29 June 2012

Hypermobility syndrome

Hypermobility describes joints that stretch more than normal. For example, some people can bend their thumbs backwards to their wrists, bend their knee joints backwards, put their leg behind the head or other contortionist performances.

Benign Joint Hypermobility Syndrome
Rebecca L Byers
http://www2.medicine.wisc.edu/

Marfan Syndrome and related disorders
SARA FABER
https://medicine.med.unc.edu/

Marfan’s Syndrome
ROZINA MITHANI
http://www.meddean.luc.edu/

Systemic stiffness: a determinant of blood pressure?
http://www.pitt.edu/

Connective tissue disorders
http://www.med.umich.edu

Medial Tibial Stress Syndrome
Bryan Bates
http://www.lhup.edu/

Rheumatology
Dennis A. Peacock
http://www.medschool.lsuhsc.edu/

Ehlers-Danlos Syndromes
Emily Chang
https://medicine.med.unc.edu/

Thoracic and Lumbar Spine Special Tests and Pathologies
http://www2.fiu.edu/

Considerations for Pediatric Adjusting
http://w3.palmer.edu/oneill/

Afibrinogenemia
http://www.medicine.wisc.edu/

Ankle and Lower Leg Rehabilitation
http://mundo.cabrillo.edu/

Cervical and Lumbar Evaluations
Brittany Annis
http://eportfolios.ithaca.edu/

The Mechanics of Spinal Manipulation
http://w3.palmer.edu/

Microfibrils: Elastic Tissues
http://www.mechamlab.wustl.edu/Lab%20Web%20Page.data/Library/FTP_Folder/MF_MAGP.ppt

The Ankle and Lower Leg
http://www2.fiu.edu/~dohertyj/Chapter%2015_Eberman.ppt


127 Published articles on Hypermobility syndrome

  1. EDS and the hypermobility syndrome. Common cause of reduced work capacity.
  2. Symptom and joint mobility progression in the joint hypermobility syndrome (Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, hypermobility type).
  3. Is hypermobility syndrome (HMS) a contributing factor for chronic unspecific wrist pain in a musician? If so, how is it evaluated and managed?
  4. Electromyographic activity of pelvic and lower limb muscles during postural tasks in people with benign joint hypermobility syndrome and non hypermobile people. A pilot study.
  5. Screening for celiac disease in the joint hypermobility syndrome/Ehlers-Danlos syndrome hypermobility type.
  6. Joint hypermobility syndrome is a risk factor trait for anxiety disorders: a 15-year follow-up cohort study.
  7. Chronic fatigue syndrome is commonly diagnosed in patients with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome hypermobility type/joint hypermobility syndrome.
  8. Association between psychopathological factors and joint hypermobility syndrome in a group of undergraduates from a French university.
  9. Need for a consensus on the methods by which to measure joint mobility and the definition of norms for hypermobility that reflect age, gender and ethnic-dependent variation: is revision of criteria for joint hypermobility syndrome and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome hypermobility type indicated?
  10. Joint hypermobility syndrome: problems that require psychological intervention.
  11. Joint hypermobility syndrome. Psychiatric manifestations.
  12. Joint hypermobility syndrome. Implications for obstetric care.
  13. Joint hypermobility syndrome. Urinary incontinence as presenting feature.
  14. Gait kinematics and passive knee joint range of motion in children with hypermobility syndrome.
  15. Joint hypermobility syndrome: A common clinical disorder associated with migraine in women.
  16. Joint protection and physical rehabilitation of the adult with hypermobility syndrome.
  17. Joint hypermobility syndrome.
  18. Evaluation of balance and improvement of proprioception by repetitive muscle vibration in a 15-year-old girl with joint hypermobility syndrome.
  19. Benign joint hypermobility syndrome--a case report: unrecognized or undiagnosed condition?.
  20. Relationship of joint hypermobility and musculoskeletal problems and frequency of benign joint hypermobility syndrome in children.
  21. An exploration of the prevalence of hypermobility and joint hypermobility syndrome in Omani women attending a hospital physiotherapy service.
  22. Joint hypermobility syndrome.
  23. Evaluation of posture and pain in persons with benign joint hypermobility syndrome.
  24. Presentation of two cases with hypermobility syndrome and review of the related literature.
  25. Association between joint hypermobility syndrome and panic disorder: a case-control study.
  26. Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, with special emphasis in the joint hypermobility syndrome.
  27. Benign joint hypermobility syndrome: a cause of childhood asthma?
  28. Incidence of joint hypermobility syndrome in a military population: impact of gender and race.
  29. Joint hypermobility syndrome pain.
  30. The lack of clinical distinction between the hypermobility type of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and the joint hypermobility syndrome (a.k.a. hypermobility syndrome).
  31. Injury and joint hypermobility syndrome in ballet dancers--a 5-year follow-up.
  32. Anxiety disorders and joint hypermobility syndrome: the role of collagen tissue.
  33. Prevalence of urinary and faecal incontinence among female members of the Hypermobility Syndrome Association (HMSA).
  34. Skin extensibility and consistency in patients with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and benign joint hypermobility syndrome.
  35. Proprioception and muscle torque deficits in children with hypermobility syndrome.
  36. Benign joint hypermobility syndrome: psychological features and psychopathological symptoms in a sample pain-free at evaluation1.
  37. The relationship between benign joint hypermobility syndrome and carpal tunnel syndrome.
  38. Marfanoid hypermobility syndrome and skeletal abnormalities in a rare case of torsion of wandering spleen.
  39. Evaluation of knee proprioception and effects of proprioception exercise in patients with benign joint hypermobility syndrome.
  40. Repeatability of joint proprioception and muscle torque assessment in healthy children and in children diagnosed with hypermobility syndrome.
  41. Contribution of lumbar spine and hip movement during the palms to floor test in individuals with diagnosed hypermobility syndrome.
  42. Hypermobility and the hypermobility syndrome, part 2: assessment and management of hypermobility syndrome: illustrated via case studies.
  43. Isokinetic evaluation of knee extensor/flexor muscle strength in patients with hypermobility syndrome.
  44. Inter-examiner reproducibility of tests and criteria for generalized joint hypermobility and benign joint hypermobility syndrome.
  45. Musculoskeletal reflex function in the joint hypermobility syndrome.
  46. Developmental Coordination Disorder and Joint Hypermobility Syndrome--overlapping disorders? Implications for research and clinical practice.
  47. Hypermobility and the hypermobility syndrome.
  48. Epidemiology of general joint hypermobility and basis for the proposed criteria for benign joint hypermobility syndrome: review of the literature.
  49. Are diagnostic criteria for general joint hypermobility and benign joint hypermobility syndrome based on reproducible and valid tests? A review of the literature.
  50. Anxiety, temporomandibular disorders, and joint hypermobility syndrome. Response to "Psychological assessment of patients with temporomandibular disorders: confirmatory analysis of the dimensional structure of the Brief Symptoms Inventory 18".
  51. Benign joint hypermobility syndrome: evaluation, diagnosis, and management.
  52. Prevalence of incontinence in women with benign joint hypermobility syndrome.
  53. Clinical study of hereditary disorders of connective tissues in a Chilean population: joint hypermobility syndrome and vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome.
  54. Hypermobility syndrome increases the risk for low bone mass.
  55. Generalised joint hypermobility and benign joint hypermobility syndrome. II: epidemiology and clinical criteria.
  56. Generalised joint hypermobility and benign joint hypermobility syndrome. I: reproducibility and validity of tests and criteria.
  57. Joint hypermobility syndrome in childhood. A not so benign multisystem disorder?
  58. Tenascin-X: a candidate gene for benign joint hypermobility syndrome and hypermobility type Ehlers-Danlos syndrome?
  59. Local anaesthetic failure in joint hypermobility syndrome.
  60. Genital prolapse in women and articular hypermobility syndrome in connective tissue dysplasia.
  61. Concomitant diseases in primary joint hypermobility syndrome.
  62. Amelioration of symptoms by enhancement of proprioception in patients with joint hypermobility syndrome.
  63. Joint hypermobility syndrome and mitral valve prolapse in panic disorder.
  64. Non-musculoskeletal symptoms in joint hypermobility syndrome. Indirect evidence for autonomic dysfunction?
  65. Joint laxity and the benign joint hypermobility syndrome in student and professional ballet dancers.
  66. Hypermobility syndrome in 105 women with pure urinary stress incontinence and in 105 controls.
  67. Dysautonomia in the joint hypermobility syndrome.
  68. The association of obstructive defecation, lower urinary tract dysfunction and the benign joint hypermobility syndrome: a case-control study.
  69. Connective tissue naevus (collagenoma) in a patient with benign joint hypermobility syndrome (Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type III).
  70. Early-onset hemochromatic arthropathy in a patient with idiopathic hypermobility syndrome.
  71. Joint hypermobility syndrome among undergraduate students.
  72. Clinical variants of joint hypermobility syndrome in respect to age.
  73. Hypermobility syndrome as a cause of joint symptoms.
  74. Viscoelastic properties and flexibility of the human muscle-tendon unit in benign joint hypermobility syndrome.
  75. Benign familial hypermobility syndrome and Trendelenburg sign in a painting "The Three Graces" by Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640).
  76. Growth hormone, insulin, and insulin-like growth factor-1 in hypermobility syndrome.
  77. Living with the hypermobility syndrome.
  78. Benign hypermobility syndrome in Greek schoolchildren.
  79. The revised (Brighton 1998) criteria for the diagnosis of benign joint hypermobility syndrome (BJHS).
  80. Hypermobility syndrome--new diagnostic criteria.
  81. Ultrasonographic, axial, and peripheral measurements in female patients with benign hypermobility syndrome.
  82. Joint hypermobility syndrome and bilateral total occlusion of the ulnar arteries presenting as Raynaud's phenomenon.
  83. Examination and treatment of a patient with hypermobility syndrome.
  84. Hypermobility syndrome.
  85. Association between joint hypermobility syndrome and panic disorder.
  86. Clinical, morphological and biochemical features in the familial articular hypermobility syndrome (FAHS): a family study.
  87. Hypermobility syndrome.
  88. Hypermobility syndrome. When too much activity causes pain.
  89. Extra-articular features of benign joint hypermobility syndrome.
  90. The effect of the hypermobility syndrome on knee joint proprioception.
  91. Impaired proprioceptive acuity at the proximal interphalangeal joint in patients with the hypermobility syndrome.
  92. A family with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type III/articular hypermobility syndrome has a glycine 637 to serine substitution in type III collagen.
  93. Impaired proprioceptive acuity at the proximal interphalangeal joint in patients with the hypermobility syndrome.
  94. Surgically treated case of Marfanoid hypermobility syndrome.
  95. Jaccoud's arthropathy and hypermobility syndrome.
  96. Is the benign joint hypermobility syndrome benign?
  97. Anxiety disorders in the joint hypermobility syndrome.
  98. Segregation analysis of collagen genes in two families with joint hypermobility syndrome.
  99. Juvenile ankylosing spondylitis and the joint hypermobility syndrome.
  100. Is the benign joint hypermobility syndrome benign?
  101. The hypermobility syndrome.
  102. Hypermobility syndrome.
  103. Aortic disruption after operation for pectus excavatum in a infant with Marfanoid hypermobility syndrome.
  104. Joint hypermobility syndrome and anxiety disorders.
  105. Marfanoid hypermobility syndrome.
  106. The hypermobility syndrome.
  107. Jaccoud's arthropathy and hypermobility syndrome in systemic lupus erythematosus.
  108. Idiopathic hypermobility syndrome; far-reaching sequelae?.
  109. Joint hypermobility syndrome: inherited disorder of collagen synthesis.
  110. Clinical manifestations of the joint hypermobility syndrome.
  111. Increased prevalence of mitral valve prolapse associated with an elevated skin type III/III+I collagen ratio in joint hypermobility syndrome.
  112. Mitral valve prolapse, aortic compliance, and skin collagen in joint hypermobility syndrome.
  113. The hypermobility syndrome.
  114. The hypermobility syndrome.
  115. Marfanoid hypermobility syndrome associated with Duane's retraction syndrome.
  116. The hypermobility syndrome. Musculoskeletal complaints in 100 consecutive cases of generalized joint hypermobility.
  117. The hypermobility syndrome.
  118. Case report: hypermobility syndrome mimicking juvenile chronic arthritis.
  119. Marfanoid hypermobility syndrome associated with flail mitral valve.
  120. A clinical and echocardiographic study of patients with the hypermobility syndrome.
  121. Marfanoid hypermobility syndrome associated with coarctation of the aorta.
  122. Cardiovascular abnormalities in the Marfanoid hypermobility syndrome.
  123. The Marfanoid hypermobility syndrome.
  124. A family with many cases of marfanoid hypermobility syndrome.
  125. Pulmonary lesions seen in a family with Marfanoid hypermobility syndrome.
  126. The marfanoid hypermobility syndrome.
  127. The hypermobility syndrome. Musculoskeletal complaints associated with generalized joint hypermobility.

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