Brain-Immune Connections in Health and Disease
March 3rd, 2010 | by admin |
The UCSD School of Medicine and the Diana Padelford Binkley Foundation bring you the newest installments of this innovative series targeted at successfully managing pain in women. Studies show women often receive inadequate care as pain manifests uniquely in the sexes and requires distinctive treatment strategies. In this program, Esther Sternberg, M.D., a national expert from American University, discusses how the brain and immune connections affect health and can help us prevent and treat disease. Series: Pain Management in Women Over the Lifecycle [9/2007] [Health and Medicine] [Professional Medical Education] [Show ID: 12600]
Duration : 0:47:17
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3 Responses to “Brain-Immune Connections in Health and Disease”
By 1888junkteam on Mar 3, 2010 | Reply
excellent worker!
excellent worker!
By amyleetwin18 on Mar 3, 2010 | Reply
AWESOME!
AWESOME!
By Zeldovich on Mar 3, 2010 | Reply
The definition of …
The definition of stress here very much misses the point. Stress involves net rates of reinforcement or aversive stimulation and temporally discounted rates of each determine stress levels.