82 results match your criteria: "Medical Faculty University of Zagreb[Affiliation]"
Horm Metab Res
November 1991
Institute for Diabetes, Endocrinology, Medical Faculty University of Zagreb, Croatia.
Horm Metab Res
October 1991
Institute for Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolic Diseases, Medical Faculty University of Zagreb, Yugoslavia.
We have studied insulin binding to erythrocyte receptors in a group of 25 nonobese, nondiabetic uremic patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis for 2-54 months and 14 healthy controls. Erythrocytes of predialyzed uremics bind significantly less insulin than control erythrocytes (p less than 0.01).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurol Croat
October 1991
Department of Neurology, Medical Faculty University of Zagreb, Croatia, YU.
The authors evaluate the most frequent causes of seizures in 562 patients admitted at the emergency out-patient ward because of fits. 194 patients were admitted because of the first occurrence of seizures, in 12 of them the first manifestation was status epilepticus of the generalized (8), or focal type (4). The commonest causes of seizures were alcoholism (82), disturbances of the brain blood flow (74), posttraumatic states (20), brain tumor (4), or encephalopathies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Hyg Epidemiol Microbiol Immunol
December 1991
Department of Virology, A. Stamper School of Public Health, Medical Faculty University of Zagreb, Yugoslavia.
Studies of arboviruses started in Yugoslavia in 1953 following the isolation of TBE virus which caused a severe epidemic that year. Until now the following viruses have been proven to circulate in the country: tick-borne encephalitis (TBE), Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF), Bhanja (BHA), sandfly fever (SF), Tahyna (TAH), Calovo (CVO), West Nile (WN), dengue (DEN), Jug Bogdanovac (JB), and Hantaviruses. TBE virus is endemic in the north-west part of the country, causing also epidemics in cyclical intervals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Rheumatol
March 1990
Department of Physical Medicine and Rheumatology, Medical Faculty University of Zagreb, Yugoslavia.
The antigens of HLA-DR locus were determined in 127 patients with rheumatoid arthritis and in 175 healthy persons. The frequency of HLA-DR1 antigen was discovered in 45% of the patients and in 22.3% of the examinees from the control group (p less than 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Pharmacol
December 1988
Department of Pharmacology, Medical Faculty University of Zagreb, Yugoslavia.
Dopamine agents (saline in control groups) were coadministered with indomethacin by either single or repeated application. The ulcerogenic effect (erosions and/or ulcers) of repeated given indomethacin on gastric mucosa differed clearly from that on intestinal mucosa. The effect on intestinal mucosa was markedly greater than after a single dose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Pharmacol
March 1988
Department of Pharmacology, Medical Faculty University of Zagreb, Yugoslavia.
The influence of the dopamine receptor-stimulating agent, bromocriptine, the dopamine-releasing drug, amantadine, and the dopamine antagonist, domperidone, on acute pancreatitis was studied in rats. Acute pancreatitis was induced by ligation of the bile duct at its point of entry into the duodenum. Each drug was applied intraperitoneally 1 h before induction of acute pancreatitis and all the surviving animals were killed 24 h thereafter.
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