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Exercise therapy for craniomandibular disorders

Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 2000
To evaluate the use of exercise therapy for the treatment of craniomandibular disorders (CMDs).Before-after trial. All patients were assigned to a waiting list, serving as a no-treatment control period.Outpatient clinic for physical medicine and rehabilitation of the University of Vienna.Thirty consecutive patients suffering from CMD with anteridr disc
Veronika Fialka-Moser   +5 more
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Exercise therapy for Parkinson's disease

Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 1986
The outcomes of two different 12-week exercise programs were assessed by machine measurements of motor signs, tests of grip strength, motor coordination and speed, and neurophysiologic determinations of long-latency stretch responses in two groups of Parkinson patients matched for age, sex and stage of disease.
David D. Webster   +4 more
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Exercise therapy in patients with myopathy

Current Opinion in Neurology, 2000
Common impairments experienced by patients with myopathy include muscle weakness, reduced endurance and cardiovascular fitness. Strength-training programmes, incorporating isometric, isotonic or isokinetic exercise, have been shown to improve muscle strength in the short term, without evidence of increased muscle damage using biochemical markers ...
Phillips, B.A., Mastaglia, F.L.
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Exercise Therapy for COPD: How Is Exercise Therapy Significant?

2016
Exercise training is the most common form of non-pharmacologic therapy prescribed to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients. In the pathogenesis of COPD, only ventilation limitation is not a problem, and many patients have also caused muscle dysfunction. Therefore, the treatment for the muscle dysfunction is required.
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Exercise Therapy in Disability

1990
For the most part, inactivity in children and young adults reflects a deviation from normality. There are many diseases for which motor dysfunction and hypoactivity have been documented as being either inherent to the disease process or consequent to it.
M. Horvat, R. Croce, J. McCubbin
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Exercise therapy for fatigue in multiple sclerosis

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 2012
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an immune-mediated disease of the central nervous system affecting an estimated 1.3 million people worldwide. It is characterised by a variety of disabling symptoms of which excessive fatigue is the most frequent. Fatigue is often reported as the most invalidating symptom in people with MS.
Heine, Martin   +4 more
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Exercise Therapy in Coronary Disease [PDF]

open access: possible, 1970
The invitation to participate in this Boerhaave Course on the Prevention of Ischaemic Heart Disease at the University of Leiden is a high honor which I truly appreciate and hope to be worthy thereof. The locale of the Course is also gratifying, since it has provided me with an opportunity to visit the city of Leiden, home of so many historical ...
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Diuretic Therapy and Exercise Performance

Sports Medicine, 1987
Drugs that induce an increased urine flow are used both legitimately (treatment of hypertension and oedema) and otherwise (rapid weight loss) in sports and exercise. There are 5 major categories of diuretic drugs based on their mechanisms and loci of action.
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Chronic Pain and Exercise Therapy

The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1989
In the past, patients with chronic pain were told to limit their activity and shield themselves from pain. But that has changed: Physicians now prescribe both aerobic and resistance exercise to treat chronic pain.
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Exercise Therapy for Chronic Pain

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clinics of North America, 2015
The benefit of exercise for pain control likely comes from the impact of exercise on the endogenous opioid system and on central pain modulatory systems. Patients with some chronic pain conditions seem to have a dysfunctional endogenous pain modulatory system, which should be considered when prescribing exercise.
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