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  • Book
    edited by Jerome Sarris, Jon Wardle.
    Summary: "Clinical Naturopathy: An evidence-based guide to practice articulates evidence-based clinical practice. It details the principles, treatment protocols and interventions at the forefront of naturopathic practice in the 21st century. Clinical Naturopathy equips you to critically evaluate your patients, analyse treatment protocols, and provide evidence-based prescriptions"--Publisher's description.

    Contents:
    Naturopathic case taking
    Naturopathic diagnostic techniques
    Wellness, lifestyle and preventive medicine
    Irritable bowel syndrome
    Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease
    Food allergy/intolerance
    Liver dysfunction and disease
    Respiratory infections and immune insufficiency
    Asthma
    Congestive respiratory disorders
    Atherosclerosis and dyslipidaemia
    Hypertension and stroke
    Chronic venous insufficiency
    Anxiety
    Depression
    Insomnia
    Headache and migraine
    Stress and fatigue
    Diabetes type 2 and insulin resistance
    Thyroid abnormalities
    Dysmenorrhoea and menstrual complaints
    Endometriosis
    Polycystic ovarian syndrome
    Menopause
    Osteoarthritis
    Fibromyalgia
    Acne vulgaris
    Inflammatory skin disorders: atopic eczema and psoriasis
    Benign prostatic hypertrophy
    Recurrent urinary tract infection
    Autoimmune disease
    Cancer
    Paediatrics
    Fertility, preconception care and pregnancy
    Ageing and cognition
    Bipolar disorder
    Attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder
    Chronic fatigue syndrome
    Human immunodeficiency virus
    Pain management
    Polypharmacy and drug-nutraceutical interactions
    Appendices. Drug-herb interaction chart
    Drug-nutrient interaction chart
    Chemotherapy drugs and concurrent nutraceutical use
    Food sources of nutrients
    Laboratory reference values
    Taxonomic cross-reference of major herbs.
    Digital Access ClinicalKey 2019
  • Article
    Grant DA, Magee AI, Hermon-Taylor J.
    Eur J Biochem. 1978 Jul 17;88(1):183-9.
    The affinity chromatography of human enterokinase using p-aminobenzamidine as the ligand [Grant, D.A.W. & Hermon-Taylor, J. (1976) Biochem. J. 155, 243-254] has been reassessed and the optimal conditions for the synthesis and operation of the derivatised gel defined. Satisfactory adsorbants were only produced using high concentrations of both CNBr and spacer-arm in the initial coupling slurry. Under these conditions it seemed likely that the majority of the ligand in a sterically favourable position to bind enterokinase was on the external surface of the bead. Trypsin binding to the adsorbant was not so critically dependent on the synthetic conditions and correlated closely with the degree of substitution. Dilution of the adsorbant with unlabelled Sepharose 4B indicated that there was more than one binding site per enterokinase molecule. The highest affinity was presumably for the active site, with adsorption supported by secondary interactions with spacer-arm or gel matrix not necessarily on the same bead. Maximal resolution was obtained by prolonged washing of the gel after loading; two populations of intestinal aminopeptidase were identified. Substitution of aniline for p-aminobenzamidine abolished specific enterokinase adsorption and improved the purification procedure by further removal of onon-specifically adsorbed contaminants.
    Digital Access Access Options