Bursting the Bubble: A Case of Secondary Infertility

2017 ◽  
Vol 30 (03) ◽  
pp. 179-182
Author(s):  
Parul Wadhwani ◽  
Soma Sharma ◽  
Gyanda Wadhwani

AbstractInfertility has been a major medical and social preoccupation since the dawn of human existence and women have always been the symbol of fertility. A 34-year-old woman presented with inability to conceive for the past 2.5 years. A single dose of indicated homeopathic remedy helped her conceive during the following month. In contrast with the fertility specialists, homeopathic treatment addresses the entire underlying bio–psycho–social dimension under a single roof. Publication of a collective pooled data may help us establish this beyond doubt, for the benefit of incomplete families!

2014 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-60
Author(s):  
Davide Sparti

Obwohl jede menschliche Handlung mit einem gewissen Grad an Improvisation erfolgt, gibt es kulturelle Praktiken, bei denen Improvisation eine überwiegende Rolle spielt. Um das Risiko zu vermeiden, einen zu breiten Begriff von Improvisation zu übernehmen, konzentriere ich mich im vorliegenden Beitrag auf den Jazz. Meine zentrale Frage lautet, wie Improvisation verstanden werden muss. Mein Vorgehen ist folgendes: Ich beginne mit einem Vergleich von Improvisation und Komposition, damit die Spezifizität der Improvisation erklärt werden kann. Danach wende ich mich dem Thema der Originalität als Merkmal der Improvisation zu. Zum Schluss führe ich den Begriff affordance ein, um die kollektive und zirkuläre Logik eines Solos zu analysieren. Paradigmatisch wird der Jazzmusiker mit dem Engel der Geschichte verglichen, der nur auf das Vergangene blickt, während er der Zukunft den Rücken zugekehrt hat, und lediglich ihr zugetrieben wird. Weder kann der Improvisierende das Material der Vergangenheit vernachlässigen noch seine genuine Tätigkeit, das Improvisieren in der Gegenwart und für die Zukunft, aufgeben: Er visiert die Zukunft trotz ihrer Unvorhersehbarkeit über die Vermittlung der Vergangenheit an.<br><br>While improvised behavior is so much a part of human existence as to be one of its fundamental realities, in order to avoid the risk of defining the act of improvising too broadly, my focus here will be upon one of the activities most explicitly centered around improvisation – that is, upon jazz. My contribution, as Wittgenstein would say, has a »grammatical« design to it: it proposes to clarify the significance of the term »improvisation.« The task of clarifying the cases in which one may legitimately speak of improvisation consists first of all in reflecting upon the conditions that make the practice possible. This does not consist of calling forth mysterious, esoteric processes that take place in the unconscious, or in the minds of musicians, but rather in paying attention to the criteria that are satisfied when one ascribes to an act the concept of improvisation. In the second part of my contribution, I reflect upon the logic that governs the construction of an improvised performance. As I argue, in playing upon that which has already emerged in the music, in discovering the future as they go on (as a consequence of what they do), jazz players call to mind the angel in the famous painting by Klee that Walter Benjamin analyzed in his Theses on the History of Philosophy: while pulled towards the future, its eyes are turned back towards the past.


2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 247-288
Author(s):  
Sabine Ackermann

AbstractAlthough people have established rules to secure their life and values, they seem to search—and to have searched, time and again, in the past—for exceptions to those rules, and this for different purposes. The article compares two concepts of exception, suggested by Kierkegaard in Fear and Trembling and by Garve in his Treatise on the Connection between Moral and Politics, respectively. A systematic-critical analysis shows certain intersections between their specific ways of handling the proposed exception. Garve’s concept of exception requires an original status naturalis between countries to increase happiness, and this is claimed by an established sovereign ruling with trust in God for his people. By contrast, the exception of Kierkegaard’s teleological suspension of the ethical turns out, precisely by being based on an individual’s relationship with God, to be incommensurable with purportedly universal social, ethical and political standards. This notwithstanding, both conceptions build on the notion of a human existence, which is subject to and ultimately dependent upon no one except the immortal God.


Südosteuropa ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Polymeris Voglis ◽  
Ioannis Nioutsikos

AbstractThis article is a presentation and assessment of Greek historiography and public memory regarding the period of occupation, resistance, and civil war during the 1940s. It examines historical production and culture from the first postwar years until 1989 and explains the relation between the changing visions of the past and political developments in Greece. In addition, the article evaluates works published after 2000, in order to discuss new questions that were raised and the ensuing debates. The article concludes by addressing themes that can revitalize the study of the 1940s, regarding the analytical framework, the territorial and social dimension, the notion of state and governmentality, and the issue of memory and public history.


Author(s):  
Sam Wiseman

Woolf’s childhood was characterised by contrasts between urban and rural, movement and belonging, past and future, domesticity and the outdoor landscape. These influences are evident in her work’s balance between nostalgic reflection and an acceptance of the inexorable transience of human existence and sensation. Woolf is interested in the ways in which new developments in travel and technology can defamiliarise us, and reveal interconnections with other beings. Her attentiveness to the sedimentary layering of the past within rural landscapes is applied to her reimagining of the urban environment; Woolf inverts urban-rural associations, and portrays the metropolitan world as a site within which both fragmentation and interconnection are made explicit. That sense of interconnection also extends to nonhuman animals in Between the Acts (1941). Ultimately, this portrayal of a world in which all experience and activity is part of a ‘work of art’ underlies the theme of unity in Woolf’s final novel; but that theme nonetheless remains balanced by the novel’s exploration of dispersal and fragmentation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 74-91
Author(s):  
Thomas Kriza

Abstract This paper questions the contemporary turn towards horizons of existential meaning going back to antiquity especially in the shape of a turn to religion by pointing to crucial differences between antique conceptions of thought and their modern revivals. Pierre Hadot and Michel Foucault interpret antique thought as spiritual exercises to perfect human existence, exposing an inherent existential relevance and connection to a peculiar conception of truth. I argue that because of these ties to a truth claim deeply alien to the modern scientific world-view, antique horizons of existential meaning cannot be revived within modern frames of thought. Their contemporary presence is more likely the expression of the deeply ambivalent modern relationship to premodern horizons of existential meaning, rather than a genuine revival.


2013 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy Verdun

This article seeks to shed light on the development over the past decades of the concept of economic governance. It asks what is understood by economic governance and what role the social dimension has played. The article offers an analysis of the problems and possible issues confronting the EU as it seeks ways to address the sovereign debt crisis by embarking on deeper economic integration. The article concludes that from the early days there have been questions about the exact interaction between economic and monetary integration and thus between ‘economic’ and ‘monetary’ union. Despite Delors’ original inclination, few were willing to establish any linkage between EMU and social matters. The crises have again brought out the need to consider the two in tandem. Moreover, with the increased role in economic governance accorded to EU-level institutions, there is a need to rethink the EU democratic model.


2020 ◽  
pp. 154041532097163
Author(s):  
Andrew Yockey ◽  
Shanna Stryker

Cocaine use disproportionately affects several social groups, including ethnic and sexual minorities. The present study sought to identify the epidemiology of cocaine use among a national sample of Hispanic young adults using pooled data from the 2015–2018 National Survey of Drug Use and Health. Weighted analyses were used to identify correlates to past-year cocaine use. Results revealed that 4.11% ( n = 729) of individuals used cocaine in the past year. Individuals who identified as gay/lesbian or bisexual, who drove under the influence of alcohol in the past year, and who reported prior drug use were at risk of cocaine use. Of concern, nearly 10% of gay/lesbian Hispanic individuals report having used cocaine in the past year. Furthermore, cocaine use was associated with other risky behaviors; 41.1% of LSD (Lysergic acid diethylamide) users also reported cocaine use, and 18.2% of cocaine users reported having driven under the influence of alcohol within the past year. Findings from the present study may inform harm reduction efforts and health prevention messages.


1967 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 323-337
Author(s):  
C. F. Evans
Keyword(s):  
The Past ◽  

Tradition in either of its two senses—the act of handing on (generally verbally), and what is handed on—is a particular instance of a law of human existence that men live in dependence on one another and by the processes of giving and receiving. So a sociologist can write, ‘If we are able to speak of real tradition, we must find the past spontaneously taken into account as the meaning of the present, without any discontinuity of social time, and without any consideration of the past as irrelevant’ (M. Dufrenne, quoted by P. Congar, Tradition and Traditions, p. 264, n. 1). ‘If democracy’, wrote Chesterton, ‘means that I give a man a vote even though he is my chauffeur, tradition means that I give a man a vote even though he is my great-great-grandfather’. What is handed on, however, is not existence of a purely biological kind, to remain always what it has been or to change very slowly over a space of aeons. Except in primitive tribes even tradition is not simply passed on as something static and timeless, and it is received by men who, though themselves in time, are not totally time-bound or restricted by what they receive. They believe themselves to be capable of significant action which is more than the repetition and reproduction of what has gone before. They are able to grasp a span of time and to call it history; they believe themselves to have a history, and they write history.


Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 4557-4557
Author(s):  
Janet R Rea ◽  
Theresa Deisher ◽  
Peter A. Jarzyna ◽  
Yumna Zahid ◽  
Kathleen Suwito ◽  
...  

Abstract Dexamethasone has been widely used since its initial approval by the FDA in 1958, either individually or as part of a therapeutic regimen for a variety of diseases and disorders, including lymphoma and leukemia and most recently, COVID-19 mediated disease. During a preclinical experiment with A20 B-cell lymphoma bearing mice, a suprapharmacologic dose of dexamethasone phosphate, equivalent to a Human (Equivalent) Dose of 17.5 mg/kg, was inadvertently administered. Blood samples were collected and analyzed by flow cytometry, revealing the presence of a new cell 48 hours after dosing. Subsequent experiments confirmed this finding following a single dose of AVM0703. This cell has since been identified as a bi-specific gamma-delta+ NKT cell, or AVM-NKT cell. One of the challenges of being able to deliver suprapharmacologic dexamethasone doses was the drug product itself. These limitations led to the development of a new drug product, AVM0703, which permits the safe administration of the doses necessary to mobilize these cells. AVM0703 is supplied as a sterile, single-use 50 mL, 24 mg/mL solution for infusion, without preservatives. The ability to rapidly mobilize and activate these cells following a single dose of AVM0703 in as little as 6 hours is the subject of an on-going clinical trial, in patients with lymphoid malignancies (NCT04329728), specifically no-option, R/R ALL, MCL, DLBCL, Primary Mediastinal Large B-cell, Burkitt, CLL/SLL and B-or T-ALL. The study consists of 2-parts, dose-escalation to determine the Phase 2 dose, followed by an adaptive-design, expansion cohort study in the same patient population. Concurrently, clinical data has also been obtained from Expanded Access-Single Patient INDs. Based on the murine model, a theoretically effective HED was determined to be at least 18 mg/kg. Because the maximum dose approved for generic injectable dexamethasone is 6 mg/kg, the starting dose for the clinical trial was set at 6 mg/kg. The dose escalation study design is a 3 x 3 design, originally consisting of cohorts escalating by 3 mg/kg to 21 mg/kg (6, 9, 12, 15, 18 and 21 mg/kg). Since that time and based on safety data (see below), the FDA has permitted a revision to the study, in which the 12 and 15 mg/kg cohorts are skipped. Table 1 provides the original and current study design, with the corresponding total dose for a 70 kg patient. For example, 18 mg/kg is 1.26 g for a 70 kg patient. The trial also incorporates a validated Quality of Life questionnaire and a 12-month follow-up period. In Expanded Use, Single-Patient IND setting, 4 patients received at least one AVM0703 dose: glioblastoma: one 6 mg/kg; B-cell ALL: one 18 mg/kg dose; and two prostate cancer patients: one 18 mg/kg dose and patient #2: repeat doses for the past year as depicted in Table 2. Figure 1 depicts the flow cytometry analysis 24 hours following an 18 mg/kg AVM0703 dose. From a safety perspective, there have been no reports of drug-related or treatment emergent SAE's. The murine model safety findings correlate to the human experience. Adverse events reported to date have been self-limiting and mild to moderate. Frequent AEs include slight elevations of blood pressure, glucose and BUN that resolve without treatment in &lt; 1 week post dose. Leukocytosis and lymphocytosis were reported 24 hours post infusion from the B-cell ALL patient but resolved by 7-days without reported intervention. Because a single AVM0703 dose triggers the rapid mobilization and activation of an endogenous bi-specific gamma-delta+ NKT cell with a favorable emerging safety profile, AVM0703 shows promise as a therapeutic agent in treating this serious disease. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Rea: AVM Biotechnology, LLC: Current Employment. Deisher: AVM Biotechnology, LLC: Current Employment. Jarzyna: AVM Biotechnology, LLC: Current Employment. Zahid: AVM Biotechnology, LLC: Ended employment in the past 24 months. Suwito: AVM Biotechnology, LLC: Current Employment. Poulin: AVM Biotechnology, LLC: Current Employment.


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