Charles H. Slocumb
Mayo Clinic
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Featured researches published by Charles H. Slocumb.
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1957
James W. Kemper; Archie H. Baggenstoss; Charles H. Slocumb
Excerpt In the last six years polyarteritis nodosa has been seen clinically, and proved histologically by biopsies, in patients who had had classic rheumatoid arthritis for many years. This associa...
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1957
Charles H. Slocumb; Howard F. Polley; L. Emmerson Ward; Philip S. Hench
Excerpt In the relatively brief period of six years of intensive clinical and biochemical investigations, the great potency of cortisone, corticotropin and related adrenocortical hormonal preparati...
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1938
Philip S. Hench; Walter Bauer; David Ghrist; Francis Hall; W. Paul Holbrook; J. Albert Key; Charles H. Slocumb
Excerpt CONTENT General incidence of rheumatic disease Classification Diseases of joints related to trauma Gonorrheal rheumatism: gonococcus arthritis Tuberculous arthritis and tuberculous rheumati...
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 1958
L. Emmerson Ward; Howard F. Polley; Marschelle H. Power; Harold L. Mason; Charles H. Slocumb; Philip S. Hench
The initial reports (Hench, Kendall, Slocumb, and Polley, 1949; Sprague, Power, Mason, Albert, Mathieson, Hench, Kendall, Slocumb, and Polley, 1950; Hench and others, 1950) of the antirheumatic potency of cortisone emphasized the fact that excessive doses produced not only desirable but also certain undesirable effects. At that time (1949), we expressed our hope and belief that analogues superior to cortisone would be discovered. Since then, at least seven more cortisone-like steroids have been found useful clinically; these include hydrocortisone, 9-alpha-fluorohydrocortisone (Fludrocortisone), prednisone, prednisolone, a compound whose structure is 9-alpha-fluoro, delta 1-hydrocortisone, and the two most recent additions, namely triamcinolone and 6-methyl, delta I-hydrocortisone. Each of these eight compounds has distinctive characteristics. Cortisone is the least costly to prepare synthetically; it is still useful in many cases and preferable in some. Hydrocortisone, apparently the major product of the normal human adrenal cortex, has proved to be superior to cortisone in local, especially intra-articular, administration. Fludrocortisone possesses a greatly enhanced antirheumatic effect (about ten times greater than that of cortisone, milligram for milligram); however, its effect on the retention of sodium and chloride and the excretion of potassium is even more enhanced. Thus, fludrocortisone is especially useful in the adrenal insufficiency of Addisons disease and when used in ointments for certain dermatological conditions, but the qualities that make it superior to cortisone or hydrocortisone in the management of Addisons disease interfere with its usefulness for rheumatic patients. Nevertheless, its production represented a distinct advance, because it demon-
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1952
Edward W. Lowman; Charles H. Slocumb
Excerpt Since the initial report in 1935 by Baehr and associates1of the diffuse peripheral vascular involvement in lupus erythematosus, much histologic investigation has been directed toward clarif...
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1942
Charles H. Slocumb
Excerpt In 1935 Dreyer and Reed1reported clinical improvement among patients who had infectious (rheumatoid, atrophic) arthritis when treated with large doses of vitamin D. Reports which have appea...
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1950
Philip S. Hench; Edward C. Kendall; Charles H. Slocumb; Howard F. Polley
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1950
Randall G. Sprague; Marschelle H. Power; Harold L. Mason; A. Albert; Don R. Mathieson; Philip S. Hench; Edward C. Kendall; Charles H. Slocumb; Howard F. Polley
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1963
William L. Treacy; Archie H. Baggenstoss; Charles H. Slocumb; Charles F. Code
JAMA | 1950
Philip S. Hench; Charles H. Slocumb; Howard F. Polley; Edward C. Kendall