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  1. Billa N, Yuen KH, Khader MA, Omar A
    Int J Pharm, 2000 May 15;201(1):109-20.
    PMID: 10867269
    A xanthan gum matrix controlled release tablet formulation containing diclofenac sodium was evaluated in vitro and was found to release the drug at a uniform rate. The gastrointestinal transit behaviour of the formulation as determined by gamma scintigraphy, using healthy male volunteers under fasted and fed conditions, indicated that gastric emptying was delayed with food intake. In contrast, the small intestinal transit remained practically unchanged under both food statuses. Therefore, the delay in caecal arrival observed in the fed state can be attributed to the delay in gastric emptying. Rate of diclofenac sodium absorption was generally higher in the fed state compared to the fasted state, however the total amount absorbed under both food statuses remained practically the same. The rate of in vivo dissolution of the drug in the fed state was faster compared to that in the fasted state. Thus, at the time of caecal arrival, in vivo dissolution was complete in the fed state, unlike in the fasted state, where almost 60% of the drug was delivered to the colon.
  2. Aladily TN, Khader M, Bustami N, Bazzeh F
    Malays J Pathol, 2022 Dec;44(3):517-521.
    PMID: 36591719
    Anaplastic large cell lymphoma, ALK-positive is a mature T-cell neoplasm that accounts for 10- 20% of paediatric non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Its frequency in infants and very young children is exceedingly rare and was rarely documented in the literature. The disease prognosis in this agegroup is unknown. We report two male patients who were diagnosed with ALCL-ALK(+) at the ages of 12 and 14 months, both presented with fever and leukemoid reaction, one was in stage I and the other in stage IV diseases. They were treated with APO-based chemotherapy and remained in complete remission for more than 7 years. To our knowledge, this is the first report that describes the long-term survival of ALCL-ALK(+) at very young age.
  3. Enkelmann HC, Bishop GD, Tong EM, Diong SM, Why YP, Khader M, et al.
    Int J Psychophysiol, 2005 May;56(2):185-97.
    PMID: 15804452
    This study tested the hypotheses that ambulatory heart rate and blood pressure would be higher for individuals high but not low in hostility when they experienced negative affect or social stress and that this interaction would be stronger for Indians compared with other Singapore ethnic groups. Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring was done on 108 male Singapore patrol officers as they went about their daily duties. After each BP measurement participants completed a computerized questionnaire including items on emotional experience. Individuals high in hostility showed higher systolic blood pressure when reporting negative affect whereas this was not true for those low in hostility. Ethnic differences were obtained such that Indians showed an increase in mean arterial pressure when angered whereas MAP was negatively related to anger for Malays and unrelated for Chinese. Also a three-way interaction between ethnicity, hostility, and social stress indicated that hostility and social stress interacted in their effects on DBP for Indian participants but not for Chinese or Malays. Finally, a three-way interaction was obtained between ethnicity, hostility and negative affect for heart rate in which heart rate increased with increasing levels of negative affect for Chinese high in hostility and Malays low in hostility but decreased with increasing negative affect for all other participants. These data are consistent with higher CHD rates among individuals high in hostility and also provide additional evidence on ethnic differences in cardiovascular reactivity in Singapore.
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