Results 271 to 280 of about 8,585,360 (297)
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Retrospective clinical studies

Journal of Pediatric Urology, 2016
Patient-based retrospective studies are most often based on one unique patient cohort from one particular institution. At best, they can give rise to observations leading to future prospective studies and new hypotheses. The study by Pamela Ellsworth et al.
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Clinical Studies with Epothilones

2009
As indicated in previous chapters, epothilone research so far has delivered seven new chemical entities that have been advanced to clinical trials in humans (Fig. 1). However, the amount of clinical data publicly available at this time strongly varies between individual compounds, depending on their development stage, but also on the general ...
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CLINICAL STUDIES WITH CURCUMIN

2007
Curcumin has long been expected to be a therapeutic or preventive agent for several major human diseases because of its antioxidative, anti-inflammatory, and anticancerous effects. In phase I clinical studies, curcumin with doses up to 3600-8000 mg daily for 4 months did not result in discernible toxicities except mild nausea and diarrhea.
Chih-Hung, Hsu, Ann-Lii, Cheng
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Hypochondriasis: A Clinical Study

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1964
IntroductionThe concept of hypochondriasis, and particularly its nosological position, is far from clear, and there is still a great deal of controversy as to whether or not there exists a condition of primary or essential hypochondriasis. Many of the historical and theoretical ramifications are reviewed in another paper (Kenyon, 1964).
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A Study of Clinical Suicide

The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1988
A retrospective analysis of the clinical records of 149 patients suicide subjects and the same number of control subjects representative of the entire admitted clinical population was carried out using a larger set of demographic, psychosocial, and clinical variables.
J, Modestin, W, Kopp
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Arson: A Clinical Study

The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 1982
Psychiatric, psychosocial and medicolegal issues related to 34 arsonists and 50 controls are described. Arson was most frequently committed by males who suffered from personality disorder, mental retardation or depressive neurosis. Poor school and work records also characterized their background when compared to the control forensic psychiatric ...
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A clinical study of neuroblastoma

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1953
Summary A brief outline of the incidence,etiology, pathology, symptomatology, diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of neuroblastoma is presented. One case observed since 1936 is reported in detail. Twenty additional cases are summarized.
O J, OBERKIRCHER   +2 more
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A Clinical Study of Actinomycosis

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1961
Any effort to correlate and publish present-day clinical knowledge of actinomycosis would result obviously in a repetition of medical history. It is not my intention, therefore, to give a course on this subject. I wish only to report 4 interesting patients, 2 with enlarged parotid glands, the other 2 with solitary masses in the neck—all the result of ...
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Zolmitriptan clinical studies

Drugs of Today, 1998
Zolmitriptan, a selective 5-HT(1B/D) agonist was developed for the acute treatment of migraine. Dose-finding studies show a clearly defined dose response curve for the oral formulation with onset of efficacy demonstrated within 45 min of dosing. Clinical trials support its efficacy in all types of migraine, with excellent safety and tolerability in ...
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Clinical Studies of Buspirone

Psychopathology, 2010
This literature review addresses two related questions: Is buspirone as clinically effective an antianxiety agent as the benzodiazepines ? And does buspirone offer any safety advantages? Data from over 1,000 anxious outpatients reveal that an average dose of 20 mg of buspirone/day appears to be as effective an antianxiety agent as comparable doses of ...
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