The notion of pain as just a peripheral, or strictly stimulus-driven, phenomenon is over.
Search results for: central nervous system
ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting 2012: Understanding Pain Signals May Pave Path to More Effective Therapies
The ability to differentiate the types of pain affiliated with rheumatic diseases can help rheumatologists better diagnose and treat patients
EULAR 2012: Rewards in Risk Factor Research
Investigations of infection and comorbidities offers hints to better understanding of rheumatoid arthritis.
Three Giants of Immunology at USC
Prejudice, and how I became a rheumatologist.
What’s In A Note?: The Use of Electronic Health Records
The dictum “to write as long as possible” has become the norm for some physicians. Quality, not quantity, should be our goal.
Pinpoint Cognitive Dysfunction in Patients with Lupus
More than 80% of SLE patients experience some type of neurologic manifestation during their disease course. The challenge for rheumatologists and other clinicians lies in appropriately diagnosing any cognitive dysfunctions that accompany lupus and better understanding the causes and risk factors of those dysfunctions. “Cognitive Function in SLE” was the focus of a talk at the 2011 ACR/ARHP Annual Scientific Meeting in November.
Susac’s Syndrome: Confusion, Expressive Aphasia, Gait Instability
A 49-year-old man presented to the hospital with confusion, dysarthria, expressive aphasia, and progressive gait instability.
Old Drugs Can Learn New Tricks
Methotrexate and its mechanism of action
The Microbiome
A voyage to (our inner) Lilliput
A&R and AC&R Abstracts: Pain in RA
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