5 research outputs found

    ハンク・モーガンが抱える破滅と忘却の宿命 : A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Courtの結末についての一考察

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    Citalopram is one of the newer and most potent selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor (SSRI) drugs. It has a well-established antidepressive action with a favorable adverse event profile. We present a fifty-year-old woman with diffuse photopigmentation who had been diagnosed as suffering from depression. The patient was given citalopram (40 mg/day) for her psychiatric condition and diffuse photopigmentation was noted thereafter. To our knowledge, such an adverse event has not been reported previously

    Citalopram-induced photopigmentation

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    Citalopram is one of the newer and most potent selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor (SSRI) drugs. It has a well-established antidepressive action with a favorable adverse event profile. We present a fifty-year-old woman with diffuse photopigmentation who had been diagnosed as suffering from depression. The patient was given citalopram (40 mg/day) for her psychiatric condition and diffuse photopigmentation was noted thereafter. To our knowledge, such an adverse event has not been reported previously

    N-acetyltransferase polymorphism in patients with Behcet's disease

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    Objectives: The objective of our study was to investigate the possible role of human arylamine N-acetyltransferase 2 (NAT2) polymorphism in susceptibility to Behcet's disease.Methods: Eighty-five patients with Behcet's disease gave their written informed consent to participate in the study. Seven point mutations (G191A, C282T, T341C, C481T, A803G, G590A, G857A) in the NAT2 gene were analysed using polymerase chain reaction/restriction fragment length polymorphism techniques. In addition, each patient received 100 mg dapsone orally to determine their NAT2 phenotype. Dapsone and its metabolite monoacetyl-dapsone were measured in 3-h plasma samples using high-performance liquid chromatography. Subjects with an acetylation ratio (monoacetyl-dapsone/dapsone) less than 0.4 were defined as slow acetylators.Results: Of 85 patients with Behcet's disease, 54 (63.5%) were identified as genotypically slow acetylators. However, 60% (51 of 85) of patients were diagnosed as slow acetylators according to mono acetyl-dapsone/dapsone ratio. Thus, a low incidence of genotype/phenotype discrepancy (3.5%) was observed in Turkish patients with Behcet's disease. When we compared our results with previous phenotyping and genotyping studies in the Turkish population, frequencies of slow and rapid acetylators were not statistically different in patients with Behcet's disease. The frequency of the *5B allele was found to be slightly higher in patients with Behcet's disease than historic controls (44.7 vs 35.6%, P=0.039). However, there was no significant difference in the frequency of the overall genotypes and alleles of NAT2 between patients and controls.Conclusion: Although the frequency of the NAT2*5B allele, responsible for slow acetylation, was slightly higher in patients than historic controls, our results failed to show an association between NAT2-acetylator status and risk for developing Behget's disease

    Translating Biotechnology To Knowledge-Based Innovation, Peace, And Development? Deploy A Science Peace Corps-An Open Letter To World Leaders

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    Scholarship knows no geographical boundaries. This science diplomacy and biotechnology journalism article introduces an original concept and policy petition to innovate the global translational science, a Science Peace Corps. Service at the new Corps could entail volunteer work for a minimum of 6 weeks, and up to a maximum of 2 years, for translational research in any region of the world to build capacity manifestly for development and peace, instead of the narrow bench-to-bedside model of life science translation. Topics for translational research are envisioned to include all fields of life sciences and medicine, as long as they are linked to potential or concrete endpoints in development, foreign policy, conflict management, post-crisis capacity building, and/or peace scholarship domains. As a new instrument in the global science and technology governance toolbox, a Science Peace Corps could work effectively, for example, towards elucidating the emerging concept of "one health"-encompassing human, environmental, plant, microbial, ecosystem, and planet health-thus serving as an innovative crosscutting pillar of 21st century integrative biology. An interdisciplinary program of this caliber for development would link 21st century life sciences to foreign policy and peace, in ways that can benefit many nations despite their ideological differences. We note that a Science Peace Corps is timely. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) of the United Nations released the Fifth Assessment Report on March 31, 2014. Worrisomely, the report underscores that no person or nation will remain untouched by the climate change, highlighting the shared pressing life sciences challenges for global society. To this end, we recall that President John F. Kennedy advocated for volunteer work that has enduring, transgenerational, and global impacts. This culminated in establishment of the Peace Corps in 1961. Earlier, President Abraham Lincoln aptly observed, "nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man's character, give him power." We therefore petition President Barack Obama, other world leaders, and international development agencies in positions of power around the globe, to consider deploying a Science Peace Corps to cultivate the essential (and presently missing) ties among life sciences, foreign policy, development, and peace agendas. A Science Peace Corps requires support by a credible and independent intergovernmental organization or development agency for funding, and arbitration in the course of volunteer work when the global versus local (glocal) value-based priorities and human rights intersect in synergy or conflict. In all, Science Peace Corps is an invitation to a new pathway for competence in 21st century science that is locally productive and globally competitive. It can open up scientific institutions to broader considerations and broader inputs, and thus cultivate vital translational science in a world sorely in need of solidarity and sustainable responses to the challenges of 21st century science and society.Wo
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