Protein therapeutics have guided a transformation in disease treatment for various clinical conditions. They have been successful in numerous applications, but administration of protein therapeutics has been limited to parenteral routes which can decrease patient compliance as they are invasive and painful. In recent years, the synergistic relationship of novel biomaterials with modern protein therapeutics has been crucial in the treatment of diseases that were once thought of as incurable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 22-year-old male was admitted to an in-patient psychiatric unit for treatment, after a period of 2 years of increasing psychotic symptoms corresponding to a very severe case of schizophrenia across the entire scale of symptom disorder domains along with some drug abuse comorbidity. Previous treatments with olanzapine (OLA) and risperidone (RIS) had been at best partly successful toward his positive symptoms with no, or even worsening effects on the negative symptomatology. Given the gravity of the latter symptoms and functional impairment of our patient, he might thus have been a candidate for clozapine (CLZ) treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSilicone intraocular lenses (IOLs) that resist lens epithelial cell (LEC) growth would greatly improve patient outcomes. Herein, amphiphilic surface modifying additives (SMAs) were incorporated into an IOL-type diphenyl silicone to reduce LEC growth without compromising opto-mechanical properties. The SMAs were poly(ethylene oxide)-silane amphiphiles (PEO-SAs) [H-Si-ODMS--PEO-OCH], comprised of a PEO segment and siloxane tether of varying lengths ( = 0, 13, and 30).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis case report describes a 30-year old male diagnosed with schizophrenia at the age of 23, and with a long history of drug abuse. He had previously received a wide range of antipsychotic drug treatment regimens, all with some degree of effect, but never with complete symptom relief. He was also suffering from persistent cognitive and negative symptoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOn 13 April 1982, after a 6 to 7 km training run on an extremely hot and humid day, 20 of 216 cadets at the Ecuadorian Naval Academy in Guayaquil became ill with symptoms of heat-related illness. Four of them suffered heat stroke, and three died. Illness was most highly associated with the amount of exercise performed that day but was significantly more common in first-year cadets than in older cadets.
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