Results 281 to 290 of about 9,004,370 (343)
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Hospital Practice, 1990
This often painful disease may be primary or secondary. Simple preventive measures sometimes provide symptomatic control. When such efforts fail, the most effective agents available are calcium channel blockers.
Joseph Varon, John D. Gasman
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This often painful disease may be primary or secondary. Simple preventive measures sometimes provide symptomatic control. When such efforts fail, the most effective agents available are calcium channel blockers.
Joseph Varon, John D. Gasman
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Raynaud's Disease and Scleroderma
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1979To the Editor.— I should like to take Orville Horwitz, MD, of Philadelphia, to task on one point that he made concerning Raynaud's disease in answering a question forThe Journal(184:85, 1963). I had occasion to read his response lately and was horrified to note the following: "Raynaud's disease itself is a nuisance rather than a serious condition and ...
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Raynaud's Disease and Prostacyclin
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1983Excerpt To the editor: The recent paper by Jobe and associates, (1) provides not only a simple treatment for mild Raynaud's symptoms but perhaps more importantly raises an interesting scientific is...
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Raynaud's disease and phenomenon.
1995The primary symptom of Raynaud’s phenomenon is episodic digital vasospasms provoked by exposure to cold and/or emotional stress (Freedman & Ianni, 1983a). Attacks generally last for several minutes and consist of blanching followed by cyanosis and rubor. The disorder is four times more common in women than in men and has an estimated prevalence of 4.3%
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Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery, 2008
I. Kossintseva, B. Barankin
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I. Kossintseva, B. Barankin
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1979
Raynaud’s disease is a disorder of the vascular system in which the individual experiences pain in the hands, feet, or (rarely) the face as a result of cold stimulation and/or emotional stress. The pain is thought to result from extreme vasoconstriction that reduces peripheral blood flow and may leave the extremities cold to the touch. In a severe case,
Todd Rogers+3 more
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Raynaud’s disease is a disorder of the vascular system in which the individual experiences pain in the hands, feet, or (rarely) the face as a result of cold stimulation and/or emotional stress. The pain is thought to result from extreme vasoconstriction that reduces peripheral blood flow and may leave the extremities cold to the touch. In a severe case,
Todd Rogers+3 more
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Raynaud's Disease, Raynaud's Phenomenon, and Serotonin
Angiology, 1960Saul S. Samuels+6 more
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Onconephrology: The intersections between the kidney and cancer
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2021Mitchell H Rosner+2 more
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