21 research outputs found
Factitious disorder mimicking addiction to levodopa in a patient with advanced Parkinson's disease
A systematic review of factors influencing student ratings in undergraduate medical education course evaluations
Short-term variability of the Sun-Earth system: an overview of progress made during the CAWSES-II period
Antimitotic drugs in the treatment of cancer
Cancer is a complex disease since it is adaptive
in such a way that it can promote proliferation and
invasion by means of an overactive cell cycle and in turn
cellular division which is targeted by antimitotic drugs
that are highly validated chemotherapy agents. However,
antimitotic drug cytotoxicity to non-tumorigenic cells and
multiple cancer resistance developed in response to drugs
such as taxanes and vinca alkaloids are obstacles faced in
both the clinical and basic research field to date. In this
review, the classes of antimitotic compounds, their mechanisms
of action and cancer cell resistance to chemotherapy
and other limitations of current antimitotic compounds are
highlighted, as well as the potential of novel 17-β estradiol
analogs as cancer treatment.Medical Research Council of South Africa, the Research Committee of the Faculty of Health Sciences of the University of Pretoria, the Cancer association of South Africa and the National Research Foundation.http://link.springer.com/journal/280hb201
Amphetamine-induced psychosis - a separate diagnostic entity or primary psychosis triggered in the vulnerable?
Use of amphetamine and methamphetamine is widespread in the general population and common among patients with psychiatric disorders. Amphetamines may induce symptoms of psychosis very similar to those of acute schizophrenia spectrum psychosis. This has been an argument for using amphetamine-induced psychosis as a model for primary psychotic disorders. To distinguish the two types of psychosis on the basis of acute symptoms is difficult. However, acute psychosis induced by amphetamines seems to have a faster recovery and appears to resolve more completely compared to schizophrenic psychosis. The increased vulnerability for acute amphetamine induced psychosis seen among those with schizophrenia, schizotypal personality and, to a certain degree other psychiatric disorders, is also shared by non-psychiatric individuals who previously have experienced amphetamine-induced psychosis. Schizophrenia spectrum disorder and amphetamine-induced psychosis are further linked together by the finding of several susceptibility genes common to both conditions. These genes probably lower the threshold for becoming psychotic and increase the risk for a poorer clinical course of the disease. The complex relationship between amphetamine use and psychosis has received much attention but is still not adequately explored. Our paper reviews the literature in this field and proposes a stress-vulnerability model for understanding the relationship between amphetamine use and psychosis
