The aim of the study was to determine whether hemodynamic and functional variables are related to the angiographic extent of lower limb atherosclerosis. In 150 patients with stable intermittent claudication, the Bollinger angiogram score was compared with the resting Doppler pressure values, and the initial claudication distance (ICD) and absolute claudication distance (ACD) with treadmill exercise. The extent of lower limb atherosclerosis correlated significantly with the age of the patients and the duration of the claudication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe diffusion of cefixime, a new orally active expanded-spectrum cephalosporin, was studied in 12 patients undergoing nephrectomy after receiving 200-mg oral doses every 12 h for 2 days. The patients were divided into two groups according to the time of perioperative sampling after the last dose: 4 h (group 1) and 12 h (group 2). Preoperative blood samples were taken just before administration of the last dose of cefixime.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVaricella is predominantly a disease of children, in whom it typically has a benign course and outcome. However, when the disease affects adults, the complications can be life-threatening. Varicella pneumonia, secondary bacterial infection, and opportunistic infection in the immunocompromised host are the most common complications in the adult.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe quantitative and qualitative analysis of proteinuria by electrophoretic means proved to be a potent diagnostic tool for differentiation of functional renal impairment. The purpose of this study was to compare the macro scale SDS-PAGE technique, which has been used for the last two decades, with semiautomated electrophoresis using an ultrathin SDS-PAA gel with silver staining (Phast system). The new system proved to be quick and easy to handle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA review of the history of the evolution of the science of toxicology from the original concepts of Paracelsus through the early development of analytical chemistry and its contributions to the detection of toxic substances in foods and drugs as these have led to modern regulatory rules for public protection is presented. The legal actions taken to protect against adulteration of food prior to the early steps by the U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSaccharin has successfully survived a half century of scrutiny of its safety. Experience during almost 60 years of common use in foods, as well as several rat feeding studies including that conducted by the FDA, established its GRAS status under the 1958 Food Additives Amendment. Many chronic one-generation and three (unvalidated) two-generation rat studies subsequently conducted by regulatory and independent agencies in the USA and elsewhere have been interpreted by expert committees, especially those of the National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council, as supportive of saccharin's non-carcinogenicity under possible conditions of use.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile the total annual volume of caffeine has increased over the years, the actual per capita daily intake has not. This is based on the fact that the quantity of caffeine in a soft drink is about the same or, in the case of diet drinks, less than in 1961 when the original GRAS (Generally Recognized as Safe) determinations were made. Since that time, there have been numerous studies on the effect of caffeine on animals and humans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe acute oral lethal doses are reported in rats or mice for 63 substances which are used in flavorings. For specific groups of compounds which contain several representatives of one structural class, some effects of structure on acute oral toxicity were observed. For pyrazines, the addition and position of methyl groups affected the toxicity while the substitution of ethyl for methyl had little effect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyclohexylamine (CHA), the metabolite of cyclamate produced in varying degree by gastrointestinal microorganisms, was subjected to a 2-year multi-generation feeding study in rats, at dosages of 15, 50, 100, and 150 mg/kg/d. Observations included growth, feed efficiency, clinical and hematological tests, reproduction, teratology, mortality and gross and microscopic pathology. Rats from the first litters of each generation from F0 through F4 were mated to produce the next succeeding generation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChronic rat feeding studies were conducted on a 10: 1 cyclamate/saccharin (C/S) mixture to supplement previous investigations which had established the safety of the individual components. The test mixture was fed at dietary levels designed to furnish 500, 1120, and 2500 mg/kg body weight to groups of 35 male and 45 female rats. The protocol included observations of physical condition, growth response, food efficiency, blood, urine, and postmortem pathology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFood Cosmet Toxicol
February 1975
Papillary transitional cell tumors were found in the urinary bladders in 8 rats out of 80 that received 2600 milligrams per kilogram of body weight per day of a mixture of sodium cyclamate and sodium saccharin (10:1) for up to 105 weeks. From week 79 on, several of these rats received cyclohexylamine hydrochloride (125 milligrams per kilogram per day, the molecular equivalent of the conversion of about 10 percent of the cyclamate dosage to cyclohexylamine) in addition to the sodium cyclamate and sodium saccharin. In another study in which 50 rats were fed daily 15 milligrams of cyclohexylamine sulfate per kilogram of body weight for 2 years, eight males and nine females survived.
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