A variety of detoxification methods have been utilized for the treatment of heroin withdrawal before individuals begin long-term opiate-free and naltrexone programs. While methadone in decreasing doses is still widely used for detoxication procedures, rapid and ultrarapid protocols including clonidine and opiate receptors antagonists have been proposed. This study compares the efficacy of different detoxification methods and investigates possible changes in naltrexone compliance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudies using single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) have found low cerebral blood flow (CBF) in frontal and parietal cortices in patients with chronic opiate dependence. In the present study, SPECT with 99mTc-HMPAO as tracer was used to compare 27 detoxified opiate addicts with nine healthy control subjects. All the subjects were evaluated with clinical psychiatric (DSM-IV), psychometric and neuropsychological measures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGood results in detoxification methods have been reached using both together clonidine and opiate receptors antagonists. One hundred fifty-two heroin-abusing patients were studied evaluating withdrawal symptoms after therapy with (a) clonidine only, (b) clonidine and naltrexone, (c) clonidine and naloxone, and (d) placebos. Treatment results, emotional and behavioral changes, and involvement in psychosocial programs were evaluated after a 6-month follow-up.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHemiballism was observed in a 77-year-old woman with Parksinson disease after a contralateral lenticular infarct without apparent involvement of the subthalamic nucleus. Parkinsonian signs ipsilateral to the hemiballism remained abolished despite subsequent nearly complete recovery from the hyperkinesias. It is argued that clinical events were due to a single ischemic lesion of the putamen-pallidum complex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe gastrocnemius and quadriceps muscles findings in 18 patients with chronic arterial insufficiency were reviewed with regard to mitochondrial changes. Prominent mitochondrial alterations were present in eight out of 18 patients. The comparison of clinical data between patients with and without mitochondrial changes revealed that in this latter group all patients were at stage IV, whereas the degree of ischemic disease was milder in the other group: the difference in distribution of patients at stage IV between the two groups was statistically significant.
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