberately less “gawky” than many imaging columns, Clinical Vistas was designed to allow readers to imagine themselves in the treating physician's decision-making shoes. In the end, the column has been primarily educational.
Readership surveys and download statistics from www.cmaj.ca have suggested that the column is well received. As editors we have, however, been disappointed that we can publish only a fraction of the cases submitted to the column. An idea was conceived for a new, briefer version of Clinical Vistas to allow multiple cases to be published in a single feature. And thus is born in this issue (see page 1710) a new column: Clinical Vistas Briefs.
Clinical Vistas will still appear in its original form in every second issue, but it will alternate with the Briefs column. The Briefs will still cover important and rare conditions or physical signs, but will differ from the usual Clinical Vistas articles in format and length. The Briefs will be presented more as a diagnostic quiz designed to sharpen the clinician's visual recognition skills; they will also be much shorter, with few references. Armed with the bare images, accompanied only by a short clinical description (such as might be found on a radiograph or pathology requisition), readers will be asked to make a diagnostic “call.” It is hoped that approaching the cases with no titles that give away the diagnosis, explanatory figure captions nor unambiguous arrow signs will make the cases more interesting. The diagnosis will be revealed on another page, with arrows as required to clarify the image, and some brief educational or take-home points about the condition in question.
Readers are invited to submit cases with interesting clinical images according to the criteria specified in Box 1. Submissions are best sent through our online manuscript tracking system (see the link at www.cmaj.ca). It is hoped that this new column will further meet the needs of our readers and authors; we look forward to feedback from readers in the coming months.
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