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Hot Flashes

Clinical Journal of Oncology Nursing, 2006
Mr. J is a 68-year-old African American man with a history of advanced prostate cancer. He was diagnosed nine months prior with adenocarcinoma of the prostate, with a Gleason score of 9 and tumor, node, metastasis staging of T3 NO M1. His prostate-specific antigen (PSA) was 483 ng/ml at the time of diagnosis.
Christine Engstrom, Deborah Davison
openaire   +2 more sources

Hot Flash Epilepsy

Southern Medical Journal, 1988
A woman had episodes of bilateral thermal sensation, initially thought to be hot flashes related to menopause. EEG telemetry documented the epileptic nature of the attacks with an electrographic seizure emanating from the right temporal area coincident with the hot flashes.
J F, Brick, T W, Crosby
openaire   +2 more sources

Hot Flashes

Drugs & Aging, 2001
Menopause, an event often accompanied by symptoms such as hot flashes, can have a significant impact on a woman's quality of life. A majority of women will experience hot flashes at some point in their life, given a normal life span. Despite multiple theories, the exact pathophysiology of hot flashes is not yet known.
D, Barton   +2 more
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Mirtazapine: Hot Flashes

Hospital Pharmacy, 2006
Off-Label Drug Uses — This Hospital Pharmacy feature is extracted from Off-Label DrugFacts, a quarterly publication available from Wolters Kluwer Health. Off-Label DrugFacts is a practitioner-oriented resource for information about specific FDA-unapproved drug uses. This new guide to the literature will enable the health care professional/clinician to
Joyce Generali, Dennis J. Cada
  +4 more sources

Climacteric hot flash

Maturitas, 1981
No data are available on either quantitative or qualitative aspects of the climacteric hot flash, yet the phenomenon is widely treated despite unknown aetiology. A basic assumption of this study was that a more complete understanding and description of women with hot flashes would identify alternatives to oestrogens used by women for relief of the hot ...
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Mechanism of hot flashes

Clinical and Translational Oncology, 2011
Hot flashes are a common and disturbing adverse effect of hormonal therapy for cancer. Their pathophysiology is poorly understood. At present, the leading mechanistic hypothesis rests on the assumption that abrupt hormone deprivation will result in loss of negative feedback over hypothalamic noradrenaline synthesis. In this article we critically review
Santiago, Vilar-González   +2 more
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Insomnia and hot flashes

Maturitas, 2019
The increased prevalence of sleep disorders associated with menopause has been emphasized by multiple international studies. Many factors are associated with insomnia during menopause, among them: hot flashes (HF), anxiety and depression, other medical conditions, behavioral and psychosocial factors and primitive sleep patterns.
Bonanni E   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Tamoxifen-Induced Hot Flashes

Clinical Breast Cancer, 2000
Hot flashes are the most prominent side effect of tamoxifen, the most frequently prescribed antitumor agent in the world. Little detailed information is available to predict who will develop hot flashes on tamoxifen, to describe the natural history of these hot flashes, and/or to predict who will request therapy for such a side effect.
C L, Loprinzi   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Hot-Flash Hypotension

New England Journal of Medicine, 2004
To the Editor: The hot flash is one of the most commonly encountered symptoms of menopause, yet there is little understanding of its underlying physiology.
Richard Nelesen   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

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