Supplements

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of Supplements

  • acid supplement
  • antioxidant supplement
  • calcium supplement
  • carnitine supplement
  • child development supplement
  • d supplement
  • development supplement
  • dietary supplement
  • e supplement
  • enzyme supplement
  • feed supplement
  • fluoride supplement
  • folic acid supplement
  • food supplement
  • health supplement
  • herbal supplement
  • iron supplement
  • lipid supplement
  • mineral supplement
  • nutrient supplement
  • nutrition supplement
  • nutritional supplement
  • oil supplement
  • oral nutritional supplement
  • oral supplement
  • used dietary supplement
  • useful supplement
  • vitamin d supplement
  • vitamin e supplement
  • vitamin supplement

  • Terms modified by Supplements

  • supplement use

  • Selected Abstracts


    AUTHOR INDEX,VOLUME 40, SUPPLEMENT 1

    JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue S1 2004
    Article first published online: 25 JAN 200
    [source]


    SUPPLEMENT FOR EXECUTIVE MEETING

    THE LATIN AMERICANIST, Issue 2 2007
    Article first published online: 28 JUN 200
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    EFFECTS OF THE NOVEL SYMBIOTIC IMMUBALANCE AS A FOOD SUPPLEMENT IN RELIEVING CLINICAL SYMPTOMS OF JAPNESE CEDAR POLLINOSIS: A PILOT STUDY

    CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 2007
    Yukio Otsuka
    SUMMARY 1Probiotics have been suggested to have potential for treating food allergy in small children. Although oral probiotics have been studied extensively in animals and humans for various allergies, their effects on the prevention and/or treatment of pollinosis have not been adequately investigated. 2The aim of the present study was to examine the effects of the novel symbiotic food supplement ImmuBalance (a koji fungus (Aspergillus oryzae) and lactic acid bacteria (Pediococcus parvulus and Enterococcus faecium) soybean fermentation product; Nichimo Co. Ltd, Tokyo, Japan) on the prevention and treatment of allergic reactions in Japanese cedar pollinosis (JCP) during the pollen season. 3An open-label pilot study on seven individuals with JCP was conducted. Each participant received oral administration of 1.0,2.0 g ImmuBalance daily for 3 months, which contained 1.8 ¥ 1010/g heat-killed lactobacteria. Six participants (four men, two women; 26,55 years of age) completed the 3 months of supplementation. One participant was excluded from the study because the JCP-specific IgE in RAST scores was lower than 2 UA/mL. The clinical severity of JCP in past year for each participant was self-evaluated on a five-point scale from 0 to 4, in accordance with the guidelines of the Nasal Allergy Clinic 2002, Japan. 4Self-evaluated overall average symptom scores (1.7 ± 0.8) in the peak pollen season showed significant improvement compared with the past year (3.5 ± 0.5; P = 0.001). Furthermore, the average scores for sneezing and runny nose in the peak pollen season showed significant improvement compared with the past year. The scores for swelling and colour of the mucosa and snivel in the nasal cavity did not increase significantly in the peak pollen season compared with baseline. 5Our studies suggest that dietary ImmuBalance may be effective in the prevention and treatment of JCP. The underlying mechanisms of action and the possibility of a randomized, placebo-controlled trial are being investigated. [source]


    EFFECTS OF ANTIOXIDANT SUPPLEMENTS COMBINED WITH RESISTANCE EXERCISE ON GAINS IN FAT-FREE MASS IN HEALTHY ELDERLY SUBJECTS: A PILOT STUDY

    JOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 9 2008
    Mélissa Labonté Dtp
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    THE USE OF ORAL NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS AND ANOREXIGENIC MEDICATIONS IN HOMEBOUND OLDER ADULTS

    JOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 5 2003
    Article first published online: 29 APR 200
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Most smokeless tobacco use is not a causal gateway to cigarettes: using order of product use to evaluate causation in a national US sample

    ADDICTION, Issue 8 2003
    Lynn T. Kozlowski
    ABSTRACT Aims, To evaluate non-causal and causal patterns of smokeless tobacco (SLT) and cigarette use; to assess the prevalence of ,non-gateway' and possible ,gateway' patterns of SLT use. Design and setting, Data from the Cancer Control Supplement to the 1987 National Health Interview Survey, a representative survey of non-institutionalized adults in the United States. From reported age at first use, participants were categorized by type and sequence of tobacco product use. SUDAAN 8.0.1 was used for statistical analyses. Participants, Males aged 18,34 (n = 3454), weighted to provide estimates of the US population. A subsample of males aged 23,34 (n = 2614) was analyzed to minimize the possibility of future product switching. Measurements, Smoking status, smokeless tobacco (snuff, chewing tobacco, both) use status, age at regular use of cigarettes, age at first use of smokeless tobacco. Findings, Of those 23,34-year-olds who had ever used SLT with or without cigarettes, 77.2% (95% CI: 71.3, 83.3) were classifiable as non-gateway users in that 35.0% (95% CI: 29.9, 40.1) had only used SLT and 42.2% (95% CI: 36.8, 47.7) had used cigarettes first. Cigarette use in younger cohorts was less common, despite increased SLT use. Those who used cigarettes before moist snuff were 2.1 times more likely to have quit smoking (95% CI 1.21,6.39) than cigarette-only users. Conclusions, The large majority of SLT users are non-gateway users. Causal gateway effects should be of minor concern for policy. SLT may be more likely to prevent smoking than cause it. [source]


    Chitosan per os: from Dietary Supplement to Drug Carrier

    FOCUS ON ALTERNATIVE AND COMPLEMENTARY THERAPIES AN EVIDENCE-BASED APPROACH, Issue 3 2000
    MH Pittler
    [source]


    The treatment of intra-articular synovitis by the use of chemical and radioactive substances

    HAEMOPHILIA, Issue 3 2002
    M. HEIM
    As the Chairperson of the session relating the intra-articular use of chemical and radioactive substances it would seem appropriate to give credit to those who contributed to the recent supplement of our Journal Haemophilia. I have extracted key sentences and concepts from the contributed articles. All the papers can be found in Haemophilia, Volume 7, Supplement 2, July 2001. The title, authors and page numbers are provided [1]. [source]


    The Adequacy of Household Survey Data for Evaluating the Nongroup Health Insurance Market

    HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, Issue 4 2007
    Joel C. Cantor
    Objective. To evaluate the accuracy of household survey estimates of the size and composition of the nonelderly population covered by nongroup health insurance. Data Sources/Study Setting. Health insurance enrollment statistics reported to New Jersey insurance regulators. Household data from the following sources: the 2002 Current Population Survey (CPS)-March Demographic Supplement, the 1997 and 1999 National Surveys of America's Families (NSAF), the 2001 New Jersey Family Health Survey (NJFHS), a 2002 survey of known nongroup health insurance enrollees, a small 2004 survey testing alternative health insurance question wording. Study Design. To assess the extent of bias in estimates of the size of the nongroup health insurance market in New Jersey, enrollment trends are compared between official enrollment statistics reported by insurance carriers to state insurance regulators with estimates from three general population household surveys. Next, to evaluate possible bias in the demographic and socioeconomic composition of the New Jersey nongroup market, distributions of characteristics of the enrolled population are contrasted among general household surveys and a survey of known nongroup subscribers. Finally, based on inferences drawn from these comparisons, alternative health insurance question wording was developed and tested in a local survey to test the potential for misreporting enrollment in nongroup coverage in a low-income population. Data Collection/Extraction Methods. Data for nonelderly New Jersey residents from the 2002 CPS (n=5,028) and the 1997 and 1999 NSAF (n=6,467 and 7,272, respectively) were obtained from public sources. The 2001 NJFHS (n=5,580 nonelderly) was conducted for a sample drawn by random digit dialing and employed computer-assisted telephone interviews and trained, professional interviewers. Sampling weights are used to adjust for under-coverage of households without telephones and other factors. In addition, a modified version of the NJFHS was administered to a 2002 sample of known nongroup subscribers (n=1,398) using the same field methods. These lists were provided by four of the five largest New Jersey nongroup insurance carriers, which represented 95 percent of all nongroup enrollees in the state. Finally, a modified version of the NJFHS questionnaire was fielded using similar methods as part of a local health survey in New Brunswick, New Jersey, in 2004 (n=1,460 nonelderly). Principal Findings. General household sample surveys, including the widely used CPS, yield substantially higher estimates of nongroup enrollment compared with administrative totals and yield estimates of the characteristics of the nongroup population that vary greatly from a survey of known nongroup subscribers. A small survey testing a question about source of payment for direct-purchased coverage suggests than many public coverage enrollees report nongroup coverage. Conclusions. Nongroup health insurance has been subject to more than a decade of reform and is of continuing policy interest. Comparisons of unique data from a survey of known nongroup subscribers and administrative sources to household surveys strongly suggest that the latter overstates the number and misrepresent the composition of the nongroup population. Research on the nongroup market using available sources should be interpreted cautiously and survey methods should be reexamined. [source]


    The Unintended Impact of Welfare Reform on the Medicaid Enrollment of Eligible Immigrants

    HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, Issue 5 2004
    Namratha R. Kandula
    Background. During welfare reform, Congress passed legislation barring legal immigrants who entered the United States after August 1996 from Medicaid for five years after immigration. This legislation intended to bar only new immigrants (post-1996 immigrants) from Medicaid. However it may have also deterred the enrollment of legal immigrants who immigrated before 1996 (pre-1996 immigrants) and who should have remained Medicaid eligible. Objectives. To compare the Medicaid enrollment of U.S.-born citizens to pre-1996 immigrants, before and after welfare reform, and to determine if variation in state Medicaid policies toward post-1996 immigrants modified the effects of welfare reform on pre-1996 immigrants. Data Source/Study Design. Secondary database analysis of cross-sectional data from 1994,2001 of the U.S. Census Bureau, Annual Demographic Survey of March Supplement of the Current Population Survey. Subjects. Low-income, U.S.-born adults (N=116,307) and low-income pre-1996 immigrants (N=24,367) before and after welfare reform. Measures. Self-reported Medicaid enrollment. Results. Before welfare reform, pre-1996 immigrants were less likely to enroll in Medicaid than the U.S.-born (OR=0.55; 95 percent CI, 0.51,0.59). After welfare reform, pre-1996 immigrants were even less likely to enroll in Medicaid. The proportion of immigrants in Medicaid dropped 3 percentage points after 1996; for the U.S.-born it dropped 1.6 percentage points (p=0.012). Except for California, state variation in Medicaid policy toward post-1996 immigrants did modify the effect of welfare reform on pre-1996 immigrants. Conclusions. Federal laws limiting the Medicaid eligibility of specific subgroups of immigrants appear to have had unintended consequences on Medicaid enrollment in the larger, still eligible immigrant community. Inclusive state policies may overcome this effect. [source]


    Unpaid Work at Home

    INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS, Issue 4 2009
    YOUNGHWAN SONG
    A substantial number of people take work home without a formal payment arrangement. Using the Work Schedules and Work at Home Supplement to the May 2001 Current Population Survey, this paper investigates the determinants of unpaid work at home. Education, lack of overtime rates, being a team leader, efficiency wages, and larger earnings inequality in an occupation are positively related to the prevalence of unpaid work at home. Unpaid work at home appears to be a form of investment made in expectation of a return in the long run. [source]


    Unions and Unemployment Insurance Benefits Receipt: Evidence from the Current Population Survey

    INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS, Issue 2 2004
    John W. Budd
    Using data from the January 1996 Current Population Survey's Displaced Worker Supplement, this article analyzes the effect of union representation on the likelihood that individuals eligible for unemployment insurance (UI) benefits receive UI benefits. For white-collar workers, unions do not have a significant effect on the probability of UI benefit receipt. Eligible blue-collar workers laid off from union jobs are approximately 23 percent more likely than comparable nonunion workers to receive UI benefits. [source]


    Improving the K6 short scale to predict serious emotional disturbance in adolescents in the USA

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF METHODS IN PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH, Issue S1 2010
    Jennifer Greif Green
    Abstract Effective screening for emotional and behavioral disorders among youth requires brief screening scales with good validity to identify youth requiring further evaluation and to estimate prevalence of target disorders in populations of interest such as schools or neighborhoods. This paper examines the psychometric properties of a very short (six-item) screening scale, the K6, to assess serious emotional disturbance (SED) among youth. The K6, which is made up of symptoms of depression and anxiety, has been shown in previous research to be a strong predictor of serious mental illness (SMI) in adults, but no information is available on the ability of the scale to screen for SED among youth. The current report examines the K6 as a screen for SED in a national survey of US adolescents, the National Comorbidity Survey Replication Adolescent Supplement (NCS-A). The K6 is shown to provide fairly good prediction of SED [area under curve (AUC) = 0.74] that is somewhat higher for internalizing (AUC = 0.80) than behavior (AUC = 0.75) disorders. Based on this result, we augmented the K6 with questions about symptoms of behavior disorders. This improved prediction of SED (from AUC = 0.74 to AUC = 0.83) as well as of SED associated with pure behavior disorders (from AUC = 0.53 to AUC = 0.78). These results show that although the symptoms of depression and anxiety in the K6 are sufficient to detect SMI among adults, high rates of behavior disorders among adolescents require indicators of behavior disorders to be added to the K6 to screen adequately for adolescent SED. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: concordance of the adolescent version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview Version 3.0 (CIDI) with the K-SADS in the US National Comorbidity Survey Replication Adolescent (NCS-A) supplement

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF METHODS IN PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH, Issue 1 2010
    Jennifer Greif Green
    Abstract This paper evaluates the internal consistency reliability and concurrent validity of the assessment of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV) attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in the adolescent version of the World Health Organization (WHO) Composite International Diagnostic Interview Version 3.0 (CIDI). The CIDI is a lay-administered diagnostic interview that was carried out in conjunction with the US National Comorbidity Survey Adolescent Supplement, a US nationally representative survey of 10,148 adolescents and their parents. Internal consistency reliability was evaluated using factor and item response theory analyses. Concurrent validity was evaluated against diagnoses based on blinded clinician-administered interviews. Inattention and hyperactivity-impulsivity items loaded on separate but correlated factors, with hyperactivity and impulsivity items forming a single factor in parent reports but separate factors in youth reports. We were able to differentiate hyperactivity and impulsivity factors for parents as well by eliminating a subset who endorsed zero ADHD items from the factor analysis. Although concurrent validity was relatively weak, decomposition showed that this was due to low validity of adolescent reports. A modified CIDI diagnosis based exclusively on parent reports generated a diagnosis that had good concordance with clinical diagnoses [area under the curve (AUC) = 0.78]. Implications for assessing ADHD using the CIDI and the effect of different informants on measurement are discussed. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    The potential power of social policy programmes: income redistribution, economic resources and health

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WELFARE, Issue 2010
    Olle Lundberg
    Lundberg O, Fritzell J, Åberg Yngwe M, Kölegård ML. The potential power of social policy programmes: income redistribution, economic resources and health Int J Soc Welfare 2010: ,,: ,,,,,© 2010 The Author(s), Journal compilation © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd and International Journal of Social Welfare. This Supplement includes a number of articles dealing with the role of social policy schemes for public health across the life course. As a key social determinant of health, poverty and its consequences have historically been at the forefront of the public health discussion. But also in rich countries today, economic resources are likely to be important for health and survival, both on an individual and an aggregate level. This introductory article serves as a background for the more specific analyses that follow. The focus is on why income and income inequality could have an effect on individual and population health. We discuss relationships between the individual and population levels and between income and health, and some of the possible mechanisms involved. We also present arguments for why welfare state institutions may matter. [source]


    State-of-the-Art in Longitudinal Studies on Aging: An Overview of the Supplement

    JOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 2010
    Ruth M. Tappen RN
    The articles in this supplement are based on a conference held in January 2008 sponsored by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The purpose of the conference was to summarize major findings and methodological issues in previous and ongoing longitudinal studies on aging and to identify potentially fruitful areas for future research. This article is a review and synthesis of the articles in this supplement. Each of the articles makes important contributions to summarizing existing research, identifying challenging methodological issues, or proposing areas that should be explored in future research. Three themes were identified: general improvement in the health status of the population aged 65 and older in the United States, a shift in longitudinal research on aging from a focus on the endpoints of disease to a focus on the preclinical stage and underlying mechanisms of these diseases, and contemporary developments in longitudinal research methodology. A number of practical suggestions were also drawn from the articles reviewed. [source]


    2009 Annual Index: A Supplement to the Africa Research Bulletin Economic, Financial and Technical Series

    AFRICA RESEARCH BULLETIN: ECONOMIC, FINANCIAL AND TECHNICAL SERIES, Issue 2010
    Article first published online: 3 AUG 2010
    First page of article [source]


    2008 Annual Index: A Supplement to Africa Research Bulletin Economic, Financial and Technical Series

    AFRICA RESEARCH BULLETIN: ECONOMIC, FINANCIAL AND TECHNICAL SERIES, Issue 2009
    Article first published online: 30 JUL 200
    First page of article [source]


    Thermal and Storage Stability of Nutraceuticals in a Milk Beverage Dietary Supplement

    JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, Issue 3 2007
    M. Uzzan
    ABSTRACT:, Under the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA), fluid skim milk can be used to serve as a vehicle to deliver certain metabolites (nutraceuticals or new dietary ingredients), which provide health benefits as related to aging problems for those over 55. This opens a new avenue for an increase in milk consumption and may replace taking pills. Milk beverages enriched with various nutraceutical ingredients (soy isoflavones, glucosamine, chondroitin sulfate, creatine, and lactoferrin) were thermally processed at different combinations of temperatures from 72 to 138 °C for different holding times using a Microthermics pilot plant thermal processing unit and were incubated at refrigeration, room, or elevated storage temperatures. Residual concentrations of the active compounds were measured by high performance liquid chromatography or by immunodifusion (for lactoferrin) and degradation kinetics were determined. Results showed a very good stability of isoflavones and chondroitin sulfate in the milk environment while glucosamine, lactoferrin, and creatin showed only limited stability at either processing or storage. Glucosamine destabilized the milk protein system at boiling temperature or higher, which caused drastic precipitation in the heat exchangers. Nevertheless, all the tested nutraceutical compounds can be used to design milk beverage dietary supplements but an overrun of over 25% may be required for some of them. [source]


    Child Support Obligations and Low-Income Fathers

    JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY, Issue 5 2005
    Chien-Chung Huang
    Using the 1994,1998 waves of the Current Population Survey,Child Support Supplement (N =5,387), the aims of this study are to document child support obligation rates of nonresident fathers, to examine the effect of the obligation rate on child support compliance, and to calculate the trade-off between fathers' financial responsibility and children's well-being, paying particular attention to low-income fathers. The results indicate that low-income fathers have high child support obligation rates, which significantly reduce their child support compliance. Although lowering the obligation rate for these fathers may improve their compliance, it does not fully offset the lowered obligation amounts and leads to a 30% net payment loss for welfare mothers and a 43% loss for nonwelfare mothers. Policy implications are discussed. [source]


    How American Children Spend Their Time

    JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY, Issue 2 2001
    Sandra L. Hofferth
    The purpose of this article is to examine how American children under age 13 spend their time, sources of variation in time use, and associations with achievement and behavior. Data come from the 1997 Child Development Supplement to the Panel Study of Income Dynamics. The results suggest that parents' characteristics and decisions regarding marriage, family size, and employment affect the time children spend in educational, structured, and family activities, which may affect their school achievement. Learning activities such as reading for pleasure are associated with higher achievement, as is structured time spent playing sports and in social activities. Family time spent at meals and time spent sleeping are linked to fewer behavior problems, as measured by the child's score on the Behavior Problems Index. The results support common language and myth about the optimal use of time for child development. [source]


    Introduction to the JASBRA Supplement

    ALCOHOLISM, Issue 2010
    Shujiro Takase
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Shared Family Activities and the Transition From Childhood Into Adolescence

    JOURNAL OF RESEARCH ON ADOLESCENCE, Issue 1 2008
    Robert Crosnoe
    Drawing on time use data from the Child Development Supplement of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, this study identified five different profiles of shared time between parents and young people at different stages of development. In childhood, all profiles had high rates of shared television viewing, but some were oriented toward in-home activities and others toward activities outside the home (e.g., cultural events). These latter profiles tended to be higher in socioeconomic advantage, and the young people in them tended to demonstrate greater gains in math, but not reading, achievement across the transition into adolescence. In adolescence, shared activity profiles favored low amounts of shared time between parents and adolescents across activities and disfavored shared time in public domains. [source]


    Schools and Terrorism: A Supplement to the Report of the National Advisory Committee on Children and Terrorism

    JOURNAL OF SCHOOL HEALTH, Issue 2 2004
    Article first published online: 9 OCT 200
    First page of article [source]


    Introduction to the JASBRA Supplement

    ALCOHOLISM, Issue 2004
    Hiromasa Ishii
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Introduction to the JASBRA Supplement

    ALCOHOLISM, Issue 2002
    Hiromasa Ishii M.D.
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Introduction to the JASBRA Supplement

    ALCOHOLISM, Issue 2001
    Hiromasa Ishii Chairman of JASBRA, President of ISBRA 2000
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    GEOGRAPHIC DIFFERENCES IN HOUSING PRICES AND THE WELL-BEING OF CHILDREN AND PARENTS

    JOURNAL OF URBAN AFFAIRS, Issue 2 2009
    JOSEPH HARKNESS
    ABSTRACT:,This article contributes to the ongoing discussion about whether the official poverty measure should be adjusted for geographic differences in the cost of living (COL). Part of the support for spatial COL adjustments is the concern that the reduced purchasing power of the poor in higher-priced areas could jeopardize the health and well-being of children and parents. The results of this analysis of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and its Child Development Supplement do not support this view. We find that children growing up in higher-priced housing markets appear to fare no worse than those in lower-priced markets. [source]


    Serum Immunoglobulin G Concentrations in Calves Fed Fresh Colostrum or a Colostrum Supplement

    JOURNAL OF VETERINARY INTERNAL MEDICINE, Issue 2 2002
    Nicole M. Holloway
    This study compared serum immunoglobulin G (IgG) concentrations in calves fed colostrum with those of calves fed a colostrum supplement containing spray-dried serum. Twenty-four Holstein calves were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 treatment groups (fresh colostrum or colostrum supplement). Each calf was fed 4 L of colostrum (n1= 12) or 4 L of colostrum supplement (n2= 12) via oroesophageal intubation at 3 hours of age. The concentration of the colostrum supplement fed to calves was twice the manufacturer's recommendation. The median and range values for colostral IgG concentration were 6,430 mg/dL and 1,400-17,000 mg/ dL, respectively. Median serum IgG concentrations at 2 days of age differed significantly (P= .001) between calves receiving fresh colostrum (3,350 mg/dL) and the colostrum supplement (643 mg/dL). Eight percent of calves force fed colostrum had serum IgG concentrations <1,000 mg/dL, whereas 75% of calves force-fed supplement had IgG concentrations below this threshold. The calculated population relative risks for mortality associated with passive transfer for calves force-fed colostrum and calves force-fed colostrum supplement were 1.09 and 1.90, respectively. Force-fed fresh colostrum is superior to the colostrum supplement studied, but the colostrum supplement has similar efficacy to routine colostrum administration practices. [source]


    Movement Disorders, Volume 20, Supplement 10, 2005: Index of Authors

    MOVEMENT DISORDERS, Issue S10 2005
    Article first published online: 9 FEB 200
    [source]