The kinetics of lindane concentration in the serum and the time-dependent urinary excretion of two groups, one with healthy subjects and one with scabies-infested subjects, were comparatively analyzed by gas chromatography. Both groups showed similar cumulative excretion curves at completely different lindane concentrations in the serum. Comparison of serum concentration in healthy females (high lindane concentration in serum) and healthy males (low serum concentration) to the urinary excretion showed similar results. There appears to be a serum 'threshold concentration', above which it is possible that lindane is no longer primarily excreted by the kidney. Based on these results recommendations are presented, for the practical use of such data in the treatment of scabies.
Crises such as European debt crisis, Brexit, and COVID-19 have challenged established relations between finance and the state in attempts at mitigating a broad range of crises-related risks. We ask whether and how these altered relations in themselves constitute novel uncertainties and risks between the two fields. To better understand these dynamics, we introduce the concept of “risk entanglement” to complement financialization as a key concept presently capturing these relations. Based on qualitative research in the German finance-state nexus, we show how financial and state actors mutually construe each other as risks that need to be managed and mitigated to safeguard their particular, field-specific logics and ends. We focus on systemic risk and political risk as two cases of risk entanglement: whereas systemic risk reflects the threat of a potential financial meltdown to the state, political risk reflects how the state endangers established risk practices in finance.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.