戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。

今後説明を表示しない

[OK]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 partments (medicine, psychiatry, pediatrics, neurology).
2  encourage the next generation of leaders in neurology.
3 ological Association and American Academy of Neurology.
4 n neuroscience research and in translational neurology.
5 n trained generations of medical students in neurology.
6 turn be key for understanding pathologies in neurology.
7 yed by one of the great pioneers of clinical neurology.
8 ymptoms are commonly encountered in clinical neurology.
9 e most prevalent and disabling conditions in neurology.
10 which to establish a new science of clinical neurology.
11 ion and operation of academic departments of neurology.
12 f computational psychiatry and computational neurology.
13  he was elected Action Research Professor of Neurology.
14 covery remains a major challenge in clinical neurology.
15 nd Brussels) became a central event in world neurology.
16 diatric critical care medicine and pediatric neurology.
17  receptors are used widely in psychiatry and neurology.
18 herence tomography and its practical uses in neurology.
19  reflect on Charles Darwin's relationship to neurology.
20 mentia before the syndrome was recognized in neurology.
21  developed out of critical care medicine and neurology.
22 sue for cell-based therapies in regenerative neurology.
23 uce flexibility during residency training in neurology.
24 hat will link small and large departments of neurology.
25 is, aetiology and treatment of depression in neurology.
26 t important threat to the future of academic neurology.
27 figures in the history of twentienth century neurology.
28 man neuroscience and clinical psychiatry and neurology.
29 remendous potential, particularly for stroke neurology.
30 ables recommended by the American Academy of Neurology.
31 ded to establish the role of TMS in clinical neurology.
32  is the single biggest unmet medical need in neurology.
33 ser to neuroscience, behavioral science, and neurology.
34 rategic approaches to enhancing diversity in neurology.
35 l and psychomotor symptoms in psychiatry and neurology.
36 ellular processes in diabetes, oncology, and neurology.
37 ys in the newly evolving field of autoimmune neurology.
38 es have led to a concerning culture shift in neurology.
39 re, represents a major challenge for today's neurology.
40 and gynecology, -0.5%; radiology, -0.4%; and neurology, -0.1%) but were positive for family practice
41                  Other applications included neurology (9% clinical, 12% research) and cardiology (3%
42 ipate by the NSA, were recognized experts in neurology (9), cardiology (2), family practice (1), nurs
43 ntries, signified a global presence of world neurology; a coming of age.
44 re the presidents of the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) and the American Neurological Associatio
45                      The American Academy of Neurology (AAN) issued new guidelines in 2010 on the det
46 tion by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology (ABPN).
47             This issue of Current Opinion in Neurology addresses recent reports that illustrate aspec
48 iculitis and meningitis (American Academy of Neurology, American Association of Neurological Surgeons
49  was conducted at the Northwestern Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer's Disease Center in August 2015
50 vide diagnostic options in ophthalmology and neurology and could provide insights into visual phototr
51 these disorders continue to reach mainstream neurology and even psychiatry, more cell-surface-directe
52 vational studies, coupled with principles of neurology and hematology.
53 tiary care referral center with expertise in neurology and HSCT, from January 1, 2001, through Decemb
54 69-96); professor of neurology, Institute of Neurology and Institute of Ophthalmology, University of
55 were performed by specialists in psychiatry, neurology and internal medicine/infectious diseases.
56 ncephalogram (EEG) is a mainstay of clinical neurology and is tightly correlated with brain function,
57 ted a growing trend toward specialization in neurology and medicine.
58 ated to medicine in the tropics may consider neurology and neurologists superfluous in this environme
59                                 A century of neurology and neuroscience shows that seeing words depen
60  FMedSci: neurologist, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery (1966-98); physician, Moorfie
61    Significant developments in the fields of neurology and neurosurgery have led to improved treatmen
62 sorders service at The National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery in London who came to neuropa
63 Research Centre at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery in the United Kingdom.
64 rosis who attended the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery or the Royal Free Hospital, L
65 0 patients seen at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery over the past 10 years.
66  clinic (initially The National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery Queen Square and University C
67 euromuscular Diseases, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London, UK.
68 ry neuropathies at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London.
69 ovements in care require a united input from neurology and neurosurgery, oncology, and palliative car
70 inkage Scheme with the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery.
71 ressive surgery to the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery.
72  registration has been applied clinically in neurology and oncology and may be particularly practical
73 lso for application in other fields, such as neurology and oncology.
74  found compared with the American Academy of Neurology and other authoritative standards.
75 ceptor (NMDAR) has entered the mainstream of neurology and other disciplines.
76 ming decades of a new nosology, certainly in neurology and perhaps also in psychiatry, based not on s
77 nd systems neuroscience, as well as clinical neurology and pharmacology.
78                             The interests of neurology and psychiatry converge within the framework o
79 brief historical overview of developments in neurology and psychiatry from the late 19th century.
80                                              Neurology and psychiatry have, for much of the past cent
81  technological advances, and applications in neurology and psychiatry illustrate the point.
82    Thus, a new degree of cooperation between neurology and psychiatry is likely to result, especially
83 s the historical basis for the divergence of neurology and psychiatry over the past century and discu
84  A major motivation comes from the fields of neurology and psychiatry, where a central goal is the ch
85 irst to describe the clinical foundations of neurology and psychiatry.
86 re classic questions of cardinal interest to neurology and psychiatry.
87  deals with disorders at the intersection of neurology and psychiatry.
88 dy of cognitive and behavioural disorders in neurology and psychiatry.
89 ire spectrum of higher function disorders in neurology and psychiatry.
90 pans virtually every major area of medicine, neurology and psychiatry.
91 can confound disease-relevant discoveries in neurology and psychiatry.
92 tion (rTMS) is used as a therapeutic tool in neurology and psychiatry.
93 e therapeutic index is an unrealized goal in neurology and psychiatry.
94 olving disorders which stem from cardiology, neurology and psychiatry: Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)
95 ence guidelines from the American Academy of Neurology and the highest-quality data for each topic.
96 framework which revolutionized both clinical neurology and the neurosciences in general.
97 the requirements for leadership positions in neurology and those personal qualities, management style
98  use, and is now widely employed in clinical neurology and, even more often, in beauty clinics.
99     FMD have been described as a "crisis for neurology" and cause major challenges in terms of diagno
100 e search terms ophthalmoscopy, nonmydriatic, neurology, and emergency, including variant spellings an
101 nology in the areas of oncology, cardiology, neurology, and infectious diseases.
102 ery, internal medicine, infectious diseases, neurology, and laboratory medicine/microbiology.
103  sulfur amino-acid metabolism in psychiatry, neurology, and neuro-oncology and of lipidomics in neuro
104 tients) was associated with initial abnormal neurology, and neurologic sequelae and/or death at 12 mo
105 nd SPECT/CT in drug development, cardiology, neurology, and oncology are stimulating further investme
106  in ophthalmology, illumination engineering, neurology, and other relevant disciplines.
107 ase was in internal medicine subspecialties, neurology, and psychiatry.
108 nges that face diversity efforts in academic neurology, and to suggest strategies that leaders in the
109 nd neurology; Internet, clinical trials, and neurology; and telemedicine, clinical trials, and neurol
110   Two important leadership posts in American neurology are the presidents of the American Academy of
111 alty by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, are discussed.
112                           It is also used in neurology as an electrophysiological endpoint in pharmac
113 f as intense interest to neuropsychiatry and neurology as dopamine, yet existing techniques to monito
114 al study was conducted at the Departments of Neurology at Charite-Universitatsmedizin Berlin and Univ
115 ho were seen within the Division of Clinical Neurology at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford, Engl
116 Memory and Aging Center of the Department of Neurology at University of California, San Francisco.
117 ards to bring this issue to the forefront of neurology because it has the potential to affect patient
118 zations, even though the American Academy of Neurology began as a small and politically vulnerable or
119 icits is one of the cornerstones of clinical neurology, behavioral and cognitive deficits in psychiat
120 imaging, particularly pediatric oncology and neurology but also the diagnosis of infectious or inflam
121 est to readers of the Journal of Comparative Neurology but that it is also contentious and difficult.
122 een in expanded application for oncology and neurology, but also cardiovascular disease and inflammat
123 th East of England were referred to a single neurology center for investigation over the 10-year peri
124 th East of England were referred to a single neurology center from 1990 to 2014.
125 c paraplegia referred to a tertiary referral neurology centre in London for diagnosis or management.
126 trial, patients from 185 epilepsy or general neurology centres in Europe, North America, and the Asia
127 syndrome were enrolled from seven paediatric neurology centres in the UK, Germany, and the USA from F
128  the cerebellar ataxia subtype (MSA-C)-at 12 neurology centres in the USA specialising in movement or
129 cebo-controlled phase 2 trial at 16 academic neurology centres in the USA, between June 28, 2007, and
130 mples referred from five tertiary paediatric neurology centres to Oxford for antibody testing in 2007
131  Any medical record diagnosis of dementia or neurology clinic diagnosis of AD or VaD.
132 established diagnosis of FMS from a tertiary neurology clinic in London, UK.
133 niversity hospital that represented the only neurology clinic in the region.
134 mple of 287 clinic attendees at a university neurology clinic in the UK.
135 ng 1992-2008 at the University of Washington Neurology Clinic or Group Health Cooperative in western
136 al findings of patients with RIM seen in the neurology clinic over a 11-year period (2002-2013).
137 ically define BRV, we have selected from our Neurology Clinic population a subset of 20 multigenerati
138 ncountered as presenting complaints in child neurology clinical practice.
139 ethods and technologies have been applied to neurology clinical trials.
140  50 non-epileptic patients attending general neurology clinics and 50 medical students at Edinburgh U
141 ical evaluation conducted at child and adult neurology clinics at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minneso
142  recruited from referral centers and general neurology clinics in public or private institutions in F
143 from primary care to National Health Service neurology clinics in Scotland, UK.
144 rt study of 3781 newly attending patients at neurology clinics in Scotland, UK.
145                         The setting included neurology clinics, clinical research centers, and hospit
146 account for over 16% of patients referred to neurology clinics.
147  who are attending outpatient cardiology and neurology clinics.
148 in epilepsy but is not routinely assessed in neurology clinics.
149 additional evaluation at tertiary outpatient neurology clinics.
150 logy, cardiorespiratory, cardiovascular, and neurology cohorts.
151                           Neuroradiology and neurology committees adjudicated the presence of SCI.
152 eld are summarized to empower and engage the neurology community in this "newly discovered organ." An
153 nversion through in-depth interviews with 22 neurology consultants.
154 tion, discharge on statin, lipid management, neurology consultation, Holter, deep vein thrombosis pro
155 tential testing, and 71% (35 of 49) received neurology consultation.
156 his system may include more frequent, timely neurology consultations in the hospital and emergency de
157        The experimental field of restorative neurology continues to advance with implantation of cell
158     It included a mailed American Academy of Neurology continuing medical education course, practice-
159 nce of efficacy based on American Academy of Neurology criteria were determined.
160 ith concussion (based on American Academy of Neurology criteria) and 56 noninjured controls underwent
161 the scientific formalism that created modern neurology, demonstrates how its direct implications affe
162                         She presented to the Neurology Department at Wayne State University with bila
163       Independent, trained monitors from the neurology department examined all patients undergoing CE
164 ients hospitalized in the Clinical Pediatric Neurology Department of Provincial Hospital No.2 in Rzes
165  or a GBS variant who presented to the adult neurology department of the University Hospital Leuven w
166  between December 2010 and February 2015, in neurology departments at tertiary referral centers.
167 onsider in order to enhance the diversity of neurology departments.
168    On its formation, the American Academy of Neurology did not enter a vacuum.
169 upied a prominent place in British and world neurology during the second half of the 20th century.
170 per week requires specialty skills in stroke neurology, endovascular surgical neuroradiology, neurosu
171 ral disconnectionist paradigm ruled clinical neurology for 20 years but in the late 1980s, with the r
172  to the readers and editors of the Annals of Neurology for this action.
173 pulations offer key benefits in regenerative neurology, for release of therapeutic biomolecules in ex
174                                      Genomic neurology has arrived and its application to resolving A
175  clinical neuropsychology, brain imaging and neurology has reached a critical moment.
176                      Of all the specialties, neurology has the third highest number of orphan product
177  relating to dermatology, ophthalmology, and neurology have been measured, using scoring systems to c
178  source materials in the American Academy of Neurology Historical Collection and the papers of Dr Hen
179 hat the clinical skills involved in clinical neurology (ie, history, examination, localisation and di
180 ful in clinical veterinary ophthalmology and neurology if PLR abnormalities detected with these proce
181 disease by targeting cardiology, physiology, neurology, immunity, hematopoiesis and mammalian develop
182 valuable resource to view Charcot's place in neurology in a relatively unbiased and balanced perspect
183 port of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, Inc.
184 port of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, Inc.
185 port of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, Inc.
186 rfields Eye Hospital (1969-96); professor of neurology, Institute of Neurology and Institute of Ophth
187 rials; adaptive design, clinical trials, and neurology; Internet, clinical trials, and neurology; and
188 every day, the principles from which bedside neurology is derived have broader consequences-for moder
189  human brain, and The Journal of Comparative Neurology is grateful to have the opportunity to feature
190                      The American Academy of Neurology is now the larger of the two organizations, ev
191                                     Academic neurology is undergoing transformational changes.
192 of abstracts from the Journal of Comparative Neurology (JCN).
193 n occasionally, and 60% had access to online neurology journals.
194                                 In contrast, neurology lacks validated measurements of the physiologi
195      Recent trends in the practice of stroke neurology lay a strong and excessive reliance on data ge
196 uture presidents and influence trends in the neurology leadership network.
197  American neurology, the American Academy of Neurology leadership was ultimately savvier at political
198 adic idiopathic ataxia from The Institute of Neurology, London, were screened for the presence of ant
199               Concurrently, breakthroughs in neurology, neuroimaging, and genetics have called into q
200 h inpatient and outpatient diagnoses made in Neurology, Neuropsychology, and Internal Medicine from 1
201  not only in hematology/oncology but also in neurology, neuroradiology, neurosurgery, clinical neurop
202 ical journals (Annals of Surgery, Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, Journal of Heart
203 cians in intensive care, emergency medicine, neurology, neurosurgery, pulmonology) who may also parti
204              PET facility located within the Neurology/Neurosurgery ICU.
205 ns to withdraw mechanical ventilation in the neurology/neurosurgery intensive care unit are based pri
206 nts were 2,109 nonelective admissions to the neurology/neurosurgery intensive care unit who received
207 aw mechanical ventilation from patients in a neurology/neurosurgery intensive care unit.
208 t was to become the manifesto of behavioural neurology, Norman Geschwind outlined a pure disconnectio
209 ogynecology, colorectal surgery, geriatrics, neurology, nursing, and psychology-and patient advocates
210                                          The neurology of breathing involves changes in respiratory d
211 d the outpatient clinic of the Department of Neurology of the Leiden University Medical Center (Leide
212 cruited prospectively from the Department of Neurology of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, fr
213 ent advances in this field which bear on the neurology of visual search in health and disease.
214     There are many reasons for reviewing the neurology of vitamin-B12 and folic-acid deficiencies tog
215 ality in the clinical field in such areas as neurology, oncology, and cardiology.
216 ciated with planned training in dermatology, neurology, ophthalmology, pathology, pediatrics, or radi
217 m brain tissue of 12 individuals with normal neurology or minor neurological conditions (N/MC individ
218 , 163 (33.1%) required specific expertise in neurology or neurosurgery for the health care profession
219  months after stroke or brain trauma from 34 neurology or rehabilitation clinics in Europe and the US
220 ry progressive multiple sclerosis from 27 UK neurology or rehabilitation departments.
221 re physicians with input from specialists in neurology, orthopaedics, and rehabilitation medicine.
222                             One-third of new neurology out-patients are assessed as having symptoms '
223 t a substantial proportion of newly referred neurology out-patients have symptoms that are considered
224  aimed to determine in a large sample of new neurology out-patients: (i) what proportion are assessed
225 were undergoing diagnostic evaluation in the neurology outpatient clinic and were eventually identifi
226  that presented to the emergency service and neurology outpatient clinic with the symptoms of acute c
227           Patients with ataxia attending the neurology outpatient clinics at the Royal Hallamshire Ho
228 =65 years of age attending cardiovascular or neurology outpatient clinics if they had no history of a
229  may help direct genetic screening in a busy neurology outpatient setting.
230                                     73.5% of neurology patients, 88% of students and (by definition)
231 s deliver high-quality and efficient care to neurology patients, is emerging to meet these challenges
232  coefficient = 0.43 (95% CI, -0.18 to 0.62); neurology patients: 0.90 (95% CI, 0.82-0.95); and ICU pa
233  interventional neuroradiology, neurosurgery,neurology, peripheral interventional radiology, and card
234 icine, gastroenterology, colorectal surgery, neurology, physiotherapy, and psychology).
235                  The most common barriers to neurology postgraduate education were few training progr
236 results have broad implications for clinical neurology practice and the approach to diagnostic testin
237            With the 1995 American Academy of Neurology practice parameters, the differences between t
238  may be an underrecognized disorder in child neurology practice.
239 SA, we recruited patients from 59 paediatric neurology practices in the USA.
240 c yield of WES supports its use in pediatric neurology practices.
241 ic of the Congo, and Mozambique had an adult neurology program; Ethiopia, Madagascar, Nigeria, Senega
242 al, and South Africa had adult and pediatric neurology programs (training duration range = 3-6 years)
243 cialists in gastroenterology and hepatology, neurology, psychiatry, and paediatrics.
244 rome may resemble diseases from the field of neurology, psychiatry, cardiology and even urology.
245  2016 The Authors The Journal of Comparative Neurology Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
246  death and, in 1995, the American Academy of Neurology published practice parameters to standardize d
247  oncology, medical oncology, neuro-oncology, neurology, radiation oncology, neurosurgery, and ophthal
248 logy; and telemedicine, clinical trials, and neurology), references of previous publications, and our
249 actice guidelines of the American Academy of Neurology regarding artificial nutrition and hydration f
250  endorsed by the WHO and American Academy of Neurology regarding the optimal management of comorbid e
251 re delivery offer the opportunity to improve neurology residency through faculty development programs
252 y 1, 2015, through June 30, 2016, at a large neurology residency training program.
253 examination technique have been difficult in neurology residency training.
254 idents in our training program (the Partners Neurology Residency).
255 t and teaching of fundoscopic examination in neurology residency.
256 is mandated as a required clinical skill for neurology residents by the American Council of Graduate
257 ngle-blinded, education research study of 48 neurology residents recruited from July 1, 2015, through
258 ith the GCS score using neuroscience nurses, neurology residents, and neurointensivists.
259 for assessment and teaching of fundoscopy to neurology residents.
260 , and being cared for by the neurosurgery or neurology services (p =.002).
261           Consecutive patients presenting to neurology services with new-onset epilepsy or establishe
262 h; and c) being cared for by neurosurgery or neurology services.
263                                        After neurology specialist training at Queen Square, he became
264 stetrics-gynecology, orthopedic surgery, and neurology specialists are often credentialed.
265 A neurohospitalist model, in which inpatient neurology specialists deliver high-quality and efficient
266 teractive evidence-based American Academy of Neurology-sponsored seminar led by local opinion leaders
267 ngland Journal of Medicine and the Annals of Neurology suggest that neurologists have been slow to ad
268 n in conjunction with the British Paediatric Neurology Surveillance Unit to further define the clinic
269 logists and trainees, the British Paediatric Neurology Surveillance Unit, paediatricians, radiologist
270                               There was more neurology taught under Harold G. Wolff at Cornell Univer
271 endees of the 7th annual sub-Saharan African neurology teaching course in Khartoum, Sudan (2015).
272 italist model of care is an emerging idea in neurology that would overcome many regulatory, education
273 as the patrician 'upper chamber' of American neurology, the American Academy of Neurology leadership
274 actile spatial acuity is routinely tested in neurology to assess the state of the dorsal column syste
275 research roadmap for academic departments of neurology to thrive in today's increasingly regulated en
276 re the increasing importance of diversity in neurology, to point out some of the specific challenges
277 s, clinical neuropsychology, psychiatry, and neurology, to provide a coherent framework for future re
278 critical step in the process of creating the neurology top 5 list for the Choosing Wisely initiative.
279 ive close scrutiny in the development of the neurology top 5 list.
280                                              Neurology training programs in sub-Saharan Africa are re
281 Of 19 responding countries, 10 had no formal neurology training programs; Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Rep
282 t the Mongi Ben Hamida National Institute of Neurology (Tunis, Tunisia).
283 emorbid functional status, clinical service (neurology vs. neurosurgery), attending status (private v
284  quality of work of the nursing staff in the neurology ward and allow a finer adjustment of the injec
285                      The American Academy of Neurology was formed around a group of young neurologist
286                                              Neurology was perceived to be a competitive specialty fo
287 ce journal to the same position at Annals of Neurology was the much greater importance of meticulous
288           Here, with particular reference to neurology, we review processes that might underlie appar
289 important, lasting contributions to clinical neurology were descriptive clinical studies, especially
290                   By the 1990s, textbooks of neurology were devoting only a few pages to classical di
291        This is particularly true in academic neurology, where faculty from racial and ethnic minority
292 ogether the traditions of German and British neurology which moulded a physiological approach to norm
293 ogy, and neuro-oncology and of lipidomics in neurology will be reviewed.
294 atus by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology with a name change to "psychosomatic medicine.
295 or all manuscripts received by the Annals of Neurology with an early screening approach in which six
296 emale patient presented at the Department of Neurology with headache and sudden bilateral loss of dis
297      The struggle of the American Academy of Neurology with the American Neurological Association was
298 ed from the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology ( www.abpn.com ).
299 ed from the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology ( www.abpn.com ).
300 ed from the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology ( www.abpn.com ).

WebLSDに未収録の専門用語(用法)は "新規対訳" から投稿できます。
 
Page Top