Sentences with phrase «says pharmacologist»

«Patients are pretty sophisticated at picking up negative vibes from their doctors, and it creates a communication barrier between patients and physicians,» says pharmacologist Joe Graedon, MS, creator of peoplespharmacy.com.
«I know for a fact that the agency will lose half its collaborators when it moves,» says pharmacologist Adam Cohen, who heads the Centre for Human Drug Research in Leiden, the Netherlands.
«It's a good start,» says pharmacologist Peter Richardson of Cambridge University, «and it should spur a lot more work.»
«Resolvin D2 is an excellent prototype for a new anti-inflammatory drug,» says pharmacologist Mauro Perretti of Queen Mary University of London, one of the study's authors.
The work «nails to the wall» the theory that different receptors respond very differently to nicotine, says pharmacologist Allan Collins of the University of Colorado, Boulder.

Not exact matches

«Pharmacologists will tell you that corticosteroids are not damaging to the joint if they're given with rest,» he says.
«It is, of course, important to discern between «a few occasional drinks,» such as having a beer or two or perhaps a glass of wine at dinner, and then «binge drinking,»» says Maija Haastrup, a clinical pharmacologist at the Odense University Hospital in Denmark, who co-authored the review I previously mentioned.
«There's no question it's important work,» says A. Douglas Kinghorn, a pharmacologist at the University of Illinois, Chicago, who says the finding could partly explain the low rates of some cancers in Japan.
«Most clinicians will tell you that they see them in at least 5 percent of patients and as many as 20 percent,» says Matthew F. Muldoon, an internist and clinical pharmacologist at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.
«That danger needs to be considered before we open a Pandora's box,» says Glen Hanson, a pharmacologist at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and former acting director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
«People used to think that once your epigenetic code was laid down in early development, that was it for life,» says Moshe Szyf, a pharmacologist with a bustling lab at McGill University in Montreal.
«Nature didn't come up with pain just to torture mankind,» says Martin Angst, an anesthesiologist and clinical pharmacologist at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California.
That's a huge missed opportunity, says Ryan Vandrey, a behavioral pharmacologist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland.
«The results are preliminary but exciting,» says Nader Moniri, a pharmacologist at Mercer University in Atlanta.
That suggestion doesn't line «up with the basic science and certainly does not describe our own data on Olinvo,» says Jonathan Violin, a molecular pharmacologist who co-founded Trevena and is now one of its vice presidents.
The paper «is a tour de force,» for its labor - intensive validation of concepts that had only been inferred from smaller studies, says molecular pharmacologist Gavril Pasternak of the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City.
'' [This study] opens a new option for reevaluating phenomena which we have been wondering about for decades,» says Kay Brune, a pharmacologist at the University of Erlangen in Germany.
A team of clinical pharmacologists, statisticians and IT experts conducted a risk analysis of the problems at Cetero, she said, and they «concluded that the risk of a misleading result was very low given how the studies were done, how the data were captured and so forth.»
But «it makes sense that if you have some limited capacity for protein synthesis, you gradually are depriving yourself of building critical synapses,» or connections between neurons, which could be important for staying happy, says co-author Moshe Szyf, a pharmacologist at McGill.
«Experience working with pharmacometric data from humans, or animals closest to humans, is highly sought after,» says Ed Dupuis, pharmacologist at University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
But pharmacologist Lisa Bero of the University of California, San Francisco, says that her own research on similar rule - making processes for tobacco control found that scientists opposing rules were often funded by industry groups.
«Everybody's idea of a Phase 0, or virtual, trial is different,» says Amin Rostami - Hodjegan, pharmacologist at the University of Sheffield in the UK.
«It seems to have similar effects as an antidepressant and antianxiety drug,» says Arieh Moussaieff, a pharmacologist from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, who led the study.
«If I go into an emergency room with acute pain, give me morphine,» says Yasmin Hurd, a pharmacologist at Mount Sinai in New York City.
The FIRST program at the University of Frankfurt aims to address a lack of Ph.D. graduates who really understand the drug - development process, says Dieter Steinhilber, the coordinator of FIRST and a pharmacologist at the university's Institute of Pharmaceutical Chemistry.
A suspected trigger for this constriction is adenosine, a chemical messenger found in high amounts in the lung fluid of asthmatics, says Jonathan Nyce, a molecular pharmacologist at EpiGenesis Pharmaceuticals in Greenville, North Carolina.
The real value of the new research may be that these receptors can provide new and more effective therapies for current addicts, says Michael Nader, a physiologist and pharmacologist at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine in Winston - Salem, N.C. «This identifies a target,» he says.
«It is wrong - headed thinking that the only kind of evidence that is reliable is a randomized controlled trial,» says Jeffrey Blumberg, a Tufts University pharmacologist.
So if, you know, a pharmacologist that come [s] along and say [s], «okay we are just going to take hydnocarpin and we are going to give that to people, it will cure them of their strep throat «or whatever; you know, after, you know, a year of use, that most of the bacteria would develop resistance.
«Sitting in my team now we have physicists, engineers, mathematicians, pharmacologists, biologists and surgeons, and we collaborate with other clinical staff,» says Seifalian.
«We are trying to use the list as leverage for increasing access and further actions on a global level,» says Nicola Magrini, a pharmacologist in Bologna, Italy, and WHO's top overseer of EML.
This work «gives us a gene and a pathway to link tolerance and the stress response,» says molecular pharmacologist Leslie Morrow of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Such new discoveries, he says, will depend on collaborations between pharmacologists and computational and physical biologists.
With many more such drugs in the pipeline, interest «is going to start snowballing as we understand how drugs modulate these pathways,» says University of Illinois pharmacologist Julio Duarte, whose paper, «Epigenetics Primer: Why the Clinician Should Care About Epigenetics,» appeared inPharmacotherapy this year.
Without spoiling the plot, let's just say that any amateur pharmacologist could have devised a more likely scenario.
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