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Institution

Damascus University

EducationDamascus, Syria
About: Damascus University is a education organization based out in Damascus, Syria. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 1980 authors who have published 2046 publications receiving 22720 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Damascus & Syrian University.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the preparation and properties of polylactic acid (PLA) polymer blends have been summarized and compared to those of traditional petrochemical-based polymers, such as polypropylene, polyamide, and polyamide.

350 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed the recent progress on recycling polymeric waste form some traditional polymers and their systems (blends and composites) such as polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), and polystyrene (PS), and introduced the mechanical and chemical recycling concepts.

343 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Clozapine is found to be more acceptable in long-term treatment than conventional antipsychotic drugs and typical neuroleptic drugs for broad outcomes such as mortality, ability to work or suitability for discharge at the end of the study.
Abstract: Summary of findings for the main comparison CLOZAPINE versus TYPICAL ANTIPSYCHOTICS -OVERALL for schizophrenia; Summary of findings 2 CLOZAPINEversusTYPICALANTIPSYCHOTICS forpeoplewithschizophreniawhose illnesshasprovedresistant totreatment1. COMPARISON 1. CLOZAPINE versus TYPICAL AN-TIPSYCHOTIC DRUGS - OVERALLAll data are derived from 50 studies.1.1 DeathFour deathsoccurredin614peopletreatedwithtypicalneurolep-tics compared with three deaths in 629 people treatedwith cloza-pine. There were no significant differences in mortality betweengroups (n=1243, 12 RCTs, RR 0.56 CI 0.1 to 2.3).1.2 Relapse rateWe included 19 short-term studies, and found incidences of re-lapse werelowerin theclozapine group (n=1303, RR 0.62 CI0.5to0.8,NNT21CI15to49)comparedwithtypicalantipsychoticdrugs. Long-term data (4 RCTs, n=578) also favoured clozapinebut data were heterogeneous (I-squared =76%) (RR 0.22 CI 0.1to 0.3).1.3 Global impression1.3.1 Clinical improvement as defined by study authorsWefound thatthenumber ofparticipants whohadnot improvedwere lower in the clozapine group (n=1119, 14 RCTs, RR 0.72CI 0.7 to 0.8, NNT 6 CI 5 to 8). Three long-term studies alsofavoured clozapine (n=719, RR 0.81 CI 0.7 to 0.9) but the dataare heterogeneous (I-squared statistic 81%).1.3.2 Readiness for hospital dischargeThere were no significant differences between treatment groupsfor the number of participants who were judged to be not readyfordischarge(short-term,n=447,5RCTs,RR0.88CI0.8to1.0).Long-termdataalsofailedtoshowasignificant difference(n=648,2 RCTs, RR 0.82 CI 0.6 to 1.1).1.4 Hospitalisation - Not discharged or readmitted within oneyear after dischargeData were available from two long-term studies (Essock 1996(H/CPZ/Flu),Rosenheck1993(H)),andwefoundnosignificantadvantageforclozapine(n=648,RR0.94CI0.9to1.0)comparedwith typical antipsychotic drugs.1.5 Unable to workWe found no significant difference in the number of participantswho were assessed as being unable to work (n=416, 4 RCTs, RR0.87CI0.8to1.0),althoughthedatasuggestedatrendfavouringclozapine (p=0.06).1.6 Participant dissatisfactionNosignificantdifferenceswerefoundfordissatisfactionwithtreat-mentintwoshort-termstudies(n=114,RR0.72CI0.4to1.3).Wefoundlonger-termdatain(Rosenheck1993(H)).Thesefavouredtheclozapinegroupwhowerelessdissatisfiedwiththeirtreatmentcomparedwithconventionalantipsychoticdrugs(n=423,RR0.45CI 0.3 to 0.8, NNT 13 CI 9 to 37).1.7 Leaving the study early - acceptability of treatmentWe used leaving the study early data as a proxy measure for theacceptability of treatment. Short-term data from 32 studies in-volving 2316 participants indicated that significantly more par-ticipantsgivenclozapinefoundtreatmentacceptable(RR0.81CI0.7 to 1.0, NNT 35 CI 20 to 217). Longer-term data from sixstudies showed a significant benefit in the clozapine group (n=982,RR0.60CI0.5to0.7,NNT15CI12to20).Thelong-termattrition rate fromclozapine treatment isapproximately 33% and56% when treated with typical antipsychotic drugs.1.8 Mental state1.8.1 BPRS and PANSSWe found BPRS mental state scores favoured clozapine duringshort-termassessmentin16studies(n=1205,WMD-3.79CI-4.9to -2.7), although the data were heterogeneous (I squared=69%).Longer-term BPRS data (Lee 1994 (mainly H)) were equivocal(n=52, WMD 0.80 CI -5.7 to 7.3). PANSS scores from threeChinesetrialsfavouredtheclozapinegroups(n=163,WMD-3.82CI -7.4 to -0.3) during short-term analysis. Also, PANSS scoresassessed over the long-term favoured clozapine (Rosenheck 1993(H), n=235, WMD -6.90 CI -10.7 to -3.1).1.8.2 Negative symptomsShort-termcontinuous data on negative symptom scores from sixshort-termtrialswith236participantsfavouredclozapine(SANS,WMD -7.12 CI -8.8 to -5.5) but these are heterogeneous data(Isquared=92%). Longer-termnegativesymptomsscoresassessedwiththePANSSnegativesubscorewerenotsignificantlydifferent(Rosenheck 1993 (H), n=235, WMD -0.90 CI -6.6 to 4.8).1.8.3 Positive symptomsWe found short-term SAPS scores were equivocal (Wang 2001(CPZ), n=60, WMD 4.39 CI -12.2 to 20.9). Longer-term datafrom the PANSS positive scores favoured clozapine (Rosenheck1993 (H), n=235, WMD -2.20 CI -3.3 to -1.1).1.9 Cognitive functionCognitive impairment from one small study (n=82) favoured theclozapine group who experienced less impairment (Klieser 1990(H),RR0.56CI0.3to0.9,NNT4CI3to21)whenassessedwiththe SKT scale compared with those given typical antipsychoticdrugs.Onesmallstudy(Lee1994(mainlyH),n=54)reporteddataon aseriesof cognitive functioning tests(verbal,memory or exec-utive functions etc.) and we found outcomes to be equivocal, ex-cept for ’psychomotor speedand attention’ scoreswhich favouredthe clozapine-treated participants over the three pre-stated cut-off points (short-term, WMD 1.40 CI 0.2 to 2.6, medium-term,WMD1.30CI0.01to3.0,long-term,WMD2.10CI0.8to3.4).Clozapine versus typical neuroleptic medication for schizophrenia (Review)

298 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a set of qualitative case studies were used in higher education institutions across seven countries (Brazil, Serbia, Latvia, South Africa, Spain, Syria, UK) to examine the extent to which transformation and learning on matters related to sustainable development may be integrated.

275 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Loai Aljerf1
TL;DR: Surprisingly, the CL modified adsorbent seems to be a good and efficient for the removal of dyes as BCP and such heavy metals including Cr.

265 citations


Authors

Showing all 2012 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Victor M. Montori13171178867
M. Hassan Murad8543246683
Tsung O. Cheng373996096
Waseem Kaialy25671545
Belal Firwana23472540
Mosab Kaseem23802401
Kotiba Hamad23762064
Wail Al Zoubi22571231
Mohammad Bashar Izzat20941647
Yomen Atassi1864927
Mohamad Bassam Sonbol18871011
Anas M. Saad171121351
Bayan Alsaid1741723
Hosam E. Matar161221010
Esam Halboub1680798
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202317
202237
2021311
2020227
2019162
2018140