Cite
Pain Phenotypes and Associated Clinical Risk Factors Following Traumatic Amputation: Results from Veterans Integrated Pain Evaluation Research (VIPER).
MLA
Buchheit, Thomas, et al. “Pain Phenotypes and Associated Clinical Risk Factors Following Traumatic Amputation: Results from Veterans Integrated Pain Evaluation Research (VIPER).” Pain Medicine (Malden, Mass.), vol. 17, no. 1, Jan. 2016, pp. 149–61. EBSCOhost, https://doi.org/10.1111/pme.12848.
APA
Buchheit, T., Van de Ven, T., Hsia, H.-L. J., McDuffie, M., MacLeod, D. B., White, W., Chamessian, A., Keefe, F. J., Buckenmaier, C. T., & Shaw, A. D. (2016). Pain Phenotypes and Associated Clinical Risk Factors Following Traumatic Amputation: Results from Veterans Integrated Pain Evaluation Research (VIPER). Pain Medicine (Malden, Mass.), 17(1), 149–161. https://doi.org/10.1111/pme.12848
Chicago
Buchheit, Thomas, Thomas Van de Ven, Hung-Lun John Hsia, Mary McDuffie, David B MacLeod, William White, Alexander Chamessian, Francis J Keefe, Chester Trip Buckenmaier, and Andrew D Shaw. 2016. “Pain Phenotypes and Associated Clinical Risk Factors Following Traumatic Amputation: Results from Veterans Integrated Pain Evaluation Research (VIPER).” Pain Medicine (Malden, Mass.) 17 (1): 149–61. doi:10.1111/pme.12848.