When the patient fails to respond to treatment: myasthenia gravis.

Myasthenia gravis is one of the most satisfying neurological disorders to treat. There are few other conditions in which therapeutic intervention can take a patient from being bed-bound and ventilated to normality. Most patients present with less severe symptoms, but even mild extraocular muscle wea...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Hilton-Jones, D
Format: Journal article
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: 2007
_version_ 1826261068865863680
author Hilton-Jones, D
author_facet Hilton-Jones, D
author_sort Hilton-Jones, D
collection OXFORD
description Myasthenia gravis is one of the most satisfying neurological disorders to treat. There are few other conditions in which therapeutic intervention can take a patient from being bed-bound and ventilated to normality. Most patients present with less severe symptoms, but even mild extraocular muscle weakness can be profoundly disabling. The standard therapeutic approach is successful for most patients, which can make the non-specialist neurologist somewhat blasé about its management. However, panic can set in when the standard approach fails. Failure is often the result of incorrect diagnosis, or inappropriate use of first-line treatments. This article outlines the main reasons for failure and gives advice on alternative therapeutic strategies.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T19:15:45Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:184d56c5-c4db-446e-9b14-dc098ee6a4f2
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T19:15:45Z
publishDate 2007
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:184d56c5-c4db-446e-9b14-dc098ee6a4f22022-03-26T10:42:34ZWhen the patient fails to respond to treatment: myasthenia gravis.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:184d56c5-c4db-446e-9b14-dc098ee6a4f2EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2007Hilton-Jones, DMyasthenia gravis is one of the most satisfying neurological disorders to treat. There are few other conditions in which therapeutic intervention can take a patient from being bed-bound and ventilated to normality. Most patients present with less severe symptoms, but even mild extraocular muscle weakness can be profoundly disabling. The standard therapeutic approach is successful for most patients, which can make the non-specialist neurologist somewhat blasé about its management. However, panic can set in when the standard approach fails. Failure is often the result of incorrect diagnosis, or inappropriate use of first-line treatments. This article outlines the main reasons for failure and gives advice on alternative therapeutic strategies.
spellingShingle Hilton-Jones, D
When the patient fails to respond to treatment: myasthenia gravis.
title When the patient fails to respond to treatment: myasthenia gravis.
title_full When the patient fails to respond to treatment: myasthenia gravis.
title_fullStr When the patient fails to respond to treatment: myasthenia gravis.
title_full_unstemmed When the patient fails to respond to treatment: myasthenia gravis.
title_short When the patient fails to respond to treatment: myasthenia gravis.
title_sort when the patient fails to respond to treatment myasthenia gravis
work_keys_str_mv AT hiltonjonesd whenthepatientfailstorespondtotreatmentmyastheniagravis