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- Bookedited by Federico E. Micheli, Peter A. LeWitt.Contents:
1. A Clinician's Approach to Chorea / Peter A. LeWitt
2. Benign Hereditary Chorea / Carlos Zúñiga-Ramírez and Héctor Alberto González-Usigli
3. Chorea-Acanthocytosis / Andreas Hermann
4. Sydenham's Chorea / Francisco Cardoso
5. Huntington's Disease: Clinical Phenotypes and Therapeutics / Michael Orth
6. Huntington's Disease: Molecular Pathogenesis and New Therapeutic Perspectives / Claudia Perandones and Ignacio Muñoz-Sanjuan
7. Huntington Disease and Huntington Disease-Like Syndromes: An Overview / Susanne A. Schneider and Felix Gövert
8. McLeod Syndrome / Hans H. Jung
9. Neuroferritinopathy / Vanderci Borges and Roberta Arb Saba
10. Neurodegeneration with Brain Iron Accumulation / Nardocci Nardo , Vanessa Cavallera , Luisa Chiapparini, and Giovanna Zorzi
11. Aceruloplasminemia / Hiroaki Miyajima
12. Chorea in Inherited Ataxias / Hélio A. Ghizoni Teive and Renato Puppi Munhoz
13. Chorea in Prion Diseases / Marie-Claire Porter and Simon Mead
14. Inherited Metabolic Disorders Causing Chorea / Mônica Santoro Haddad
15. Drug-Induced Chorea / Federico E. Micheli
16. Structural Causes of Chorea / Jon Snider and Roger L. Albin
17. Chorea: A Surgical Approach / Raul Martinez-Fernandez and Elena Moro
18. Chorea in Childhood / Emilio Fernández-Alvarez
19. Psychogenic Chorea / Juan Carlos Giugni , Daniel Martínez-Ramírez, and Ramon L. Rodríguez-Cruz. - ArticleAronstam A, Dennis B, Friesen MJ, Clark WF, Linton AL, Lindsay RM.Thromb Haemost. 1978 Jun 30;39(3):695-700.Heparin neutralizing activity (HNA) was increased in plasma of patients with end-stage renal disease treated by maintenance haemodialysis. It was not raised in non-dialyzed patients with chronic renal failure, nor in patients with normal renal function who had been exposed to the extracorporeal circulation of the heart-lung bypass 48--72 hr before testing. It is postulated that the trauma of extracorporeal circulation causes platelets to release HNA which is not cleared by the dialysis membranes of the artificial kidney but is by the human kidney. This may have therapeutic implications for heparin dosage schedules during haemodialysis.