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Publications (5)15.01 Total impact

  • Article: [The syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) during treatment with the antipsychotic agents haloperidol and quetiapine].
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    ABSTRACT: A 45-year-old man with paranoid schizophrenia repeatedly developed hyponatraemia due to the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH), both after treatment with haloperidol and after taking quetiapine. This side effect did not occur subsequently during clozapine treatment. SIADH has been described in connection with almost all psychotropic drugs. Since the risk of developing SIADH is increased with increasing age, comorbid somatic disorders and polypharmacy, and the mean age of the psychiatric patient will further increase in the years to come, the physician should be alert to the risk factors and the clinical symptoms of disturbances in water balance; moreover, the proper differential diagnostic deliberations should be made. In case of increased risk, it is recommended to monitor the serum sodium during the first 2-4 weeks of pharmacotherapy.
    Nederlands tijdschrift voor geneeskunde 10/2006; 150(35):1944-8.
  • Article: Successful treatment with linezolid and rifampicin of meningitis due to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis refractory to vancomycin treatment.
    European Journal of Clinical Microbiology 03/2006; 25(2):135-7. · 2.86 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Medicinal cannabis for diseases of the nervous system: no convincing evidence of effectiveness].
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    ABSTRACT: --In 1996, the Netherlands Health Council issued a negative recommendation regarding the use of medication on the basis of cannabis (marihuana). However, interest in medicinal cannabis has certainly not waned since. --The neurological diseases for which cannabis could presently be used therapeutically are: multiple sclerosis, chronic (neuropathic) pain and the syndrome of Gilles de la Tourette. --Since September 2003, the Dutch Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport delivers medicinal cannabis to Dutch pharmacies, so that now for the first time, medicinal cannabis can be given to patients on a prescription basis within the framework of the Opium Law. The result of this is that doctors and patients now assume that this is a medication for which the efficacy and safety have been established. --The question arises whether new scientific data have become available since 1996 that provide scientific support for the current Governmental policy. --In a recent clinical trial that has aroused much discussion, patients with multiple sclerosis and problematic spasticity were treated with oral cannabis or a placebo. There was no significant effect of treatment on the primary outcome measure, i.e. objectively determined spasticity. Nevertheless, it was concluded that the mobility was improved and that the pain was subjectively decreased. --Until now, convincing scientific evidence that cannabinoids are effective in neurological conditions is still lacking. --However, it is also not possible to conclude definitely that cannabinoids are ineffective; still, this is no basis for official stimulation of their use.
    Nederlands tijdschrift voor geneeskunde 12/2004; 148(48):2374-8.
  • Article: Toxicokinetics of nortriptyline and amitriptyline: two case reports.
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    ABSTRACT: Two cases are presented of intentional intoxications with the tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) nortriptyline (NT) and amitriptyline (AT). The peak plasma concentrations were 2290 microg/L and 2900 microg/L, respectively. The active metabolites E-10-hydroxynortriptyline (EHNT) and Z-10-hydroxynortriptyline (ZHNT) profiles were quite different as monitored for 5 to 10 days after presumed drug intake. In conclusion, these cases illustrate that (1) metabolite formation and elimination after intake of an overdose dose of NT and AT are stereoselective, and (2) NT and EHNT toxicokinetics and toxicodynamics are quite different. It also shows that a patient with a severe TCA overdose can still survive if he or she receives appropriate and quick supportive care, even if the prognostic markers QRS time, coma grade, and serum TCA levels predict poor outcome.
    Therapeutic Drug Monitoring 05/2003; 25(2):248-51. · 2.49 Impact Factor
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    Article: Cytokine profiles during clinical high-flux dialysis: no evidence for cytokine generation by circulating monocytes.
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    ABSTRACT: Secretion of cytokines by monocytes has been implicated in the pathogenesis of dialysis-related morbidity. Cytokine generation is presumed to take place in two steps: induction of mRNA transcription for cytokines by C5a and direct membrane contact, followed by lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced translation of mRNA (priming/second signal theory, Kidney Int 37: 85-93, 1990). However, the in vitro conditions on which this theory was based differed markedly from clinical dialysis. To test this postulate for routine hemodialysis, 13 patients were studied cross-over with high-flux cuprammonium (CU), cellulose triacetate (CTA), and polysulfon dialyzers, using standard bicarbonate dialysate, as well as CTA with filtered dialysate (fCTA). Besides leukocytes, C3a, C5a, and limulus amebocyte lysate reactivity, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, interleukin (IL)-1 beta, IL-6, IL-1RA, soluble TNF receptors, and IL-1 beta mRNA were assessed. Only during dialysis with CU did C5a increase significantly (561 to 8185 ng/ml, P < 0.001). Endotoxin content of standard bicarbonate was higher than filtered dialysate (median, 24.3 and < 5 pg/ml respectively, P = 0.002), whereas limulus amebocyte lysate reactivity was not detected in the blood, except in the case of CU. TNF-alpha levels were elevated before, and remained stable during, dialysis, independent of the modality used. IL-1 beta, IL-6, and mRNA coding for IL-1 beta could not be demonstrated. IL-1RA and soluble TNF receptors (p55/p75) were markedly elevated compared with normal control subjects, but showed no differences between fCTA and CTA. To summarize, no evidence was found for production and release of cytokines by monocytes during clinical high-flux bicarbonate hemodialysis, neither with complement-activating membranes nor with unfiltered dialysate. Therefore, this study sheds some doubt on the relevance of the "priming/second signal" theory for clinical practice. The data presented suggest that reluctance to prescribe the use of high-flux dialyzers, as advocated in many reports, may not be warranted.
    Journal of the American Society of Nephrology 11/1997; 8(11):1745-54. · 9.66 Impact Factor