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Seth L. Feigenbaum

Researcher at University of California, San Francisco

Publications -  15
Citations -  1576

Seth L. Feigenbaum is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Arthritis & Rheumatoid arthritis. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 15 publications receiving 1548 citations. Previous affiliations of Seth L. Feigenbaum include University of Illinois at Chicago & Northwestern University.

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Primary fibromyalgia (fibrositis): Clinical study of 50 patients with matched normal controls

TL;DR: It is shown that primary fibromyalgia is a poorly recognized condition and should be suspected by the presence of its own characteristic features, and not diagnosed just by the absence of other recognizable conditions.
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Prognosis in rheumatoid arthritis. A longitudinal study of newly diagnosed younger adult patients.

TL;DR: Computer-assisted data screening and multivariate analytic technics were employed to derive a simple index from entry data which correlated closely with the patients' subsequent articular course and developed promise to assist with a broad range of clinical research and medical care delivery problems.
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Prospective study of the early course of rheumatoid arthritis in young adults: comparison of patients with and without rheumatoid factor positivity at entry and identification of variables correlating with outcome.

TL;DR: Type of drug therapy tended to reflect severity of arthritis, rather than vice versa, and functional capacity improved significantly from entry to last evaluation in both males and females, even though the latter had stable or progressive arthritis.
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Hormonal and pregnancy relationships to rheumatoid arthritis: Convergent effects with immunologic and microvascular systems*

TL;DR: Serum DHEAS, an adrenal androgen, was impressively decreased among women with premenopausal onset of RA, and the complex biology of pregnancy was interpreted as an example of vital interactions between hormonal, immunological, and vascular systems, as they may relate to the physiopathology of RA.
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Lymphocytic adenohypophysitis: a pituitary mass lesion occurring in pregnancy. Proposal for medical treatment.

TL;DR: In this paper, a prospective diagnosis of lymphocytic adenohypophysitis associated with pregnancy was made using glucocorticoids, which suppressed the inflammatory response and protected remaining pituitary tissue.