79 research outputs found

    Herbal Medicines: Can We Do Without Pharmacologist?

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    The increase of herbal medicine use led many scientists to contribute to the research in this field. Also a few pharmacologists, after an initial phase of correct criticisms, today recognize the possibility of investigating the scientific value of medicinal products composed essentially of vegetable extracts. However, it is logical to pose the questions: (i) is there a role for the pharmacologist in herbal medicine (or phytotherapy)? (ii) can we do without pharmacologists’? First, two worlds—drug researchers (pharmacologists) and herbal medicines—yesterday appearing in opposition, are today closer and it is not unusual to read scientific works describing herbal extracts in journals traditionally dedicated to the study of synthetic drugs. Second, clinical application of herbal medicines is evaluable through the methods of modern clinical pharmacology. Efficacy and safety of medicinal plants represent naturally the object of interest for the pharmacologist and it is surely this aspect which gives the most important information on herbal medicine use. Many plants have been studied and results published showing, one time good or another poor, efficacy. Safety aspects of some of the most frequently used plants are now well known. For example, today we learn to use hypericum and we do not give it to patients taking other drugs because the interactions of hypericum with them. Contraindications of other plants, often represented by interactions with drugs, are finally known (Ginkgo biloba and drugs acting on blood coagulation). In conclusion, antagonistic behavior of pharmacologists versus herbal medicines is not useful. On the contrary, modern phytotherapy needs the contribution of researchers usually trained to evaluate efficacy and safety of medicinals

    On Nontrival Equilibria in Finitely Repeated Games

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    Background: Data on the effect of oral bisphosphonates (BPs) on risk of upper gastrointestinal complications (UGIC) are conflicting. We conducted a large population-based study from a network of Italian healthcare utilization databases aimed to assess the UGIC risk associated with use of BPs in the setting of secondary prevention of osteoporotic fractures.Methods: A nested case-control study was carried out within a cohort of 68,970 patients aged 45 years or older, who have been hospitalized for osteoporotic fracture from 2003 until 2005. Cases were the 804 patients who experienced hospitalization for UGIC until 2007. Up to 20 controls were randomly selected for each case. Conditional logistic regression model was used to estimate odds ratio (OR) associated with current and past use of BPs (i.e. for drug dispensation within 30 days and over 31 days prior the outcome onset, respectively) after adjusting for several covariates.Results: Compared with patients who did not use BPs, current and past users had OR (and 95% confidence interval) of 0.86 (0.60 to 1.22) and 1.07 (0.80 to 1.44) respectively. There was no difference in the ORs estimated according with BPs type (alendronate or risedronate) and regimen (daily or weekly), nor with co-therapies and comorbidities.Conclusions: Further evidence that BPs dispensed for secondary prevention of osteoporotic fractures are not associated with increased risk of severe gastrointestinal complications is supplied from this study. Further research is required to clarify the role BPs and other drugs of co-medication in inducing UGI

    Effects of cloricromene, a coumarin derivative, on endotoxin-induced uveitis in Lewis rats. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci

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    PURPOSE. To investigate the effects of cloricromene, a coumarin derivative, in rats subjected to endotoxin-induced uveitis (EIU). METHODS. Endotoxin uveitis was induced in male Lewis rats by a single footpad injection of 200 g lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Cloricromene was topically applied to the rat eye twice at 1 hour before and 7 hours after injection of LPS. A separate group of animals was treated with vehicle. Rats were killed 16 hours after injection and the eyes enucleated for histologic examination and immunohistochemical analysis. The effect of treatment was also evaluated by slit lamp examination, by the number of intraocular inflammatory cells on histologic sections, and by measuring the protein and TNF␣ levels in the aqueous humor. Nitrite and nitrate production was also measured in the aqueous humor. RESULTS. The histopathology of the iris-ciliary body included inflammatory cell infiltration and nuclear modification of vessel endothelial cells. Cloricromene treatment reduced the inflammatory cell infiltration and improved histologic status of the ocular tissue. Immunohistochemical analysis for P-selectin, intracellular adhesion molecule (ICAM)-1, nitrotyrosine, and poly(ADP-ribose) synthetase (PARS) revealed a positive staining in inflammatory cell infiltration from LPS-treated rats. The degree of staining for P-selectin, ICAM-1, nitrotyrosine, and PARS was markedly reduced in tissue sections obtained from LPS-recipient rats that had received cloricromene. Cloricromene strongly inhibited cell infiltration, protein exudation, TNF␣ production, and nitrite-nitrate formation. CONCLUSIONS. This study provides the first evidence that cloricromene, a coumarin derivative, attenuates the degree of inflammation and tissue damage associated with EIU in rats

    Long-term effects of high doses of nicotine on feeding behavior and brain nitric oxide synthase activity in female mice.

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    We studied the long-term effects of repeated doses of nicotine, causing dependence, 120 days after its withdrawal on feeding behavior and on brain nitric oxide (NO) formation in female mice. Nicotine dependence was induced by subcutaneous (s.c.) nicotine injection (2 mg/kg, four injections daily) for 14 days. Daily food intake was evaluated for the entire observational period (120 days). Moreover, 30, 60, and 120 days after nicotine withdrawal, we evaluated food intake, nitrite/nitrate levels, and nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity and expression in the hypothalamus after food deprivation (24 h). In animals in which nicotine dependence was induced (NM), daily food intake was similar to that of controls (M). However, following food deprivation, NM mice showed i) a significant increase in food intake, ii) changes in weight gain and in hypothalamic nitrite/nitrate levels, and iii) enhancement of hypothalamic neuronal NOS (nNOS) activity. Results indicate that high doses of nicotine producing dependence induce long-term changes in feeding behavior consequent to food deprivation associated to alterations in the brain nitrergic system. Keywords:: food intake, nicotine, nitric oxide, weight gain, food deprivatio
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