Challenges in Evaluating Sleep Disturbances in Patients with Hand and Upper Extremity Disease
Authors
Abstract:
Challenges in Evaluating Sleep Disturbances in Patients with Hand and Upper Extremity Disease
similar resources
challenges in evaluating sleep disturbances in patients with hand and upper extremity disease
challenges in evaluating sleep disturbances in patients with hand and upper extremity disease
full textChallenges in Evaluating Sleep Disturbances in Patients with Hand and Upper Extremity Disease.
Arch Bone Joint Surg. 2017; 5 (2): 129-130. http://abjs.mums.ac.ir the online version of this article abjs.mums.ac.ir Dear Editor It was with great interest that we read the recent study by Peters et al regarding sleep disturbances in patients with disease of the upper extremity (1). In this article, the authors aimed to correlate sleep disturbance and other psychosocial factors with upper extr...
full textSleep Disturbance and Upper-Extremity Disability
Background: Although upper-extremity disability correlates with psychosocial aspects of illness the association with sleep disturbance in upper extremity disability is less certain. To evaluate whether sleep disturbance is associated with upper-extremity disability among patients with upper extremity illness, accounting for sociodemographic, condition-related, and psychosocial factors. Method...
full text[Sleep disturbances in patients with Parkinson disease].
Sleep disturbances are among the most common disabling nonmotor symptoms of Parkinson disease (PD). Recently, awareness of sleep disorders related to PD has increased, reflecting their significant negative impact on the quality of life of the patient. However, sleep disturbances are still often under-recognized. In PD, multiple factors are associated with sleep disturbances; impaired arousal sy...
full textthe past hospitalization and its association with suicide attempts and ideation in patients with mdd and comparison with bmd (depressed type) group
چکیده ندارد.
True aneurysmal disease in the hand and upper extremity.
Ten patients with true aneurysmal disease of the hand and forearm vessels were treated at our institution between 1981 and 1990. Pseudoaneurysms resulting from penetrating trauma or mycotic aneurysms were specifically excluded. Eight patients were male, two were female; mean patient age was 38 years (range 26 to 72 years). A history of repetitive occupational or recreational trauma was elicited...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 5 issue 2
pages 129- 130
publication date 2017-03-01
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023