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Variable Association of Neighborhood Deprivation and Race With Postoperative Survival After Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting. [PDF]

open access: yesJ Am Heart Assoc
Schaffer JM   +7 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Low depression rates among caregivers of young children with sickle cell disease: a rapid report. [PDF]

open access: yesJ Sick Cell Dis
Hoyt CR   +6 more
europepmc   +1 more source
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Adie syndrome

Vestnik oftal'mologii, 2019
Disorders and abnormalities of pupil reactions comprise important part in the clinical practice of both ophthalmologists and neurologists. The present article presents a historical perspective on one of such pathologies - Adie syndrome, and discusses its etiology, pathogenesis and clinical symptomatology.
P I, Kuznetsova   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Adie's Syndrome

Archives of Neurology, 1968
MEDICAL .EDICAL men have seldom been shy in claiming paternity for orphaned syndromes and bestowing their names on them. William Adie's description of the tonic pupil with absent tendon reflexes is partly a dialectic to establish his priority. It is also an attempt to broaden the syndrome by defining incomplete forms.
I A, Brody, R H, Wilkins
openaire   +2 more sources

Adie's Syndrome

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1959
I. Response of Iris Sphincter and Ciliary Muscle to Greatly Diluted Solutions of Drugs Drug tests by means of conjunctival instillation have been used in patients with pupillotonia firstly for the purpose of differential diagnosis and secondly in order to determine the site of the underlying disturbance. Whereas some drugs have, when used in the usual
openaire   +2 more sources

ADIE'S SYNDROME

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1942
The symptom complex of absent tendon reflexes and tonic pupils has been termed Adie's syndrome. Its cause remains unknown. Its importance lies in distinguishing this symptom complex from syphilis of the central nervous system. Neurologists and ophthalmologists are familiar with Adie's syndrome. There have been numerous publications in the literature of
openaire   +1 more source

ADIE'S SYNDROME

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1943
To the Editor: —Dr. Rooks's article "Adie's Syndrome," in the June issue (Arch. Ophth. 29: 936, 1943) suggests that all cases of this syndrome "be brought to the attention of the medical profession with as much publicity as possible." I am in complete agreement with this idea, and I assume that if this is the purpose of the report, the cases which are
openaire   +2 more sources

ADIE'S SYNDROME

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1951
To the Editor: —Your correspondent Dr. Wartenberg (The Journal, July 21, 1951, page 1152) appears to have overlooked the fact that the association of a tonic pupil and the absence of tendon reflexes was first described in England by Markus in 1906. The reference is C. Markus, Trans. Ophthalm. Soc. U. K., 1906, 26, 50.
openaire   +1 more source

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