A three - page
editorial accompanying the study notes that the researchers had the baby's parents sign a consent form acknowledging that their egg was undergoing an experimental technique.
Not exact matches
In an
accompanying editorial commentary, Jared M. Baeten, MD, PhD, of the University of Washington, who was not involved with the
study,
noted that how PrEP is provided to patients is likely to evolve as more experience is gained with it.
In an
accompanying editorial, Michael Davis, CRNP and Jeffrey Kopp, MD (National Institutes of Health)
noted that the
study also pointed to various factors — such as having access to alternate dialysis in an integrated system, getting access to transportation, and having a stable social situation — that could be important for avoiding missed dialysis treatments.
In an
accompanying editorial, Stanley Jordan, MD (Cedars - Sinai Medical Center)
noted that if the findings are supported by additional
studies, they could be of great help in counseling patients and possibly avoiding costly immunotherapy to reduce what appear to be largely benign donor - specific HLA antibodies.
Poor nutrition early in life can have far - reaching effects that last well into adulthood, Jaako Tuomilehto, MD, a professor in the department of public health at the University of Helsinki, in Finland,
notes in an
editorial accompanying Dr. Paajanen's
study.
«The use of TMS could be a major step forward in patients in whom presently available drug treatment is ineffective, poorly tolerated, or contraindicated,» Hans - Christoph Diener, MD, of University Hospital Essen, in Germany,
noted in an
editorial accompanying the
study.
In an
accompanying editorial, Francesco Celi, MD, of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases in Bethesda, Md.,
notes that «taken together, these
studies point to a potential «natural» intervention to stimulate energy expenditure: Turn down the heat and burn calories (and reduce the carbon footprint in the process).»
In an
editorial accompanying Dr. Becker's
study, Dr. Phillips
notes that the incidence of muscle pain reported among the
study participants taking red yeast rice (about 7 %) could be artificially low.
There is also an
editorial about the
study that
accompanies it and
notes that lethal methods «prove unsuccessful because of repopulation through breeding and migration» and debunks the notion that community cats are decimating so - called «native species.»