Background: In institutional care, oral liquid pharmaceutical products are widely prescribed for older patients, especially for those with swallowing disorders. As medicines acceptability is a key factor for compliance in the older population, this study investigated the acceptability of oral liquid pharmaceutical products in this targeted population.
Methods: An observational, multicenter, prospective study was conducted in eight geriatric hospitals and eight nursing homes in France.
Introduction: Medicine acceptability is a multi-faceted concept driven by both product and user characteristics. Although a key factor for treatment effectiveness, especially in vulnerable populations, knowledge of those medicine features that best promote individual user acceptability remains fragmented. Focusing on paracetamol, this study has explored the appropriateness of pharmaceutical products in different dosage forms to achieve adequate patient acceptability from infants to centenarians.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Medicine acceptability, which is of the utmost importance for vulnerable patients' adherence, is driven by both user and product characteristics. Herein, a novel multivariate approach integrating the many aspects of acceptability is used to discriminate positively and negatively accepted medicines in the older population.
Methods: An observational study was carried out in eight hospitals and eight nursing homes to collect a large set of real-life data on medicines uses in older patients (≥65 years).
Heteroclass chick/mouse chimaeras were prepared by transplanting somitic presumptive myogenic cells or limb bud myoblasts from donor mouse embryos into chick hosts, to replace (1) previously extirpated brachial somitic mesoderm or (2) experimentally deleted limb premuscular masses. Since mouse and chick cells can be distinguished by differential staining affinities, this parameter was used to verify the viability of the implant and to assess its fate. Our analyses showed that transplanted mouse somitic myogenic stem cells or limb bud myoblasts did not participate in the host brachial musculature, whatever the experimental conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWilehm Roux Arch Dev Biol
July 1982
By modifying the temporal relationship between connective tissue and myogenic cell invasion during early limb bud development new evidence of the organizing role of the connective tissue was obtained.Muscle cell-deprived wing buds were allowed to grow up to stages 22 to 27 of Hamburger and Hamilton, when they received a transplant of quail myogenic cells (somitic mesoderm or wing premuscular mass) into the dorsal face of their presumptive upper arm. Muscular arrangement in forearm and hand was analyzed 4 days later.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWilehm Roux Arch Dev Biol
March 1978
In chick embryos, observations were made on serial semithin transverse sections of the wing level. In addition homo- or heterotopic replacements of the wing or leg somitic mesoderm by labelled somitic or nonsomitic mesoderm were made in 2-to 2.5-day embryos.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF