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Autoimmune Disorders

Nursing Standard, 2002
Autoimmune disorders affect people of all ages, ethnicity, social class and gender. The authors briefly review the normal immune response and consider how this might break down, resulting in autoimmune disorders. Susceptibility of individuals to such disorders is discussed and examples of specific conditions are outlined.
Alistair, Farley, Charles, Hendry
openaire   +2 more sources

Gastroduodenal Disorders

Gastroenterology, 2016
Symptoms that can be attributed to the gastroduodenal region represent one of the main subgroups among functional gastrointestinal disorders. A slightly modified classification into the following 4 categories is proposed: (1) functional dyspepsia, characterized by 1 or more of the following: postprandial fullness, early satiation, epigastric pain, and ...
STANGHELLINI, VINCENZO   +6 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Global prevalence of gaming disorder: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry (Print), 2020
Background: Gaming disorder was included in the latest revision of the International Classification of Diseases (11th ed.). Worldwide, prevalence estimates of gaming disorder are considerably heterogeneous and often appear to be exceedingly high. However,
Matthew W. R. Stevens   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Seizure disorders

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 2004
The diagnosis and management of patients with epilepsy is often undertaken by pediatricians, internists, and geriatricians (primary care physicians [PCPs]). Although referral to a neurologist may be necessary if the diagnosis of epilepsy is unclear or if the patient does not respond to initial therapy with antiepileptic drugs, PCPs may subsequently ...
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Gait Disorders

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 2021
As a child matures so does the child's gait pattern. Gait changes in pediatric patients will be expected and sequential as developmental milestones. Gait changes may also represent normal variations along an appropriate spectrum. There are times when changes in gait are due to urgent orthopedic or medical conditions, and those should not be overlooked.
Margaret E, Gibson, Natalie, Stork
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Peroxisomal disorders

Current Opinion in Pediatrics, 1999
Peroxisomes, subcellular organelles found in nearly all eukaryotic cells, are involved in numerous biochemical functions within the cell. There has been an increasing understanding of the genetic mechanism of the diseases of the single peroxisomal enzyme abnormalities as well as defects of peroxisome biogenesis.
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Adrenal Disorders

2012
The most frequent cause nowadays is autoimmune adrenalitis, which can be confirmed by the presence of 21-hydroxylase-antibodies (Oelkers 1996). When suspected on clinical grounds, adrenal insufficiency has to be confirmed by inappropriately low serum cortisol with elevated adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) (in case of primary adrenal insufficiency). A morning
Gessl, Alois   +2 more
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Sleep disorders

Current Paediatrics, 1984
The development of multidisciplinary centers and the increasing availability of consultation in the overlapping borderland that sleep disorders medicine shares with many specialties are leading to accurate diagnoses and successful treatment for patients of physicians who are aware of the clinical situations in which polysomnography or sleep latency ...
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Peroxisomal Disorders

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1986
Peroxisomal disorders occur more frequently and have a wider range of clinical manifestations than has been realized in the past. Precise diagnosis can be achieved with non-invasive biochemical assays and all can be diagnosed prenatally, thus providing the option of genetic counseling.
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Adrenocortical Disorders

International Anesthesiology Clinics, 1997
Preoperative preparation for the patient with adrenal disorders is directed toward restoring the intravascular volume and the electrolyte concentrations to normal. Hypertension and hypokalemia may be controlled by restricting sodium intake and administration of the aldosterone antagonist spironolactone.
P, Sheeran, E, O'Leary
openaire   +2 more sources

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