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[Result of treatment of urinary lithiasis for professional aptitude].

Prog Urol

May 2018

Service d'urologie, hôpital d'Instruction des Armées Sainte-Anne, BP 600, 83800 Toulon cedex 09, France.

Introduction: Military people are inapt for presence of urinary stones. In this specific population, the treatment of stones is even more aggressive than for the general population without recommendation. The final decision about aptitude is the responsibility of the military doctor.

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A randomized controlled trial of home monitoring versus hospitalization for mild non-alcoholic acute interstitial pancreatitis: a pilot study.

Pancreatology

July 2015

Division of Gastroenterology & Hepatology, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD, USA.

Background/objectives: Acute pancreatitis (AP) is a disease typically requiring in-hospital treatment. We conducted a trial to assess the feasibility of early discharge from the hospital for patients with mild non-alcoholic acute pancreatitis (NAAP).

Methods: Eighty-four patients with mild NAAP were randomized to home or hospital groups after a short hospital stay (≤24 h).

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The results of the pharmacological investigation of the properties of apricot leaves dry extract are indicated in the article. It is proved that the extract belongs to the group of "relatively harmless" substances, exclusion of the ulcerogenic effect on the stomach, local irritating and allergenic effect on animals. It is found minimal reacting dose of the extract, which is 70 mg/kg of body weight.

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Introduction And Objective: The frequency of agranulocytosis induced by psychoactive drugs is estimated the first year of around 0.8% under clozapine, against 0.13% under chlorpromazine (King and Wager, 1998 [3]).

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[Anesthesia in the breast feeding period. Excretion of anesthetic agents and adjuvants into breast milk and potential pharmacological side-effects on the suckling infant].

Anaesthesist

October 2003

Klinik für Anästhesie und Intensivtherapie, Interdisziplinäres Medizinisches Zentrum, Marburg.

Whenever an anesthetic is needed during the breast feeding period, potential pharmacological side-effects imposed on the infant by any kind of anesthetic agent used during both general and regional anesthesia are in contrast to the potential beneficial effects of breast feeding for the infant and the mother. Despite an increasing knowledge and understanding of the mechanisms of excretion of drugs and their metabolites through breast milk, information about most anesthetic drugs are still either inconclusive or contradictory. Often it is impossible to decide whether a certain substance that is potentially excreted through breast milk might be harmless or harmful for the breast-fed infant.

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