Search research articles
Contact Us
Filters
Showing results (1-10 of 12) with videos related to
Page
of 2
Sort By:
Journal of the Neurological Sciences
|
March 25, 1998
Clinical applications of quantitative sensory testing (QST)
R Zaslansky, D Yarnitsky
British Journal of Anaesthesia
|
March 27, 2018
Pain after orthopaedic surgery: differences in patient reported outcomes in the United States vs internationally. An observational study from the PAIN OUT dataset
R Zaslansky, W Meissner, C R Chapman
The International Journal of Neuroscience
|
September 1, 1996
Somatosensory evoked potentials in aphasic patients
R Dickstein, R Zaslansky, N Abulaffio, et al.
Pain
|
March 1, 1995
Heat pain thresholds: normative data and repeatability
D Yarnitsky, E Sprecher, R Zaslansky, et al.
Pain
|
October 1, 1996
Multiple session experimental pain measurement
D Yarnitsky, E Sprecher, R Zaslansky, et al.
Journal of the Neurological Sciences
|
September 1, 1994
Variance of sensory threshold measurements: discrimination of feigners from trustworthy performers
D Yarnitsky, E Sprecher, A Tamir, et al.
Harefuah
|
November 3, 2006
[A Hebrew version of the FLACC scale: measurement of pain in non-verbal children]
R Zaslansky, S Glasser, A Golobov, et al.
Pain
|
July 1, 1996
The P300 in pain evoked potentials
R Zaslansky, E Sprecher, E C Tenke, et al.
Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology
|
September 1, 1996
Pain-evoked potentials: what do they really measure?
R Zaslansky, E Sprecher, Y Katz, et al.
Neurology
|
March 17, 1999
Limitations of quantitative sensory testing when patients are biased toward a bad outcome
D Yarnitsky, E Sprecher, R Zaslansky, et al.
Page
of 2
Search research articles
Search
Showing results (1-10 of 12) with videos related to
Sort By:
Page
of 2
Journal of the Neurological Sciences
|
March 25, 1998
Clinical applications of quantitative sensory testing (QST)
R Zaslansky, D Yarnitsky
British Journal of Anaesthesia
|
March 27, 2018
Pain after orthopaedic surgery: differences in patient reported outcomes in the United States vs internationally. An observational study from the PAIN OUT dataset
R Zaslansky, W Meissner, C R Chapman
The International Journal of Neuroscience
|
September 1, 1996
Somatosensory evoked potentials in aphasic patients
R Dickstein, R Zaslansky, N Abulaffio, et al.
Pain
|
March 1, 1995
Heat pain thresholds: normative data and repeatability
D Yarnitsky, E Sprecher, R Zaslansky, et al.
Pain
|
October 1, 1996
Multiple session experimental pain measurement
D Yarnitsky, E Sprecher, R Zaslansky, et al.
Journal of the Neurological Sciences
|
September 1, 1994
Variance of sensory threshold measurements: discrimination of feigners from trustworthy performers
D Yarnitsky, E Sprecher, A Tamir, et al.
Harefuah
|
November 3, 2006
[A Hebrew version of the FLACC scale: measurement of pain in non-verbal children]
R Zaslansky, S Glasser, A Golobov, et al.
Pain
|
July 1, 1996
The P300 in pain evoked potentials
R Zaslansky, E Sprecher, E C Tenke, et al.
Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology
|
September 1, 1996
Pain-evoked potentials: what do they really measure?
R Zaslansky, E Sprecher, Y Katz, et al.
Neurology
|
March 17, 1999
Limitations of quantitative sensory testing when patients are biased toward a bad outcome
D Yarnitsky, E Sprecher, R Zaslansky, et al.
Page
of 2