Publications by authors named "Kanerva R"

Introduction: Some medicines purchased are not used, resulting in pharmaceutical waste. Finland, among many other countries, is seeking to reduce the amount of pharmaceutical waste, but little information on this is currently available. This study aimed to evaluate the quantity, type, economic value, and reasons for returning pharmaceutical waste from households to community pharmacies in Finland.

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The aim of this study was to explore the reasons behind medicine shortages from the perspective of pharmaceutical companies and pharmaceutical wholesalers in Finland. The study took the form of semi-structured interviews. Forty-one pharmaceutical companies and pharmaceutical wholesalers were invited to participate in the study.

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Objectives: To explore the frequency, the reasons behind, and the consequences of medicine shortages in Finnish community pharmacies.

Methods: During the 27-day study period in the autumn of 2013, randomly selected pharmacies reported on medicines that were in short supply from orders made to wholesalers.

Results: Altogether 129 (66%, n=195) pharmacies participated in the study, and the study material consisted of 3311 report forms.

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Eating disorders are often associated with regurgitation of gastric contents into the mouth and dental erosion. In this study the dental status was evaluated in bulimic patients. Thirty-five bulimics, diagnosed in the Outpatient Departments of Psychiatry and Adolescent Psychiatry of the University Central Hospital in Helsinki, and 105 controls matched for age, sex, and educational level were examined clinically, and the factors associated with dental erosion and caries were evaluated in an interview.

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Objective: Determine calcium (Ca) absorption from Ca fortified orange and apple juice.

Methods: Absorbability was assessed by measuring 45Ca absorption in healthy women (mean age 57 years, n = 57/group) and whole body 47Ca retention in adult female beagle dogs (n = 6/group) and young adult male rats (n = 6/group). Women received 6.

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Objective: To determine mental health risk factors related to somatic symptoms, common in adolescence.

Design: Cross-sectional study.

Setting: Ten schools, corresponding approximately to US senior high schools, in two cities in Finland.

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Evidence on the relation between the threat of nuclear war and mental health among adolescents is conflicting. We studied 1493 adolescents in the 10th to 12th grades in school, who completed self-administered questionnaires 1-43 days before the Persian Gulf war broke out. Regression analyses controlled for several potential confounders.

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In a longitudinal study we determined the effect of animal age as well as Ca source and radiolabeling method on Ca bioavailability by measuring whole body 47Ca retention (WBR) in male Sprague-Dawley rats. The WBR assay was performed without surgery or anesthesia, and the same groups of animals were studied at 8, 16, 20, and 32 wk of age. Rats were administered a 6-mg radiolabeled oral dose of Ca as Ca citrate malate (CCM) or intrinsically or extrinsically labeled CaCO3 or hydroxyapatite (HAP).

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The dissolution of CaCO3 before intraduodenal administration was found to be an important factor determining calcium (Ca) bioavailability. Extrinsically and intrinsically labelled 47CaCO3 preparations were sequentially dissolved by serial additions of HCl. Aliquots of these preparations were collected before (no HCl added) and during the solubilization process and administered intraduodenally to rats.

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Several hydrocarbons, including d-limonene, have been shown to produce a male-rat-specific nephrotoxicity that is manifested acutely as exacerbation of hyaline droplet formation. In a study to assess the presence or absence of this response in a non-rodent species, the dog was selected as a relevant model because of an earlier report suggesting that d-limonene may be nephrotoxic in this species. Five male and five female adult beagle dogs per treatment group were gavaged twice daily over a 6-month period with tap-water (control) or d-limonene at 0.

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We have determined the effects of orange juice on calcium bioavailability from CCM (a combination of CaCO3, citric acid, malic acid, 5:1:1, mol/mol/mol) and iron-calcium interaction by using whole body isotope retention techniques in rats. The mean calcium retention values from CCM were 42.8% from orange juice and 33.

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In rats, percent liver weight loss is greater than percent body weight loss within the 8 A.M.-4 P.

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d-Limonene administered by oral gavage at 150-2400 mg/kg/day in a subchronic (91-day) study conducted for the National Cancer Institute induced renal alterations in male rats at all dose levels, whereas kidneys of male mice, female rats and female mice were unaffected. The renal alterations were dose responsive, and were similar to changes observed as sequelae to oral or inhalation exposure to decalin, a model compound used in a volatile hydrocarbon toxicology programme. Decalin induces a nephrotoxic response unique to the male rat, but the primary response associated with decalin exposure--hyaline droplet formation within the cytoplasm of the epithelial cells of the proximal convoluted tubule--was not recognized in the kidneys of d-limonene-exposed male rats.

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Groups of young adult male Fischer-344 rats given the vehicle (corn oil) or either decalin or d-limonene at dose levels of 75, 150 or 300 mg/kg body weight by a single daily gavage on 5 days/wk were killed on study days 6 or 27, approximately 24 hr after the fifth or 20th dose, to determine whether the specific time- and dose-related triad of renal alterations characterizing decalin-associated nephrotoxicity in the adult male rat also occurs in response to d-limonene. Dose-related hyaline droplet formation associated with renal accumulation of a specific protein alpha 2u-globulin) is considered the primary response in the morphogenesis of decalin-induced nephrotoxicity in the male rat and was present to a maximal degree in all decalin- and d-limonene-treated groups by day 6. Alterations considered to be sequelae of the hyaline droplet response, including granular casts in the outer zone of the medulla and multiple cortical changes collectively classified as chronic nephrosis, were present in the kidneys of both decalin- and d-limonene-treated rats killed on day 27.

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Adult male Fischer 344 rats were killed after 5, 12, 19 or 31 days' 'occupational' (6 hr/day, 5 days/wk), 'semi-continuous' (22 hr/day, 5 days/wk) or 'continuous' (22 hr/day, 7 days/wk) exposure to 125 ppm decalin vapour. Control rats were exposed to filtered air. Kidney sections were evaluated to determine the nature and time-course of development of decalin-induced lesions.

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Male and female Fischer 344 rats were given decalin by oral gavage for 5 or 12 consecutive days in order to determine whether oral dosing would result in light microscopically evident renal effects that were comparable to those that have been observed after inhalation exposure. Decalin (in corn oil vehicle) was administered at doses of 0, 0.1, 0.

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Fischer 344 male rats and C57BL/6 male mice were exposed 'continuously' (22 hr/day, 7 days/wk) for 20, 28 or 35 days to a model compound, decalin, at 0, 25, 62.5 or 125 ppm. Fischer 344 female rats were exposed 'continuously' to decalin at 0 or 125 ppm for 28 days.

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Studies were conducted to gain additional information about the spontaneous and decalin-exacerbated formation of hyaline droplets within the cytoplasm of proximal convoluted tubule (PCT) epithelial cells of the adult male rat. Renal cortical tissue protein patterns determined through two-dimensional gel electrophoresis revealed four species of a low-molecular-weight protein (18,000-20,000 daltons). Treatment groups differed only with respect to this protein, the relative concentrations of which paralleled the numbers of hyaline droplets in mature treated and untreated male rats.

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Male Fischer 344 rats were used to determine effect of consumption of 0.5% N-nitroso-n-butyl-(4-hydroxybutyl)amine (BNN) in the drinking-water for 2 wk on the response to 0.02, 0.

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Renal pelvic and proximal ureteral dilatation has been observed in male Charles River (CD) and Fischer 344 rats ingesting comparable doses of Na3NTA X H2O. Ureteral dilatation is accompanied by epithelial surface ulceration and erosion. Taken together with previous work (Anderson, Alden & Merski, Fd Chem.

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Male and female rats (20 of each sex) were killed, and a broad sample of organs were excised, weighed, and immersed in 10% neutral buffered formalin. Following 72 hours fixation the organs were reweighed. Comparison of fresh and fixed organ weights revealed statistically significant organ weight changes due to fixation.

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The effects in the renal cortex of the male rat of continuous administration of a high dose of nitrilotriacetate (NTA) for 24 months were compared with those of the administration of a similar dose for 18 months followed by a 6-month recovery period on the control diet. The results suggest that discontinuation of treatment interrupts the sequence of events leading to tumour formation. This study indicates that all stages in the proposed pathogenesis of renal tubular tumour formation by NTA, up to the occurrence of adenomatous hyperplasia and neoplasia, are reversible.

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The reversibility of nitrilotriacetate (NTA)-associated nephrotoxicity was investigated by comparing renal tissues from rats fed nephrotoxic levels of NTA for 7 wk with those from rats allowed 5 wk of recovery after the 7-wk exposure. In addition the toxicity of 2% Na3NTA X H2O in the diet (73 mumol/g diet) was compared with that of 1.5% H3NTA (79 mumol/g diet).

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