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Patients with eosinophilic neuropathy, associated with primary eosinophilia or the Churg-Strauss syndrome, exhibit cutaneous vasculitis and reduced epidermal nerve fiber density.
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Muscle Nogo-A may be a useful biomarker for the early diagnosis of ALS.
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In spite of great advances in neuroimaging, neurocritical care, and neurosurgical interventions for the diagnosis and treatment of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), it is uncertain if case morbidity and mortality have significantly declined.
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Patients with Parkinson's disease takinglevodopa were divided into groups with (i) moderate-severe fluctuations and (ii) stable response.
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Patients with peripheral artery disease are at high risk for cardiovascular complications. Antiplatelet drugs are routinely prescribed for these patients, but is adding an oral anticoagulant of value?
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News this past summer about a hepatitis virus C (HCV) cluster in New York City at outpatient facilities was a startling reminder of how ambulatory sites should monitor infection control practices by both staff, contracting physicians, and others.
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There have been a number of hepatitis outbreaks in U.S. ambulatory settings in recent years, including one in 2002 that involved 100 hepatitis infections caused by one certified registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA) who reused needles and another outbreak of 99 hepatitis C cases also was caused by reused syringes.
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Public health investigators have found that the ambulatory clinic health care worker in Tennessee who died of community-associated, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) was likely an isolated case.