Multiple Sclerosis in Clinical Practice
β Scribed by Stanley Van Den Noort, Nancy J. Holland
- Publisher
- Demos Medical Publishing
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 253
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Managing multiple sclerosis, with all the associated problems of a progressive chronic disease, requires special knowledge on the part of the clinician. From which drugs to prescribe for an acute attack, to the use of new drugs available to help control the disease process, to managing the myriad of symptoms and neurologic complications associated with the disease, the clinician must have a full armament of tools available to be effective. This book provides the basic groundwork you need to treat these patients. It is designed for all physicians who manage the disease outside a comprehensive MS care center, emphasizing those therapies that can be used successfully by the non-MS specialist, and indicating when referral is appropriate. Most importantly, it gives you the tools to improve the quality of life for your patients, allowing them to maximize their capabilities and take advantage of all available resources. (20100503)
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p></p><p><span>Fatigue is a major symptom in patients with multiple sclerosis (pwMS) and is mainly responsible for unemployment, early retirement but also social withdrawal.Β This book combines reporting of actually existing scientific knowledge with guidance for clinical practice. As such the book
<p></p><p><span>Fatigue is a major symptom in patients with multiple sclerosis (pwMS) and is mainly responsible for unemployment, early retirement but also social withdrawal.Β This book combines reporting of actually existing scientific knowledge with guidance for clinical practice. As such the book
<p><p>This book gives a clinical context to optical coherence tomography (OCT) findings, while considering the differential diagnosis and providing patient management guidance. </p><p>Relevant anatomical and technical aspects are discussed, followed by a pragmatic illustration of the use of OCT for
<p>We have entered an exciting period in the study of multiple sclerosis and its treatment. Central to this progress has been the introduction of magnetic resoΒ nance techniques. When Young and his colleagues published the first images of the brain in multiple sclerosis at the end of 1981, it was at