731 research outputs found

    Fetal Transplant-Induced Restoration of Spatial Memory in Rats with Lesions of the Nucleus Basalis of Meynert

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    Bilateral lesions of the nucleus basalis of Meynert (nbM) in rats produced mnemonic deficits when subjects were tested on tests of spatial memory over a period of 3 to 7.5 months postoperatively. The transplantation of cholinergic- rich, fetal ventral forebrain tissue to either two or four frontoparietal cortical sites normalized performance on the spatial memory tasks. However, which transplant condition yielded recovery depended upon the nature of the task and/or posttransplantation interval. When assessed 8 months following transplant surgery, cortical choline acetyltransferase and acetylcholinesterase activity levels in both transplant groups were comparable to those values found in sham-operated animals. These data indicate that fetal transplants can reverse the mnemonic deficits and restore cortical cholinergic neurochemical activity to near-normal levels in rats with nbM lesions

    Infliximab in paediatric inflammatory bowel disease

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    AbstractInfliximab has been widely used in paediatric Crohn's disease, mainly in luminal and fistulous disease refractory to standard treatment and for extraintestinal manifestations. Moreover, there is growing experience with its use in refractory ulcerative colitis. Infliximab has shown similar efficacy and safety in children as in adult population. It is postulated that its early use in paediatric inflammatory bowel disease, as a bridging treatment until the onset of action of other immunomodulators, could reduce the use of steroids and change the natural history of the disease as well. The effect of infliximab on mucosal healing could also contribute to the normal growth and sexual maturation in these patients

    A Multivariate Approach to a Meta-Analytic Review of the Effectiveness of the D.A.R.E. Program

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    The Drug Abuse Resistance Education (D.A.R.E.) program is a widespread but controversial school-based drug prevention program in the United States as well as in many other countries. The present multivariate meta-analysis reviewed 20 studies that assessed the effectiveness of the D.A.R.E. program in the United States. The results showed that the effects of the D.A.R.E. program on drug use did not vary across the studies with a less than small overall effect while the effects on psychosocial behavior varied with still a less than small overall effect. In addition, the characteristics of the studies significantly explained the variation of the heterogeneous effects on psychosocial behavior, which provides empirical evidence for improving the school-based drug prevention program

    Withdrawal-associated injury site pain (WISP): a descriptive case series of an opioid cessation phenomenon.

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    Withdrawal pain can be a barrier to opioid cessation. Yet, little is known about old injury site pain in this context. We conducted an exploratory mixed-methods descriptive case series using a web-based survey and in-person interviews with adults recruited from pain and addiction treatment and research settings. We included individuals who self-reported a past significant injury that was healed and pain-free before the initiation of opioids, which then became temporarily painful upon opioid cessation-a phenomenon we have named withdrawal-associated injury site pain (WISP). Screening identified WISP in 47 people, of whom 34 (72%) completed the descriptive survey, including 21 who completed qualitative interviews. Recalled pain severity scores for WISP were typically high (median: 8/10; interquartile range [IQR]: 2), emotionally and physically aversive, and took approximately 2 weeks to resolve (median: 14; IQR: 24 days). Withdrawal-associated injury site pain intensity was typically slightly less than participants' original injury pain (median: 10/10; IQR: 3), and more painful than other generalized withdrawal symptoms which also lasted approximately 2 weeks (median: 13; IQR: 25 days). Fifteen surveyed participants (44%) reported returning to opioid use because of WISP in the past. Participants developed theories about the etiology of WISP, including that the pain is the brain's way of communicating a desire for opioids. This research represents the first known documentation that previously healed, and pain-free injury sites can temporarily become painful again during opioid withdrawal, an experience which may be a barrier to opioid cessation, and a contributor to opioid reinitiation

    Growth And The Growth Hormone-Insulin Like Growth Factor 1 Axis In Children With Chronic Inflammation:Current Evidence, Gaps In Knowledge And Future Directions

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    Growth failure is frequently encountered in children with chronic inflammatory conditions like juvenile idiopathic arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease and cystic fibrosis. Delayed puberty and attenuated pubertal growth spurt is often seen during adolescence. The underlying inflammatory state mediated by pro-inflammatory cytokines, prolonged use of glucocorticoid and suboptimal nutrition contribute to growth failure and pubertal abnormalities. These factors can impair growth by their effects on the growth hormone-insulin like growth factor axis and also directly at the level of the growth plate via alterations in chondrogenesis and local growth factor signaling. Recent studies on the impact of cytokines and glucocorticoid on the growth plate studies further advanced our understanding of growth failure in chronic disease and provided a biological rationale of growth promotion. Targeting cytokines using biologic therapy may lead to improvement of growth in some of these children but approximately one third continue to grow slowly. There is increasing evidence that the use of relatively high dose recombinant human growth hormone may lead to partial catch up growth in chronic inflammatory conditions, although long term follow-up data is currently limited. In this review, we comprehensively review the growth abnormalities in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease and cystic fibrosis, systemic abnormalities of the growth hormone-insulin like growth factor axis and growth plate perturbations. We also systematically reviewed all the current published studies of recombinant human growth hormone in these conditions and discuss the role of recombinant human insulin like growth factor-1

    Jejunoileal Crohn's disease: a case-control study.

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    AIMS: Jejunoileitis might be a severe form of Crohn's disease (CD). The aim of the study was to evaluate clinical characteristics, therapeutics modalities and long-term outcome in CD patients with jejunoileitis (CDJI). METHODS: All patients with CDJI followed in the department of Gastroenterology from 1963 to 1999 were included and compared to matched (on Year of CD diagnosis) CD controls without jejunoileitis. Data were obtained from retrospective review of medical charts. RESULTS: Eighteen patients with CDJI were compared to 36 matched CD controls. Median follow-up was 7.65 Years in both groups. At time of CDJI diagnosis the following signs were significantly more frequent in patients with jejunoileal CD than in controls: malnutrition (39% vs 3%), pain suggesting obstruction (33% vs 8%), vomiting (28% vs 5%). Patients with CDJI were more frequently male: M/F ratio=2.0/1.1 (P=0.33). Upper digestive involvement (esophagus, stomach and duodenum) (67% vs 36%, P=0.04) and small intestine strictures (61% vs 19%, P=0.06) were more frequent in CDJI. Initial management was more "aggressive" in CDJI than in controls: steroids in 62% vs 30%, azathioprine in 39% vs 3%, total parenteral nutrition in 28% vs 8% and surgery in 33% vs 17%. During follow-up, the need for azathioprine therapy and surgery were more frequent in CDJI than in controls (extensive small bowel resection in two patients). In 10 of 18 patients, jejunoileitis involvement was diagnosed with a median delay of 3.6 Years (range: 0.5-14.5) after CD diagnosis and at time of CD diagnosis in the 8 others; outcome after CDJI diagnosis was similar in these 2 groups. CONCLUSION: The main revealing signs of jejunoileitis in CD patients are obstruction and malnutrition. Patients with CDJI require more often azathioprine and surgery than CD patients without jejunoileitis. Jejunoileitis is a severe form of CD more frequently complicated by extensive small bowel resection

    Letters to the Editor

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    With regard to the article by Cleary and Kohl (Pediatrics 64:301, 1979), is there a literature on such infection following circumcision by a licensed mohel, ritual circumcisor. In 45 years of pediatric practice in a largely Jewish area, I have never seen any occurrence. The only infection I have seen is minor oozing, easily controlled. Perhaps the seventh day is the best time for the procedure, and the use of the Gomco clamp is the simplest and least traumatic.</jats:p
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