Skip to main content

Thank you for visiting nature.com. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in Internet Explorer). In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles and JavaScript.

Volume 1 Issue 2, February 1995

Editorial

Top of page ⤴

Letters to the Editor

Top of page ⤴

News

Top of page ⤴

Commentary

  • Contemporary psychiatric misdirections derived primarily from standard medical errors of oversimplification, misplaced emphasis, and invention are reviewed. These particular errors, however, were in part prompted and sustained by the sociocultural fads and fashions of the day. The results have been disastrous for everyone — patients, families, the public and psychiatry itself.

    • Paul R. McHugh
    Commentary
Top of page ⤴

News & Views

  • Removal of a primary tumour can result in a burst of growth in previously ‘dormant’ micrometastases and is associated with onset of angiogenesis and a reduced incidence of apoptosis (see pages 149–153)

    • Cliff Murray
    News & Views
  • It is reported that DNA fragmentation (indicating apoptosis) is rarely observed in HIV-1 or SIV-producing infected cells, and HIV-1 or SIV RNA is rarely (0-1%) observed in apoptotic cells. What is the role of apoptosis in the pathogenicity of HIV infection? (pages 129–134)

    • Giuseppe Pantaleo
    • Anthony S. Fauci
    News & Views
  • A demonstration of inhibition of β-sheets in both reactive amyloid, using an in vivo mouse model, and synthetic Alzheimer (β) amyloid, in vitro (pages 143–148).

    • Scott R. Diehl
    News & Views
  • Examination of the effects of three new drugs shows that the destruction of the immune system in AIDS reflects fulminant HIV production, which eventually overwhelms the immune system's prodigious powers of regeneration.

    • Nicholas Short
    News & Views
  • Three articles claim to have identified the spinal muscular atrophy gene, yet they do not appear to have enough in common to identify the same gene.

    • T. Conrad Gilliam
    News & Views
Top of page ⤴

Article

Top of page ⤴

Book Review

Top of page ⤴

On the Market

Top of page ⤴

Search

Quick links