Publications by authors named "W C Buhles"

Mirtazapine is classified as a weight gain drug in cats, and the purpose of this study was to evaluate its efficacy in cats experiencing unintended weight loss. This was a multi-center, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical study in client-owned cats ≥1 year of age, weighing ≥2 kg, with a documented loss (≥5%) in body weight. Cats were treated once daily with either 2 mg/cat mirtazapine transdermal ointment (n = 83) or placebo (n = 94) (Per Protocol population) applied to the inner surface of the pinna for 14 ± 3 days.

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Single and multiple dose pharmacokinetics (PK) of mirtazapine transdermal ointment applied to the inner ear pinna of cats were assessed. Study 1 was a randomized, cross-over single dose study (n = 8). Cats were treated once with 0.

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Results from investigations conducted in clinical settings contribute greatly to determining how veterinarians practice medicine. It is important for the practitioner to understand how clinical information is collected, analyzed, and communicated in journals and presentations at conferences. Clinical research is either retrospective in observational studies, looking at historical medical records as the source of data, or prospective in both experimental and observational studies, where the study is designed before any patients are included.

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This history chronicles the unusual development of the antiviral drug ganciclovir. The first compound with activity against human cytomegalovirus (CMV), ganciclovir was so clearly efficacious that a placebo-controlled clinical trial could not ethically be done, and the FDA rejected the first application to market the drug. Used to treat a blinding eye infection in patients with AIDS, the story of ganciclovir paralleled the spread of the AIDS epidemic.

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