Publications by authors named "Bateman D"

Objective: To evaluate the relationship between head circumference, birth weight, and cocaine dose in healthy term and near-term newborns exposed to cocaine in utero.

Methods: We used radioimmune assay (RIAH) of cocaine metabolite in maternal hair to quantify third trimester cocaine exposure in 240 healthy newborn infants (gestational age: >36 weeks). Cocaine exposure was categorized into 3 levels: no exposure (n = 136), low cocaine exposure (n = 52; RIAH: 2-66 ng/10 mg hair), and high cocaine exposure (n = 52; RIAH: 81-4457 ng/10 mg hair).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Management of pyrethroid exposure.

J Toxicol Clin Toxicol

May 2000

Severe pyrethroid insecticide poisoning is uncommon in the developed world, but more common in developing countries because of its wide use in agriculture. This short review proposes a management strategy for pyrethroid poisoning based on the present literature. It also mentions an experimental approach, which will require further study in animals and may have eventual relevance for man.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Prospective follow-up of 136 babies exposed to ecstasy in utero indicated that the drug may be associated with a significantly increased risk of congenital defects (15.4% [95% CI 8.2-25.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The management of acute poisoning remains an important part of accident and emergency (A&E) care. Three gastric decontamination procedures have been widely used: gastric lavage, ipecac, and activated charcoal. Their role has recently been reviewed and position statements developed by working groups of the American Academy of Clinical Toxicology and the European Association of Poisons Centres and Clinical Toxicologists.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Long-term drug treatment of schizophrenia with conventional antipsychotics has limitations: an estimated quarter to one third of patients are treatment-resistant; conventional antipsychotics have only a modest impact upon negative symptoms (poverty of thought, social withdrawal and loss of affect); and adverse effects, particularly extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS). Newer, so-called atypical, antipsychotics such as olanzapine, risperidone, sertindole and clozapine (an old drug which was re-introduced in 1990) are claimed to address these limitations. Atypical agents are, at a minimum, at least as effective as conventional drugs such as haloperidol.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Studies of fetal cocaine exposure and newborn neurologic function have obtained conflicting results. Although some studies identify abnormalities, others find no differences between cocaine-exposed and cocaine-unexposed infants. To determine the effects of prenatal cocaine exposure on intrauterine growth and neurologic function in infants, we prospectively evaluated 253 infants shortly after birth.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Assessments of the possible consequences of prenatal exposure to cocaine have been limited by lack of control for socio-demographic confounders and lack of follow-up into the school years. We evaluated intelligence at ages 6-9 years in 88 children from a cohort of 280 born between September 1, 1985 and August 31, 1986 and identified at birth as cocaine-exposed, and in a group of unexposed (n = 96) births of comparable gender and birthweight. IQ scores did not differ between children with and without prenatal exposure to cocaine (mean 82.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Epilepsy is a condition for which regular drug treatment is normally prescribed. We have examined the primary care prescribing rates for anti-epileptic drugs (AEDs) in a region of northern England with a population of 6.8 million.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Two cases of parkinsonism after recurrent obstructive hydrocephalus due to idiopathic aqueductal stenosis are reported. In both patients an extrapyramidal syndrome was noted in the absence of contemporaneous evidence of hydrocephalus or shunt failure. One of the patients underwent a shunt operation, but showed no clinical improvement.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We describe a patient who developed chronic bilateral trigeminal neuropathy that was found at autopsy to be due to lambda light chain amyloidosis involving the trigeminal nerves, ganglia and roots bilaterally, as well as part of the intrapontine course of the trigeminal nerve fibres. No amyloid was found elsewhere in the nervous system or systemically. Review of previous reports indicates that the clinical features of trigeminal amyloidosis are quite stereotyped, with initial trigeminal neuralgia or dysaesthesiae, and subsequent development of facial anaesthesia and weakness of muscles of mastication.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

1. Paracetamol is increasingly involved in self-poisoning in the United Kingdom and remains a common cause of fatal poisoning. 2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: In April, 1996, ten cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) with an apparently new clinicopathological phenotype were published and it was suggested that these new variant cases (nvCJD) might be causally linked to bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). There have now been 21 cases of nvCJD in the UK and one case in France. We report clinical features and diagnostic test results of the first 14 cases of nvCJD in the UK.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To determine the hospital cost of caring for newborn infants with congenital syphilis.

Study Population: All live-born singleton neonates with birth weight greater than 500 gm at an inner-city municipal hospital in New York City in 1989.

Methods: We compared the characteristics of 114 infants with case-compatible congenital syphilis with those of 2906 infants without syphilis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF