Publications by authors named "Gofman A"

Objective: Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is a neurodegenerative disease with high rates of disability and mortality. Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) is an effective method of treating patients, increasing life expectancy, but currently, predictors available to determine the best outcome of therapy in this category of patients are unknown. This systematic review aimed to determine the impact of prognostic factors on benefits from NIV application compared with non-NIV tools of treatment (invasive ventilation and standard care) in case of survival of ALS patients.

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Only one-third of patients with advanced MSS/pMMR endometrial cancer exhibit a lasting response to the combination treatment of Pembrolizumab and Lenvatinib. The combined administration of these two drugs is based on Lenvatinib's ability to modulate the tumor microenvironment, enabling Pembrolizumab to exert its effect. These findings underscore the importance of exploring tumor microenvironment parameters to identify markers that can accurately select candidates for this type of therapy.

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Flashbulb memories (FBMs) refer to vivid and long-lasting autobiographical memories for the circumstances in which people learned of a shocking and consequential public event. A cross-national study across eleven countries aimed to investigate FBM formation following the first COVID-19 case news in each country and test the effect of pandemic-related variables on FBM. Participants had detailed memories of the date and others present when they heard the news, and had partially detailed memories of the place, activity, and news source.

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The role of autobiographical memory in emotion regulation is deemed as limited to the selective retrieval of positive memories intended as a distraction from unpleasant stimuli. The present experimental study is the first to examine whether negative autobiographical memories serve as a way to boost one's mood by employing the mechanism of retrospective downward autobiographical comparison between now and then. We hypothesised that this mechanism may operate in response to negative memories, leading to positive mood induction.

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Accumulating data suggest that the brain undergoes various changes during aging. Among them are loss of both white and gray matter, neurons and synapses degeneration, as well as oxidative, inflammatory, and biochemical changes. The above-mentioned age-related features are closely related to autophagy and mitochondria.

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Objective: This study aimed to explore the autobiographical foundations of specific narrative identities, which made it possible to choose medical volunteering in the time of the pandemic, resist highly hazardous conditions of working in COVID-19 "red zones," and emerge from this work with a sense of meaning and optimism.

Method: In this study, we focused on the graphical life stories, self-defining memories (SDMs), and self-defining future projections (SDFPs) of four individuals who worked at COVID-19 "red zone" hospitals as medical volunteers.

Results: The analysis revealed that all participants incorporated their volunteering experiences as meaningful and satisfying into their general narrative identity.

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Interactions between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondria have received insufficient attention until recently. However, distorted contacts between the ER and mitochondria were identified as an important factor in the etiopathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. In view of these new data, the mechanisms of ER-mitochondrial interactions are necessary to study in detail in order to develop new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to neurodegenerative diseases and to extend basic knowledge of the physiology of the eukaryotic cell.

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While such factors as demand characteristics, encoding, and retrieval inhibition were shown to be significant in producing the directed forgetting effect, no attention was paid to whether the intention to manage one's own memory, per se, matters. In the present article, we addressed this important gap in the literature. To control the quality of encoding we ensured that both the to-be-remembered (TBR) and to-be-forgotten (TBF) items were genuinely learned before the manipulation.

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[Depression in alcohol addicted patients].

Zh Nevrol Psikhiatr Im S S Korsakova

November 2015

In this review, authors considered characteristics of depression and alcohol addiction. Depressive disorders comorbid to alcoholism are heterogeneous in their nature and structure and can be observed during alcohol withdrawal syndrome and in remission. Antidepressants, and first of all selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), along with the specific anti-relapse drugs (disulfiram, acamprosate and naltrexone), are the drugs of choice in treatment of alcohol addiction.

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Synovial sarcoma (SS) of an extremity or trunk is relatively rare and is approached by limb sparing surgery (LSS), radiation therapy (RT) and chemotherapy. We conducted a retrospective analysis of the clinical and histopathological data of 73 patients with proven SS. At a median follow-up time of 6 years, local recurrence was seen in 17.

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We studied the efficiency of ANAR containing antibodies to morphine (dilutions C300 and C200) in the therapy of patients with the opium withdrawal syndrome. In patients with moderate to severe forms of the opium withdrawal syndrome therapeutic activity of ANAR was comparable to that of standard symptomatic drugs. ANAR possessed vegetostabilizing, sedative, and analgetic properties.

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The efficiency of Proproten-100 containing antibodies to S100 protein in ultralow doses and used to relieve somatovegetative and psychoneurological manifestations of the alcohol withdrawal syndrome was studied in a double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial. The preparation possessed anxiolytic, sedative, hypnagogic, and vegetostabilizing properties. Proproten-100 more rapidly relieved the alcohol withdrawal syndrome than standard drugs (by 2 times).

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The efficiency of potentiated preparations from ethanol and morphine hydrochloride in the therapy of patients with alcohol and opium withdrawal syndromes was compared in an open clinical trial. Potentiated ethanol relieved the major clinical manifestations, possessed hypnagogic properties, and reduced the severity of neurological and vegetative disorders in patients with the alcohol withdrawal syndrome. Potentiated morphine produced the anxiolytic, myorelaxing, and analgetic effects.

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This clinical observational study examined the effects of group hypnosis on psychosomatic disorders. A psychotherapist conducted hypnotic sessions with a single group of 306 people on four consecutive days. Our follow-up studies indicated that group hypnosis can have strong positive effects on many types of disorders.

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A total of 18 patients with acute myocardial infarction complicated by acute left ventricular failure were examined for their central hemodynamics. Intravenous nitroglycerin was shown to cause positive changes in central hemodynamic parameters, but it failed to normalize the hemodynamics in patients with baseline low blood pressure, as nitroglycerin induced a further reduction in blood pressure. A combined administration of nitroglycerin and dobutamine solutions contributes to hemodynamic normalization and is indicated for patients with acute myocardial infarction complicated by acute left ventricular failure at a baseline low blood pressure.

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The model-independent pharmacokinetics and hemodynamics were studied in 48 patients (35 males and 13 females; mean age, 60.0 +/- 1.3 years) with primary myocardial infarction of various sites.

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The pharmacokinetics of prazosin was studied in 16 patients in the early subacute period of myocardial infarction complicated with heart failure following a single and 10-day administration. The increase of the half-life of the drug (6.6 +/- 1.

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Central hemodynamic parameters were monitored by invasive procedures (pulmonary arterial catheterization), and prazosin kinetics following the administration of a single 5 mg dose were determined in 69 patients with subacute myocardial infarction, complicated by heart failure. The response to prazosin was dependent on pretreatment hemodynamic parameters and differed between patients with early and manifest heart failure. There was a correlation between the peaks of hemodynamic change and drug concentration.

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