Many statistical models are available for spatial data but the vast majority of these assume that spatial separation can be measured by Euclidean distance. Data which are collected over river networks constitute a notable and commonly occurring exception, where distance must be measured along complex paths and, in addition, account must be taken of the relative flows of water into and out of confluences. Suitable models for this type of data have been constructed based on covariance functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: To present the 4 to 9 years (median: 6 years) treatment follow up of 10 HIV1-AIDS patients, 9 at AIDS and 1 at A3 stages.
Methods: We have applied from 1992 to 1994, AZT combined with 2 integrase inhibitors, acriflavine and hydroxy-methyl-ellipticine. We could shift, in 1994, to combinations of 3 drugs including two more retrotranscriptase inhibitors (RTI), ddI and ddC, and, after 1995, to combinations of 4 drugs including also two other RTI, d4T and 3TC, and 3 protease inhibitors (PI), indinavir, ritonavir, and saquinavir.
Two virostatics which we discovered in 1990, acriflavine (ACF) and hydroxy-methyl-ellipticine (HEL) and shown active on HIV1 resistant to AZT have been introduced into combinations of four virostatics selected among ten available: themselves, plus zidovudine, zalcitabine, didanosine, lamivudine, stavudine, saquinavir, ritonavir, indinavir, the combinations were applied in 3-week sequences, differing from each other by drug rotation. Those which contained ACF may have more often a CD34 decrease than those containing neither ACF nor HEL, and they present more often a CD4 increase. No significant difference as far as side effects or beneficial effects could be detected after 18 months to 6 years, between sequences containing ACF or HEL or both, and sequences not containing any one of them.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper presents the evolution during its follow-up of a virostatic combination study of the type I-II trial conducted on ten AIDS-related complex (ARC) or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients [1, 9, respectively]. Its concept is based on the following original notions: a) it is not the number of the virostatics applied to each patient at any phase which determines their effect; it is the number of affected virus targets which determines the effect. Thus, the so called "tritherapies", imposed by the "AIDS Command" to thousands of patients selected at random, to be compared to the same number of subjects receiving only "bi" or "monotherapies", might be beginning to face failure because they attack only two targets: retro-transcriptase and HIV1 protease.
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