Article info
Contemporary Neurological Dilemmas
WHAT SHOULD I TELL A PATIENT AFTER AN ISOLATED EPISODE OF DEMYELINATION?
Citation
WHAT SHOULD I TELL A PATIENT AFTER AN ISOLATED EPISODE OF DEMYELINATION?
Publication history
- First published December 1, 2001.
Online issue publication
February 01, 2018
Request permissions
If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.
Copyright information
© 2001 BMJ
Other content recommended for you
- Patient and physician attitudes regarding risk and benefit in streamlined development programmes for antibacterial drugs: a qualitative analysis
- Anti-VEGF intervention in neovascular AMD: benefits and risks restated as natural frequencies
- Prevention of ischaemic stroke
- Non-invasive versus invasive management in patients with prior coronary artery bypass surgery with a non-ST segment elevation acute coronary syndrome: study design of the pilot randomised controlled trial and registry (CABG-ACS)
- Consent for anaesthesia
- Risks of elective cardiac surgery: what do patients want to know?
- Observational and prospective study: evaluation of beliefs and representations of chronic treatments of polymedicated patients hospitalised in a vascular medicine and surgery department
- Clinical and angiographic predictors of stroke and death from carotid endarterectomy: systematic review
- Nudging, informed consent and bullshit
- Should carotid stenting replace carotid endarterectomy in routine clinical practice?