Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 13
pro vyhledávání: '"Jack Wodak"'
Publikováno v:
Medical Journal of Australia. 159:757-760
OBJECTIVE To alert physicians to the dangers of a readily available, non-prescription drug by describing the clinical and pathological features of myopathy due to chronic poisoning with ipecac syrup in a patient with an eating disorder. CLINICAL FEAT
Autor:
Jack Wodak, Graham Brown, Andrew Fuller, Brian P. Tress, Jonathan Erlich, Jeffery V. Rosenfeld
Publikováno v:
Surgical Neurology. 38:287-290
We report the first case of an acute pyogenic intramedullary cervical spinal cord abscess, brain abscesses and meningitis due to an unusual anerobe, Bacteroides disiens. The importance of spinal magnetic resonance imaging for establishing the diagnos
Publikováno v:
International Journal of STD & AIDS. 3:366-368
Spinal cord toxoplasmosis occurs rarely in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). It usually presents as a space occupying lesion which makes differentiation from a neoplasm difficult. As a result, only 2 of the 5 previously reported cases ha
Autor:
Jack Wodak
Publikováno v:
Journal of Clinical Neuroscience. 6:272
Publikováno v:
Medical Journal of Australia. 2:28-31
Thirteen patients with Parkinson's disease, whose disability was increasing and on long-term levodopa therapy (both with and without carbidopa), had the levodopa fully replaced by bromocriptine. At three months, eight of the 13 patients (62%) were le
Autor:
Bernard S. Gilligan, Jack Wodak, L L Ioannides-Demos, Nicholas Tong, Paul M. Harrison, John J McNeil, Allan J. McLean, Malcolm K. Horne
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy. 45:1549-1551
Publikováno v:
Medical Journal of Australia. 2:205-207
Publikováno v:
Medical Journal of Australia. 2:1054-1056
Publikováno v:
Medical Journal of Australia. 1:320-322
Autor:
E G Butler, G. A. Brazenor, Malcolm K. Horne, Richard J Stark, Jack Wodak, Bernard S. Gilligan
Publikováno v:
Annals of neurology. 26(6)
A patient with severe end-stage Parkinson's disease and troublesome fluctuations in motor function was treated with a long-term intraventricular infusion of dopamine. There was modest improvement in speech and mentation and there was smoother control