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Rhumatologue

Docteur Virginie MARTAILLE

📍 Paris (75)HospitalierRPPS 10100283521
📊 Reconnaissance scientifique : 5/100📝 16 articles publiés📚 HAL (8)

Diplômes

🎓 DES & spécialité ordinale

  • DES Rhumatologie
  • Rhumatologie (SM)

🎓 Diplômes

  • DE Docteur en médecine

Source : Annuaire Santé ANS (FHIR Practitioner.qualification) · Mises à jour quotidiennes.

Activité de recherche & publications

Source : bases de données publiques (OpenAlex, PubMed).

h-index

5

h articles cités ≥ h fois chacun. Un h de 5 = 5 publications avec 5+ citations.

Citations

215

Publications

16

i10-index

5

Thématiques principales

  • Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Research ×7
  • Rheumatoid Arthritis Research and Therapies ×6
  • Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Research ×2
  • Spondyloarthritis Studies and Treatments ×2
  • Autoimmune and Inflammatory Disorders Research ×2

Affiliations FR : Centre hospitalier universitaire d'Orléans

Source : OpenAlex (CC0, OurResearch). Indicateurs académiques agrégés sur 250 M+ d'œuvres.

Bibliographie

Source : HAL — archive ouverte CCSD/CNRS (couvre articles, chapitres EMC, communications congrès, thèses).

Lieux de consultation

  • CNAM

    CNAM, 26-50 IMMEUBLE FRONTALIS — 26 AV DU PROFESSEUR ANDRE LEMIERRE, 75986 Paris

    Hospitalier
  • CHRU ORLEANS - HOPITAL DE LA SOURCE

    14 Avenue DE L'HOPITAL, 45067 Orléans

    0238514444Hospitalier
  • CAISSE NATIONALE DE L'ASSURANCE MALADIE

    26-50 IMMEUBLE FRONTALIS CNAM 26 AV DU PROFESSEUR ANDRE LEMIERRE, 75986 PARIS CEDEX 20

    Activité non soignante

Tarifs & secteur de conventionnement

Secteur de conventionnement non disponible (médecin hospitalier ou non présent dans l'Annuaire santé CNAM des libéraux conventionnés).

Prendre rendez-vous & contact

Lien Doctolib = recherche Google site:doctolib.fr (le 1er résultat est presque toujours le profil correct s'il existe).

Top publications · les plus citées

  • 1
    Comparison of the Big Five personality traits in fibromyalgia and other rheumatic diseases

    Joint bone spine · 2017

    📚 50 citations🎯 RCR 3.18Top 15% NIH
  • 2
    A Comparative Study of Fibromyalgia, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Spondyloarthritis, and Sjögren's Syndrome; Impact of the Disease on Quality of Life, Psychological Adjustment, and Use of Coping Strategies

    Pain medicine (Malden, Mass.) · 2021

    📚 42 citations🎯 RCR 4.90Top 8% NIH🔓 Open Access📄 PDF gratuit ↗
    Lire l'abstract Crossref ↓

    Abstract Background Fibromyalgia, rheumatoid arthritis, spondyloarthritis, and Sjögren’s syndrome are chronic rheumatic diseases with very different clinical characteristics, but which share symptoms such as pain and fatigue. The aim of the study was to examine the impact of the disease on psychological adaptation in fibromyalgia compared with other rheumatic diseases (rheumatoid arthritis, spondyloarthritis, and Sjögren’s syndrome). Methods In a multicenter study, 165 women with rheumatic diseases (48 with fibromyalgia, 47 with rheumatoid arthritis, 47 with spondyloarthritis, 23 with Sjögren’s syndrome) completed the General Health Questionnaire–28 (emotional distress), Fatigue Severity Scale (fatigue), Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (impact of the disease), Coping Strategies Questionnaire (coping), and Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (comorbidity with DSM IV axis-I disorders). We used the Kruskal-Wallis test, Mann-Whitney U test, and chi2 test to compare comorbid anxiety and depressive disorders and to compare the impact of the disease on patients’ mental well-being and daily life and adjustment (coping strategies). Results Anxiety and depressive disorders were more common in fibromyalgia patients; they had higher scores on impact of the disease, physical symptoms, pain, and fatigue than rheumatoid arthritis patients and reported more fatigue than patients with spondyloarthritis. Overall, they used more maladaptive coping strategies (less use of distancing from pain than patients with rheumatoid arthritis and spondyloarthritis, less use of ignoring pain sensations, and more use of catastrophizing than those with rheumatoid arthritis). No differences were found between fibromyalgia and Sjögren’s syndrome on impact and adjustment. Conclusions Compared with other rheumatic diseases, fibromyalgia has a greater impact on daily life; patients have more difficulty adjusting to the disease and generally use poorer strategies to cope with pain.

Publications scientifiques (6) — classées par pathologie

Source PubMed · Recherche par auteur (homonymes possibles, vérifier l'affiliation).

Transversal3

IA en rhumatologie1

Lupus1

Sjögren1

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