Therapeutics

‘Therapeutics’ introduces the principles and delivery of ocular drugs, and practical advice about safe injection techniques, before moving on to the core of the chapter that comprises tabular summaries of topical and systemic medications commonly used in ophthalmology. Key areas include advice on the safe use of corticosteroids, immunosuppressants, and biologics.

Author(s):  
Alastair K.O. Denniston ◽  
Philip I. Murray

‘Therapeutics’ introduces the principles and delivery of ocular drugs, practical advice about safe injection techniques, before moving on to the core of the chapter that comprises tabular summaries of topical and systemic medication commonly used in ophthalmology. Key areas include advice on the safe use of corticosteroids, immunosuppressants and biologics.


2000 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 43-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara Workman

2019 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-93
Author(s):  
Steven Bozza ◽  
Jeffrey Berger

This article addresses the issue of safe injection sites (SIS) that municipalities in the United States and elsewhere in the world propose to save lives by curbing the instances of fatal overdoses and provide addicts with healthcare services and opportunities for detoxification and social rehabilitation. Drawing on current clinical science and the medical facts regarding substance abuse and addiction, widely accepted bioethical principles, Catholic social teaching, and the common good, it shows the administration and consumption of illicit recreational drugs in an SIS is not a suitable medical intervention and a violation of the core principles of Catholic social teaching and Catholic healthcare ethics. More importantly, municipal governing bodies and the clinicians who staff these facilities cooperate in the evil of illegal drug abuse. Summary: Safe injection sites are morally illicit.


2020 ◽  
pp. 55-76
Author(s):  
Phil Blum ◽  
Chris Bowden ◽  
Tom Coonan

The chapter covers drugs in common use in resource-poor settings that may be unfamiliar to anaesthetists practising in high-resource settings, primarily ketamine and the volatile anaesthetic agents halothane and ether. Ketamine is one of the core drugs in use in resource-poor environments and as such a significant proportion of the chapter is given over to it: how it works, side effects and how to attenuate them and useful ketamine ‘recipes’. It also contains advice on ‘workarounds’ when other familiar drugs are unavailable, e.g. vasopressors, muscle relaxants. Lastly, blood transfusion is a major difficulty in most parts of the world and this chapter gives practical advice on dealing with this reality.


1999 ◽  
Vol 13 (39) ◽  
pp. 47-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara Workman

2019 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guido Gainotti

Abstract The target article carefully describes the memory system, centered on the temporal lobe that builds specific memory traces. It does not, however, mention the laterality effects that exist within this system. This commentary briefly surveys evidence showing that clear asymmetries exist within the temporal lobe structures subserving the core system and that the right temporal structures mainly underpin face familiarity feelings.


Author(s):  
T. Kanetaka ◽  
M. Cho ◽  
S. Kawamura ◽  
T. Sado ◽  
K. Hara

The authors have investigated the dissolution process of human cholesterol gallstones using a scanning electron microscope(SEM). This study was carried out by comparing control gallstones incubated in beagle bile with gallstones obtained from patients who were treated with chenodeoxycholic acid(CDCA).The cholesterol gallstones for this study were obtained from 14 patients. Three control patients were treated without CDCA and eleven patients were treated with CDCA 300-600 mg/day for periods ranging from four to twenty five months. It was confirmed through chemical analysis that these gallstones contained more than 80% cholesterol in both the outer surface and the core.The specimen were obtained from the outer surface and the core of the gallstones. Each specimen was attached to alminum sheet and coated with carbon to 100Å thickness. The SEM observation was made by Hitachi S-550 with 20 kV acceleration voltage and with 60-20, 000X magnification.


Author(s):  
M. Locke ◽  
J. T. McMahon

The fat body of insects has always been compared functionally to the liver of vertebrates. Both synthesize and store glycogen and lipid and are concerned with the formation of blood proteins. The comparison becomes even more apt with the discovery of microbodies and the localization of urate oxidase and catalase in insect fat body.The microbodies are oval to spherical bodies about 1μ across with a depression and dense core on one side. The core is made of coiled tubules together with dense material close to the depressed membrane. The tubules may appear loose or densely packed but always intertwined like liquid crystals, never straight as in solid crystals (Fig. 1). When fat body is reacted with diaminobenzidine free base and H2O2 at pH 9.0 to determine the distribution of catalase, electron microscopy shows the enzyme in the matrix of the microbodies (Fig. 2). The reaction is abolished by 3-amino-1, 2, 4-triazole, a competitive inhibitor of catalase. The fat body is the only tissue which consistantly reacts positively for urate oxidase. The reaction product is sharply localized in granules of about the same size and distribution as the microbodies. The reaction is inhibited by 2, 6, 8-trichloropurine, a competitive inhibitor of urate oxidase.


Author(s):  
P.P.K. Smith

Grains of pigeonite, a calcium-poor silicate mineral of the pyroxene group, from the Whin Sill dolerite have been ion-thinned and examined by TEM. The pigeonite is strongly zoned chemically from the composition Wo8En64FS28 in the core to Wo13En34FS53 at the rim. Two phase transformations have occurred during the cooling of this pigeonite:- exsolution of augite, a more calcic pyroxene, and inversion of the pigeonite from the high- temperature C face-centred form to the low-temperature primitive form, with the formation of antiphase boundaries (APB's). Different sequences of these exsolution and inversion reactions, together with different nucleation mechanisms of the augite, have created three distinct microstructures depending on the position in the grain.In the core of the grains small platelets of augite about 0.02μm thick have farmed parallel to the (001) plane (Fig. 1). These are thought to have exsolved by homogeneous nucleation. Subsequently the inversion of the pigeonite has led to the creation of APB's.


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