8 results on '"Wainstein L"'
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2. PROLACTINOMA IN PEDIATRIC AGE: A LONGITUDINAL FOLLOW-UP
- Author
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Fideleff, H, primary, Boquete, H, additional, Orlandi, A, additional, Wainstein, L, additional, and Holland, M, additional
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Evolution of U.S. Strategic Command and Control and Warning, 1945-1972
- Author
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INSTITUTE FOR DEFENSE ANALYSES ALEXANDRIA VA, Wainstein, L., Cremeans, C. D., Moriarty, J. K., Ponturo, J., INSTITUTE FOR DEFENSE ANALYSES ALEXANDRIA VA, Wainstein, L., Cremeans, C. D., Moriarty, J. K., and Ponturo, J.
- Abstract
In the summer of l974, the Secretary of Defense requested that a study be undertaken of the strategic arms competition between the United States and the Soviet Union from l945 to 1972. The purpose of the study was twofold: (a) to provide a comprehensive historical account, hitherto unavailable, of the strategic competition and (b) to provide the basis for examining various hypotheses as to its origins and development. This extensive research effort, under the direction of the Chief Historian, OSD, was divided into eight discrete studies, each covering both US and Soviet developments, and was assigned to a number of agencies. The subject matter of these studies included: missiles, bombers, space, and warheads; air defense; aircraft carriers and ballistic missile submarines; forces and budgets; US and Soviet chronologies, high-level decisions, organization; and command and control and warning. The eight studies are intended to provide the basic research and analysis from which another study team will prepare an integrated report of US and Soviet developments for the Secretary of Defense.
- Published
- 1975
4. Extraction of Signals from Noise.
- Author
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Root, William L., primary, Wainstein, L. A., additional, Zubakov, V. D., additional, and Silverman, R. A., additional
- Published
- 1963
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Extraction of Signals from Noise
- Author
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Wainstein, L. A., primary, Zubakov, V. D., additional, and Mullin, Albert A., additional
- Published
- 1963
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Opioid-related adverse drug reactions in patients visiting the emergency division of a tertiary hospital.
- Author
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Ing Lorenzini K, Wainstein L, Spechbach H, Sarasin F, Ramlawi M, Desmeules J, and Piguet V
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Analgesics, Opioid adverse effects, Tertiary Care Centers, Emergency Service, Hospital, Pain drug therapy, Opioid-Related Disorders diagnosis, Drug Overdose epidemiology, Drug Overdose diagnosis, Drug Overdose therapy, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions epidemiology, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions etiology, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions drug therapy
- Abstract
Opioid use and associated morbidity and mortality have increased in several countries during the past 20 years. We performed a study whose objective was to assess the frequency and causes of opioid-related emergency division (ED) visits in an adult tertiary Swiss University Hospital over 9 weeks in 2018. We primarily assessed opioid-related adverse drug reactions (ADR), secondary overdose, misuse, abuse, and insufficient pain relief. Current opioid use was identified in 1037 (8.3%) of the 12 470 included ED visits. In 64 opioid users, an ADR was identified as a contributing cause of the ED visit, representing 6.2% of opioid users, and 0.5% of the total ED visits. Moreover, we identified an overdose in 16 opioid users, misuse or abuse in 19 opioid users, and compatible withdrawal symptoms in 7 opioid users. After pooling all these events, we conclude that the ED visits could be related to opioid use in 10.2% of opioid users. Finally, in 201 opioid users, insufficient pain relief (pain not responding to the current pharmacological treatment) was identified as a contributing cause of ED visits. In these cases, other factors than simply pharmacological nonresponse may have been involved. In the context of an ever-increasing opioid use to better control chronic pain situations, these results should reinforce emergency network epidemiological surveillance studies at a national level., (© 2022 The Authors. Pharmacology Research & Perspectives published by British Pharmacological Society and American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. PHEDRE trial protocol - observational study of the prevalence of problematic use of Equimolar Mixture of Oxygen and Nitrous Oxide (EMONO) and analgesics in the French sickle-cell disease population.
- Author
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Gérardin M, Couec ML, Grall-Bronnec M, Feuillet F, Wainstein L, Rousselet M, Pinot ML, Perrouin F, Bonnot O, Drouineau MH, Jolliet P, and Victorri-Vigneau C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Female, France, Humans, Male, Pain Measurement, Substance-Related Disorders complications, Young Adult, Analgesics administration & dosage, Anemia, Sickle Cell drug therapy, Nitrous Oxide administration & dosage, Oxygen administration & dosage, Pain drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: The use of analgesics can lead to cases of drug abuse and dependence. It can also cause pseudo-addiction in patients suffering from pain. What is the actual situation in patients suffering from severe sickle-cell disease, exposed to acute pain during vaso-occlusive crises? Evaluation of the use of analgesics, on the basis of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders criteria for substance abuse and dependence, makes it possible to differentiate the symptoms occurring only in a context of pain, in the aim of managing the pain, and thus describing pseudo-addiction, from symptoms also occurring when there is no pain, and more in favour of true addiction. Currently there is no data available in France on this problem, and no studies have been carried out in children or adolescents with sickle-cell disease. The purpose of the study is to evaluate the prevalence of problematic use of equimolar mixture of oxygen and nitrous oxide and other analgesic drugs in a population of subjects with severe sickle-cell disease in France., Methods/design: PHEDRE (Pharmacodépendance Et DREpanocytose-drug dependence and sickle-cell disease) is an observational, descriptive and transversal study. Patients under the age of 26 with sickle-cell disease are included in the study by the doctors looking after them in sickle-cell disease centres. The patients are then contacted by a trained researcher for a telephone interview, including an evaluation of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders criteria for abuse and dependence to equimolar mixture of oxygen and nitrous oxide and for each of the analgesic drugs taken by the patient. The data are also completed using the subject's medical record., Discussion: This study will make it possible to provide an initial quantitative and qualitative evaluation of problematic use of equimolar mixture of oxygen and nitrous oxide and analgesic drugs in the sickle-cell disease population. The results will be used firstly to provide additional data essential for monitoring the risk of overdose, abuse, dependence and misuse of these products, and to begin awareness-raising and to provide information for health care professionals, in order to significantly improve the management of sickle-cell disease-related pain., Trial Registration: Clinical Trials.gov ID: NCT02580565 registered 16 October 2015 Unique Protocol ID: RC14_0344.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Crushed and injected buprenorphine tablets: characteristics of princeps and generic solutions.
- Author
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Bouquié R, Wainstein L, Pilet P, Mussini JM, Deslandes G, Clouet J, Dailly E, Jolliet P, and Victorri-Vigneau C
- Subjects
- Analgesics, Opioid adverse effects, Buprenorphine adverse effects, Dermatitis etiology, Drugs, Generic chemistry, Flow Cytometry, Humans, Injections, Subcutaneous, Lasers, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Particle Size, Skin pathology, Solutions chemistry, Substance-Related Disorders pathology, Analgesics, Opioid chemistry, Buprenorphine chemistry, Tablets chemistry
- Abstract
Self-injection of high-dose buprenorphine is responsible for well-described complications. In 2011, we have been alerted by unusual but serious cutaneous complication among injection buprenorphine users. A prospective data collection identified 30 cases of necrotic cutaneous lesions after injection of filtered buprenorphine solution, among which 25 cases occurred following injection of buprenorphine generics. The main goal of our study was to put forward particularities that could explain the cutaneous complications, by qualitatively and quantitatively confronting particles present in Subutex and generics solutions. We used the same protocol that injected-buprenorphine users: generic or subutex tablets were crushed in sterile water and filtered through 2 filters commonly used (cotton-pad and sterifilt). Solutions were analyzed by laser granulometry, flow cytometry and scanning electron microscopy. We have highlighted the wide variation of the quantity and the size of the particles present in solution between the two drugs after cotton-pad filtration. The proportion of particles <10 µm is systematically higher in the generic solutions than with Subutex. All of the insoluble particles found in generic solutions contain silica, whereas non- organic element was to be identified in the insoluble particles of Subutex. One skin biopsy obtained from one patient who developed a necrotic lesion after intravenous injection of filtrated solution of buprenorphine generic, shows non-organic elements. Identification of particles in situ enables us to confirm the presence of silica in the biopsy. Actually the monitoring of patient receiving generic of buprenorphine must be strengthened.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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