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Sporadic Inclusion Body Myositis and Other Rimmed Vacuolar Myopathies
Conrad C. Weihl
Center of Regenerative Medicine
Roy and Diana Vagelos Division of Biology & Biomedical Sciences (DBBS)
Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences (ICTS)
Section of Neuromuscular Medicine
Department of Neurology
DBBS - Molecular Cell Biology
DBBS - Neurosciences
Hope Center for Neurological Disorders
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Review article
›
peer-review
17
Scopus citations
Overview
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Keyphrases
Sporadic Inclusion Body Myositis (sIBM)
100%
Rimmed Vacuolar Myopathy
100%
Laboratory Features
40%
Hereditary Myopathy
40%
Disease Progression
20%
Increasing Age
20%
Therapeutic Intervention
20%
Clinical Features
20%
Clinical History
20%
Pathologic
20%
Histopathological Features
20%
Autoantibodies
20%
Effective Therapy
20%
Diagnostic Criteria
20%
Early Diagnosis
20%
Genetic Risk
20%
Clinical Laboratory
20%
Natural History
20%
Myopathy
20%
Pathogenic Mechanism
20%
Improved Diagnosis
20%
Clinical Development
20%
Unmet Medical Need
20%
Muscle Disease
20%
Inclusion Body Myositis
20%
Muscle Biopsy
20%
Inherited Myopathies
20%
Medicine and Dentistry
Inclusion Body Myositis
100%
Myopathy
100%
Biological Marker
16%
Physical Examination
16%
Disease Exacerbation
16%
Early Diagnosis
16%
Awareness
16%
Autoantibodies
16%
Muscle Disease
16%
Genetic Risk Factor
16%
Muscle Biopsy
16%
Diseases
16%
Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
Myopathy
100%
Inclusion Body Myositis
100%
Biological Marker
16%
Disease Exacerbation
16%
Genetic Risk
16%
Muscle Disease
16%
Autoantibodies
16%
Diseases
16%
Neuroscience
Muscle Disorder
100%
Myositis
100%
Autoantibodies
16%
Physical Examination
16%