Results 271 to 280 of about 795,035 (307)
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1967
Dr. Joseph T. Ferrucci, Jr.: A 63-year-old white woman, who lived in a nursing home because of slowly progressive syringomylelia, was admitted to the hospital complaining of abdominal pain of one day's duration. The pain had occurred spontaneously, had radiated to the back, but was primarily located in the lower abdomen.
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Dr. Joseph T. Ferrucci, Jr.: A 63-year-old white woman, who lived in a nursing home because of slowly progressive syringomylelia, was admitted to the hospital complaining of abdominal pain of one day's duration. The pain had occurred spontaneously, had radiated to the back, but was primarily located in the lower abdomen.
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1967
ABSTRACT To the Editor:— In reply to the letter of J.V. Gilkey, MD, (202:152, 1967) in which he comments on my paper "Technique for Quantitating Abdominal Pain" (201:558, 1967) I would say that technically Dr. Gilkey is correct in his semantic argument.Pain may be defined as the subjective complaint of the patient, whereas tenderness is the pain the ...
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ABSTRACT To the Editor:— In reply to the letter of J.V. Gilkey, MD, (202:152, 1967) in which he comments on my paper "Technique for Quantitating Abdominal Pain" (201:558, 1967) I would say that technically Dr. Gilkey is correct in his semantic argument.Pain may be defined as the subjective complaint of the patient, whereas tenderness is the pain the ...
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Pediatrics, 1971
The omissions and emphases in discussing "irritable bowel syndrome" in Drs. Stone and Barbero's article on recurrent abdominal pain1 were criticized in the December issue of Pediatrics.2 The difficulties encountered in lumping children with abdominal pain into simple categories are part of daily clinical pediatrics.
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The omissions and emphases in discussing "irritable bowel syndrome" in Drs. Stone and Barbero's article on recurrent abdominal pain1 were criticized in the December issue of Pediatrics.2 The difficulties encountered in lumping children with abdominal pain into simple categories are part of daily clinical pediatrics.
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Functional Abdominal Pain (Chronic Abdominal Pain)
2020Functional abdominal pain is chronic and recurrent pain in the abdominal region that does not have an identifiable physical or organic cause. Along with other gastrointestinal functional disorders, as a group it constitutes the most common cause of abdominal pain.
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Optimal pain management for patients with cancer in the modern era
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2018Cardinale B Smith
exaly

