Clinical Diagnosis of Mood Disorders

1988 ◽  
Vol 34 (11) ◽  
pp. 2370-2370 ◽  
Author(s):  
A John Rush

Abstract Vol 34: p 813: In the fifth full paragraph in column 2, the second sentence should read "In 1934, von Meduna, a Hungarian psychiatrist..." (instead of 1983), and in the third sentence "1983" should read "1938." In the acknowledgements section to this paper, "MH-4115" should read "MH-41115." p 1018: Add Richard A. Patrick to this list of authors' names. p 1113: second column, 14th line from bottom, "32.1%" should read "10.9%" and, in the next line, "consistent" should read "inconsistent." Two lines further down, "60.7%" should read "18.5%" (see Letter by M. R. Hammer, in press). p 1493: It is stated (column 2, third paragraph) that a DB-1701 column does not contain a nitrogen atom in its stationary phase. This is incorrect. The Phase is a 14% cyanopropylphenylsiloxane polymer. p 1541: In the first full sentence in the right-hand column, "similarly higher" should read "similar." p 1629: In the right-hand column, the second-to-last paragraph, the ninth line from the bottom should read "...0.5 mL of a reagent solution containing, per liter, 10 g of dextran sulfate (500 000 Da) and 0.5 mol of MgCL2" p 1945: In line 6, column three, "0.65" should "0.965." p 2148: Add I. Morales to this list of authors' names.

1946 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 2-2

In the article “Infant Speech Sounds and Intelligence” by Orvis C. Irwin and Han Piao Chen, in the December 1945 issue of the Journal, the paragraph which begins at the bottom of the left hand column on page 295 should have been placed immediately below the first paragraph at the top of the right hand column on page 296. To the authors we express our sincere apologies.


VASA ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 344-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jandus ◽  
Bianda ◽  
Alerci ◽  
Gallino ◽  
Marone

A 55-year-old woman was referred because of diffuse pruritic erythematous lesions and an ischemic process of the third finger of her right hand. She was known to have anaemia secondary to hypermenorrhea. She presented six months before admission with a cutaneous infiltration on the left cubital cavity after a paravenous leakage of intravenous iron substitution. She then reported a progressive pruritic erythematous swelling of her left arm and lower extremities and trunk. Skin biopsy of a lesion on the right leg revealed a fibrillar, small-vessel vasculitis containing many eosinophils.Two months later she reported Raynaud symptoms in both hands, with a persistent violaceous coloration of the skin and cold sensation of her third digit of the right hand. A round 1.5 cm well-delimited swelling on the medial site of the left elbow was noted. The third digit of her right hand was cold and of violet colour. Eosinophilia (19 % of total leucocytes) was present. Doppler-duplex arterial examination of the upper extremities showed an occlusion of the cubital artery down to the palmar arcade on the right arm. Selective angiography of the right subclavian and brachial arteries showed diffuse alteration of the blood flow in the cubital artery and hand, with fine collateral circulation in the carpal region. Neither secondary causes of hypereosinophilia nor a myeloproliferative process was found. Considering the skin biopsy results and having excluded other causes of eosinophilia, we assumed the diagnosis of an eosinophilic vasculitis. Treatment with tacrolimus and high dose steroids was started, the latter tapered within 12 months and then stopped, but a dramatic flare-up of the vasculitis with Raynaud phenomenon occurred. A new immunosupressive approach with steroids and methotrexate was then introduced. This case of aggressive eosinophilic vasculitis is difficult to classify into the usual forms of vasculitis and constitutes a therapeutic challenge given the resistance to current immunosuppressive regimens.


Blood ◽  
1963 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 506-506

Abstract A portion of Dr. C. Lockard Conley’s letter in the August issue of BLOOD appeared garbled due to omission of some type. On page 235, the sentence beginning on line 22 of the right-hand column, and the following sentence, should have read as follows: A similar mechanism may be involved in hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin. An overlapping deletion involving contiguous loci provides a simple and adequate explanation for the occurrence of this anomaly.


1989 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 670-670
Author(s):  
Donald S Young

Abstract p 800: In the first column, the correct name (and the address) of the publisher is Science Enterprises, Inc., Box 88443, Indianapolis, IN 46208. p 1018: Richard Patrick should be added to the list of authors. p 1110: Corrections to this paper are detailed in a Letter by Hammer, Vol. 35, p 193. p 1800: Column two, line nine: "12.5" should read "125." p 1801: Column one, "Linearity" paragraph: "HDL-C" should read "HDL-FC" in lines nine and 14. p 1803: Column two, last sentence in first full paragraph should read "...automated method, the interferences with the manual method were less." p 2017: In the legend to Figure 1, the equation for G7 should read: y = -4012 x + 18. In Figure 2, there should be three dots above the 7 glucosyl units coordinate, the third being between the curve and the point just above the curve. p 2045: In Figure 1 (right), read "41" instead of "91" in the integration values for the 2-3a fraction assay. p 2141: Right-hand column, line 16: the formula for CNP-NAG should contain two N atoms. Vol. 35: p. 17: In the last part of the equation, "0.0835" should read "0.00835", and "0.0759" should read "0.00759." p 517: See correction note in "The Clinical Chemist."


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 96 (6) ◽  
pp. A48-A48
Author(s):  
Bruce D. Meade ◽  
Freyja Lynn ◽  
George F. Reed ◽  
ChrisAnna M. Mink ◽  
Theresa A. Romani ◽  
...  

• Relationships Between Functional Assays and Enzyme Immunoassays as Measurements of Responses to Acellular and Whole-Cell Pertussis Vaccines (1995;96:595-600): In the introduction, "WCL" is used incorrectly in three instances as an abbreviation for whole-cell pertussis vaccines. On page 595 (15 lines from the bottom of the right-hand column), "WCL pertussis immunization" should have read "whole-cell pertussis immunization." Similarly, on page 596 (in lines 21 through 23 of the left-hand column), "WCL vaccines" twice should have read "whole-cell vaccines." All other references to WCL in this article mean the specific product listed in Table 1 on page 596.


2016 ◽  
Vol 101 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 473-477 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wengang Li ◽  
Biao Liu ◽  
Jun Song ◽  
Yan Liu ◽  
Haoyu Liu ◽  
...  

Avascular necrosis of the metacarpal head is a rare disease. We herein report a case with varying degrees of lesions in the third and fourth metacarpal heads of the right hand and the third metacarpal head of the left hand. The patient was a 37-year-old male right-handed mechanical worker who presented with persistent dull pain in the right hand after labor work for more than a year. The 3 lesions in this patient were treated differently based on their clinical imaging manifestations. The neurologic function of the right hand recovered by the 18-month follow-up; only a slight limitation remained in the right middle finger. This is the first report of 1 patent who received 2 different treatment methods simultaneously and both provided a satisfactory clinical result.


1992 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 323-323 ◽  

Abstract Vol.36 p. 954: In abstract 0014, the concentration of total plasma homocysteine (TH) should be in mmol/L. Vol.37 p. 933: In abstract 0114, line 7, the actual value for Patient 2 should be 2700 U/L. p. 1187: In Table 1, the column heading for the right-most column should be "Rel. std. dev. of mean, %." p. 1290: In Table 1, the name of the steroid is dehydrochloromethyltestosterone. p. 1667: In the right-hand column, line 13, the correct name of the manufacturer of the antigen-based assay is Innogenetics. p. 1977: The captions for Figures 1 and 2 are correct, but the chromatograms should be interchanged. p. 2017: In the first sentence in the Letter that begins on this page, the incorrect editorially inserted word "gut" should be omitted. p.2138: In Table 1, footnote α should indicate that the results for Guadeloupe and for Martinique are significantly different from the previous data (P 0.001, chisquare test) but are not significantly different from each other; results in references 2-6 also are not significantly different from one another.


1909 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 66-73
Keyword(s):  

This paper is written in two separate columns. The right hand column contains a list of charges against Mary; the left hand column, which is evidently incomplete, contains a statement of the proofs for some of the charges made. The former is written in a clerkly hand in the ordinary Gothic script of the Elizabethan period, the latter, probably by the same hand, in Italian script. There is an exact copy of this paper written in the same manner and by the same hand among the papers relating to Mary Stuart in the Record Office (Vol. viii, no. 54) which has been wrongly calendared in the Scottish Calendar under the year 1577. It is impossible to fix the date of this paper exactly, but it certainly belongs sometime after the execution of Dr. Parry (March 2, 1584/5) and before the trial of the Scottish Queen (October 1586). Very likely it has some connection with the proceedings against Mary in 1586 although the charges which it lodges against her do not seem to have been brought forward at her trial. It is somewhat surprising to find in it no reference whatsoever to the Throgmorton plot, Mary's complicity in which was well known to the English government.


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