Since Magnus Huss introduced the diagnosis of ‘chronic alcoholism’ into medical literature in 1849, two unsolved problems concerning classification have remained: (1) Differentiation between problem drinkers and chronic alcoholics fluctuates, whereby the cut point of differentiation between abuse and addiction remains differently defined by different authors. Some authors view alcohol-induced damage as a building-stone of diagnosis of chronic alcoholism whereas other authors define these damages as illnesses developed as a consequence of chronic alcohol intake. This fact is also mirrored in the different definitions of chronic alcoholism by different classification systems, like ICD-9, DMS-III or DMS-III-R. Valid and reliable questionnaires, like the Munich Alcoholism Test or the Problem Drinking Scale did not succeed in solving this problem of definition, either. (2) The fact that chronic alcoholics are sick – in the sense of a biological-medical approach – is undoubted. Our research group was able to prove that chronic alcoholic patients metabolize methanol in a different way from that of healthy persons. The biological, sociological and psychopathological heterogeneity of this illness has been stressed for more than a century. A prospective long-term study carried out over 4–7 years has led to the development of a new typology in chronic alcoholism that is able to differentiate subgroups of chronic alcoholic patients cross-sectionally in a clinical, biochemical and neurophysiological way. Diagnosis according to this typology qualitatively differentiates patients in many spheres other than drinking behavior. These subgroups also require correspondingly modified therapeutic strategies.
Abstract. Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) are playing a vital role in an ever-growing number of applications ranging from environmental surveillance over medical monitoring to home automation. Since WSNs are often deployed in unattended or even hostile environments, they can be subject to various malicious attacks, including the manipulation and capture of nodes. The establishment of a shared secret key between two or more individual nodes is one of the most important security services needed to guarantee the proper functioning of a sensor network. Despite some recent advances in this field, the efficient implementation of cryptographic key establishment for WSNs remains a challenge due to the resource constraints of small sensor nodes such as the MICAz mote. In this paper we present a lightweight implementation of the elliptic curve Diffie-Hellman (ECDH) key exchange for ZigBee-compliant sensor nodes equipped with an ATmega128 processor running the TinyOS operating system. Our implementation uses a 192-bit prime field specified by the NIST as underlying algebraic structure and requires only 5.20 · 10 6 clock cycles to compute a scalar multiplication if the base point is fixed and known a priori. A scalar multiplication using a random base point takes about 12.33 · 10 6 cycles. Our results show that a full ECDH key exchange between two MICAz motes consumes an energy of 57.33 mJ (including radio communication), which is significantly better than most previously reported ECDH implementations on comparable platforms.
Little is known about the kinetics of most serum enzymes during the first hours of life, and even less about the effect on such enzyme activities of perinatal hypoxia-ischaemia. It was the aim of the present study to evaluate the serum kinetics of seven differently located cell enzymes in healthy and asphyxiated newborns during the 1st week of life. The serum activities of cytoplasmic and mitochondrial [aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT), creatine kinase (CK), glutamate dehydrogenase (GLDH), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), and hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (HBDH)] and membrane-bound (γ-glutamyltransferase and leucine arylaminidase) enzymes were prospectively measured in full-term asphyxiated (n = 49) and healthy (n = 87) newborns during the first 144 h of life. The blood samples were taken serially at five fixed times; 0 (cord), 12,24,72, and 144 h postpartum. The asphyxiated newborns had significantly increased serum activities of ASAT, LDH, and HBDH up to 72 h postpartum, whereas healthy newborns showed higher CK and GLDH activities. Only the activities of ASAT, LDH, and HBDH seemed to depend on the oxygen supply of the fetus or newborn. If other causes of increased serum enzyme activities, e.g. liver diseases, haemolytic disorders, tumours, or inborn errors of metabolism, are excluded, elevated serum activities of ASAT, LDH, and HBDH should draw one’s attention to a perinatal hypoxic-ischaemic insult of the newborn.
In addition to the established areas of endogenous psychoses, the concept of abnormal hemispheric organization in the field of psychiatry is also generating ever greater interest in the area of research into addiction. On the basis of the demonstrably higher rate of developmental risk factors (pre-, peri-, postnatal), in particular the marker left-handedness (LH) has been interpreted as an indication of induced hemispheric 'malcontrol' in endogenous psychoses. In various studies, elevated rates of LH have also been shown in alcoholics. Alcoholism could be related to biological factors associated with anomalous cerebral dominance. In a joint study carried out by the Anton Proksch Institut in Vienna (Austria), and the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg (Germany) involving a total of 250 alcohol-dependent inpatients, the hypothesis of deviant laterality in the presence of an elevated frequency of developmental risk factors has been confirmed exclusively in male alcoholics. A comparison of subtypes has also revealed that Type IV in the Lesch typology, and Type II in the Cloninger classification, are more vulnerable subtypes. These results clearly show that there are differences to be found within the overall group of alcoholics, and underscore the need for subtyping and gender-specific studies.
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