Results 191 to 200 of about 42,497 (216)
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The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1984
A 29-year-old married nurse with pancytopenia was discovered to be surreptitiously ingesting alkylating agents. Despite her life-threatening behavior, there was no evidence that she was psychotic, depressed, or cognitively impaired. Psychological testing was indicative of a sociopathic personality.
C V, Ford +3 more
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A 29-year-old married nurse with pancytopenia was discovered to be surreptitiously ingesting alkylating agents. Despite her life-threatening behavior, there was no evidence that she was psychotic, depressed, or cognitively impaired. Psychological testing was indicative of a sociopathic personality.
C V, Ford +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Hospital Practice, 1980
Bone marrow transplantation and androgen therapy offer some hope of survival for patients with aplastic anemia, whether the disease is idiopathic or induced by drugs or toxins.
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Bone marrow transplantation and androgen therapy offer some hope of survival for patients with aplastic anemia, whether the disease is idiopathic or induced by drugs or toxins.
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1982
To the Editor.— Two cases of fatal aplastic anemia following the use of topical ocular chloramphenicol have been recently reported. 1,2 Regardless of dosage, systemic chloramphenicol can cause an idiosyncratic, usually fatal, hemopoietic event, with an incidence rate of one in 30,000 to 50,000 patients. This incidence is 13 times greater than the risk
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To the Editor.— Two cases of fatal aplastic anemia following the use of topical ocular chloramphenicol have been recently reported. 1,2 Regardless of dosage, systemic chloramphenicol can cause an idiosyncratic, usually fatal, hemopoietic event, with an incidence rate of one in 30,000 to 50,000 patients. This incidence is 13 times greater than the risk
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Annals of Internal Medicine, 1999
In aplastic anemia, hematopoiesis fails: Blood cell counts are extremely low, and the bone marrow appears empty. The pathophysiology of aplastic anemia is now believed to be immune-mediated, with active destruction of blood-forming cells by lymphocytes.
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In aplastic anemia, hematopoiesis fails: Blood cell counts are extremely low, and the bone marrow appears empty. The pathophysiology of aplastic anemia is now believed to be immune-mediated, with active destruction of blood-forming cells by lymphocytes.
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Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association (1961), 1974
L E, Patterson, P G, Rigby
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L E, Patterson, P G, Rigby
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