What's the difference between necrologist and neurologist?

Necrologist


Definition:

  • (n.) One who gives an account of deaths.

Example Sentences:

Neurologist


Definition:

  • (n.) One who is versed in neurology; also, one skilled in the treatment of nervous diseases.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Diagnoses suggested by neurologists have been confirmed by the CT in 69%.
  • (2) Visual judgments of tremor amplitude made by neurologists during clinical examinations equaled the sensitivity of computerized tremor amplitude measurements.
  • (3) This population-based case-control study of 130 Calgary residents with neurologist-confirmed idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) and 260 randomly selected age- and sex-matched community controls attempted to determine whether agricultural work or the occupational use of pesticide chemicals is associated with an increased risk for PD.
  • (4) In a consecutive series of 515 first-ever strokes in a community-based study of stroke that combined prompt clinical assessment by a study neurologist with a high rate of confirmed pathologic diagnosis, 108 cases (21%) had a lacunar syndrome.
  • (5) The main role in the care of the patients was played by neurologists from the public health service, but the number of house visits provided by physicians of the basic health service was slightly higher than that provided by neurologists.
  • (6) A team including the neurologist, internist, ophthalmologist, and surgeon optimizes care of the whole disease and not just the symptom.
  • (7) The actual number of neurologists is compared with earlier projections of neurology needs for 1990.
  • (8) This supports claims for an increase in the number of neurologists to improve the quality of service at district level.
  • (9) At the end of the diagnostic process the surgeon or internist and neurologist must decide together whether the diagnosis is appropriate, and then whether an operative or non-operative approach to treatment is fitting.
  • (10) The referral source in different age groups varied, but in all age groups relatively few were referred by the general paediatricians or paediatric neurologists.
  • (11) The Society had 74 members, of whom 14 were neurologists: J. Breitenfeld, D. Cop, I. Glavan, I. Herzog, A. Kuljzenko, D. Karminski, M. Lapinskij, R. Lopasić, H. Ortyński, V. Ostrovidov, F. Palmović, S. Poljak and D. Vranesić, all of them from Zagreb, and J. Robida from Ljubljana.
  • (12) Of the patients with panic disorder 9% had previously been assessed by a cardiologist and 17% by a neurologist.
  • (13) Since invasion of the nervous system by this parasite is a significant cause of intracranial hemorrhage in Thailand, it should be kept in mind by internists, neurologists, neurosurgeons, and pathologists who care for patients residing in, or who have visited, areas where G. spinigerum occurs.
  • (14) A case analysis has been performed on 4000 successive outpatient referrals to one consultant neurologist, representing 72% of all referrals to Charing Cross Hospital and 82% to Hillingdon Hospital.
  • (15) Testing the reliability and usefulness of disability scales in Parkinson's disease has been the object of a study carried out by 4 neurologists on 48 patients using 2 rating scales--Hoehn and Yahr staging and Columbia University Rating Scale--and 2 disability scales--Northwestern University Disability Scale and Extensive Disability Scale, a new scale conceived for this purpose, which is more accurate in examining in a different way the physical incapacity and handicap of parkinsonian patients in their daily living.
  • (16) Compelling reasons why neurologists, especially those with academic interests, should become involved in rehabilitation include the opportunity to observe patients in the recovery phases of their illnesses and to study issues relating to functional recovery, exposure to patients (such as those with spinal cord injury) who are often not seen by neurologists in the acute phase, and the opportunity to help establish a scientific base for rehabilitation medicine.
  • (17) Because of the increasing number of neuroethical dilemmas in medicine, neurologists are becoming more involved with the activities of institutional ethics committees and also serving as ethics consultants.
  • (18) Clinical, as well as basic neuroscience, information is culled by professional neurologists from 855 medical periodicals.
  • (19) Of 1761 three-year-old children born in 1979-80 and lived at Yonago city, Japan, 28 (1.6%; 25 boys and girls) were diagnosed as developmental speech delay by two pediatric neurologists.
  • (20) Random sample surveys of physicians and the general public by mail and telephone respectively and a mail survey of a selected panel of expert cardiologists and neurologists.

Words possibly related to "necrologist"

Words possibly related to "neurologist"