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Volumn 27, Issue 3, 2001, Pages 151-156
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Sham neurosurgery in patients with Parkinson's disease: Is it morally acceptable?
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Author keywords
Neural grafting; Parkinson's disease; Research ethics; Sham surgery
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Indexed keywords
ARTICLE;
BRAIN TISSUE;
COMPARATIVE STUDY;
CONTROLLED STUDY;
EVIDENCE BASED MEDICINE;
HUMAN;
INFORMED CONSENT;
MEDICAL RESEARCH;
MESENCEPHALON;
MORALITY;
NEUROSURGERY;
PARKINSON DISEASE;
POSTOPERATIVE PERIOD;
PREOPERATIVE EVALUATION;
RISK BENEFIT ANALYSIS;
STANDARD;
TISSUE TRANSPLANTATION;
ANALYTICAL APPROACH;
BIOMEDICAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH;
MORAL POLICY;
THERAPEUTIC RESEARCH;
DOUBLE-BLIND METHOD;
FETAL TISSUE TRANSPLANTATION;
HUMAN EXPERIMENTATION;
HUMANS;
NEUROSURGICAL PROCEDURES;
PARKINSON DISEASE;
PLACEBOS;
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIALS;
RESEARCH DESIGN;
RISK ASSESSMENT;
THERAPEUTIC HUMAN EXPERIMENTATION;
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EID: 0034775154
PISSN: 03066800
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: 10.1136/jme.27.3.151 Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (64)
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References (25)
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