As she may be a solicitor, perhaps enquiries should be made as to the intended interpretation of the "or" in that "anxiety or ME". One does...
This looks to be based on the idea of "circular causal and feedback mechanisms in biological and social systems". It seems to be a popular idea on...
The beauty of the phrase is that it is wholly devoid of content. There are no rules as to the quality or admissability of the evidence or the...
Interesting. That NIH description of paresthesia looks as though it might refer only to an acute condition. That "which happens without warning"...
On reading the various posts, and the thread title, two other questions arise. The first must be restricted to those with acute onset, not...
It's a pity that it was just the same in the late 1980's and 1990's when he was not at all perturbed.
This is what Wallis said Hyperaesthiae of the skin overlying the affected muscles was present from the onset of the myalgic pains, while...
Apologies, I keep going back to that Washington Post syndicated article by Alfred Friendly. There is a highly intriguing aspect to his emphasising...
This did not look like a case between Stanford and Montoya. It involved proceedings by Mendiola (whoever she is) against Stanford and Montoya for...
Looking only at a secondary source (Jenkins 1990) it would seem that Gilliam reported "sensory symptoms including skin hyperaesthesia,...
As they say, "you don't have to be mad to work here, but it helps".
I know not whereof you speak.
One can only hope that this was a study to see what peer reviewers would accept and journals publish.
Were the comments of the cantaloupe as to the outcome of the test recorded?
Has there ever been a study as to whether the benefit to the therapist from the patient is greater than the benefit to the patient from the therapist?
That information that the RFH was only closed to new admissions , out-patients remaining open, scuppers my suggestion above about comparative rate...
I have always assumed that these are the parasthaesia described from the early papers. I too eventually settled on "buzzing" to describe it....
...and, coincidentally, exactly the place where the product would be available for purchase.
It would help if the BBC were to indicate how such people come to be in touch with them.
Have you ever heard of a pin-cushion suffering from pain?
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