Archive for the ‘drug amphetamine’ Category

Dangers of taking too much medication

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

Dangers of taking too much medicationThe traceability system of medicines announced 14 days ago by President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, will take effect from today, which will ensure the quality and origin of the remedies that each person consumes or uses.

The National Food, Drug and Medical Technology (An mat) ordered the system “to counter the negative impact that the unlawful drug trade poses to the health of patients and their health systems,” the agency

The provision 3683/2011, published in the Official Gazette, explains that the system will be implemented in a first stage, all those medical specialties already registered or in the future to register and containing in its composition, the active pharmaceutical ingredients (API’s).

The regulation stipulates that laboratories holding certificates of Registration of Medical Specialties should be placed in the packaging of each of the retail units, a medium capable of storing a unique code overseen and audited by the ANMAT.

It also provides that the laboratories, pharmacies and their coaches are responsible for the proper use of unique code and information attached.

Also specifies that all actors involved in the supply chain, distribution and dispensing of medicines should be able to market, having the hardware and software to capture the code that must be accompanied by the lot number, date of maturity and the code of the recipient.

A biological explanation for anorexia?

Sunday, May 29th, 2011

drug amphetamineFor most people find it hard to diet, especially when last several months. But not so with people with anorexia nervosa, to whom the decision to stop eating may cause death. So far, the strong refusal to eat had no clear explanation. A new study at the University of California provides new clues for understanding why people have anxiety disorder after eating, instead of the normal feeling of pleasure or satisfaction.

“This is the first study to show that there is a biological cause for this paradoxical response to food,” says Walter Kaye, a psychiatry professor and director of Research and Treatment of eating disorders at the university. During the last decade, failed to understand in more detail how food triggers rewarding sensations. These brain mechanisms involving dopamine, a chemical that is released in the brain when animals or people eat tasty food.

Kaye and his group of researchers selected women with anorexia nervosa and without eating disorders and they generated ‘stimuli of dopamine “using a dose of the drug amphetamine, which also releases the chemical in the brain. Then, using a technique called positron emission tomography (PET for short in English) obtained images of brain function in response to dopamine.

The results of this work, published in the International Journal of Eating Disorders, suggest that in healthy women, the release of dopamine produced sensations of pleasure in the brain region known as “reward center.” However, in women with anorexia nervosa, released dopamine produced feelings of anxiety. In these cases, the scientists could see that it activated a different brain region, which is related to the “concern about the consequences.”

For Kaye, the study could explain why sufferers of anorexia nervosa have difficulty eating and weight gain. “It is possible that dopamine generated by the food they generate intense feelings of anxiety and unpleasant,” said the expert.

Because the study was conducted in patients who were recovering anorexic from at least one year, the researchers suggest that the anxiety experienced is due to existing features in the patients and extremely low birth weight caused by the disease.

At the moment it is premature to anticipate the impact of these results in therapies for anorexia. There is still no proven treatments to reduce the core symptoms of the disease, such as anxiety induced by food. For experts, it remains critical to ensure that patients eat and gain weight to treat this disease effectively.