Results 271 to 280 of about 1,142,709 (351)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
JAMA, 1960
To the Editor:— In my letter toThe Journalof July 16, 1960, page 1272, I questioned Johnson's and Olsen's statement that "the conduction velocity is normal in poliomyelitis" ( JAMA 172 :2030-2035, 1960). I did so on the basis of my own work with 26 chronic poliomyelitis patients in whom nerve conduction velocity was slowed ( J Neurophysiol 12 : 259 ...
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To the Editor:— In my letter toThe Journalof July 16, 1960, page 1272, I questioned Johnson's and Olsen's statement that "the conduction velocity is normal in poliomyelitis" ( JAMA 172 :2030-2035, 1960). I did so on the basis of my own work with 26 chronic poliomyelitis patients in whom nerve conduction velocity was slowed ( J Neurophysiol 12 : 259 ...
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Archives of Internal Medicine, 1972
To the Editor. —The article, "Nerve Conduction Velocity in the Assessment of Hypertension" by Viskoper, Chaco, and Aviram (Arch Intern Med 128:574-575, 1971) concluded that "nerve conduction velocity can provide us with an objective measurable index of the severity of hypertension." Although one might think that this could be done more easily with a ...
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To the Editor. —The article, "Nerve Conduction Velocity in the Assessment of Hypertension" by Viskoper, Chaco, and Aviram (Arch Intern Med 128:574-575, 1971) concluded that "nerve conduction velocity can provide us with an objective measurable index of the severity of hypertension." Although one might think that this could be done more easily with a ...
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Phrenic nerve conduction studies
Muscle & Nerve, 1992AbstractTo refine in the technique of phrenic nerve conduction, we first studied electrode positioning and sources of chest wall artifact. Diaphragmatic compound motor action potentials (DCMAPs) were mapped at close intervals over 4 hemithoraces of two subjects, finding optimum recording sites which were then used to quantitate artifacts due to EKG ...
M R, Swenson, R S, Rubenstein
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Electrically Conductive Hydrogel Nerve Guidance Conduits for Peripheral Nerve Regeneration
Advanced Functional Materials, 2020Peripheral nerve injuries are serious conditions, and surgical treatment has critical limitations. Therefore, nerve guidance conduits (NGCs) are proposed as an alternative.
Junggeon Park +9 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Australian family physician, 2012
This article forms part of our 'Tests and results' series for 2011 which aims to provide information about common tests that general practitioners order regularly. It considers areas such as indications, what to tell the patient, what the test can and cannot tell you, and interpretation of results.
Jasper R. Daube, Devon I. Rubin
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This article forms part of our 'Tests and results' series for 2011 which aims to provide information about common tests that general practitioners order regularly. It considers areas such as indications, what to tell the patient, what the test can and cannot tell you, and interpretation of results.
Jasper R. Daube, Devon I. Rubin
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Sensory Nerve Conduction Studies
Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology, 1994Sensory nerve conduction studies (NCS) are an indispensable component of the electrodiagnostic examination. They evolved from mixed NCS, and were initially described by Dawson in 1950. Gilliatt and Sears first reported their clinical value in 1958. Compared to motor NCS, sensory NCS are much less standardized.
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