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Dive into the research topics where Dick B. S. Brashier is active.

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Featured researches published by Dick B. S. Brashier.


Journal of Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapeutics | 2014

Lorcaserin: A novel antiobesity drug

Dick B. S. Brashier; Ashok Kumar Sharma; Navdeep Dahiya; Santosh Kumar Singh; Anjan Khadka

Obesity is a major co-morbidity with hypertension and diabetes mellitus. There are few drugs for treatment of obesity like orlistat and recentlty approved drug lorcaserin. Lorcaserin has serotonergic properties and acts as an anorectic. It may cause serious side effects, including serotonin syndrome, particularly when taken with certain medicines that increase serotonin levels or activate serotonin receptors. Although, mainstay and first line of approach of treatment will always remain in having low calorie diet and increase in physical activity. Lorcaserin has come as a new hope to achieve success in treating obese patients but still a long road with further extensive research to be undertaken in the treatment of obesity.


Journal of Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapeutics | 2015

Macitentan: An important addition to the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension

Anjan Khadka; Dick B. S. Brashier; Anantharamu Tejus; Ashok Kumar Sharma

Macitentan is an orphan drug for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Endothelin-1 (ET-1) plays a critical role of pathophysiology of PAH. Macitentan, a new dual endothelin receptor antagonist, has reportedly improved prognosis of PAH patients by delaying the progression of disease. It prevents the binding of ET-1 to both endothelin A (ET A ) and endothelin B (ET B ) receptors. Macitentan displays higher efficacy, lesser adverse effects and drug interactions. It has completed phase III trials in 2012 for treatment of PAH and has been tried for ischemic digital ulcers in systemic sclerosis, recurrent glioblastoma and combination with chemotherapeutic agents against various cancers. Safety data for macitentan were obtained primarily from a placebo-controlled clinical study in 742 patients with PAH. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the drug on 13 October 2013. It is an important addition to long-term treatment of PAH.


Journal of Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapeutics | 2015

Naloxegol: First oral peripherally acting mu opioid receptor antagonists for opioid-induced constipation

Tejus Anantharamu; Sushil Sharma; Ajay Kumar Gupta; Navdeep Dahiya; Dick B. S. Brashier; Ashok Kumar Sharma

Opioid-induced constipation (OIC) is one of the most troublesome and the most common effects of opioid use leading to deterioration in quality of life of the patients and also has potentially deleterious repercussions on adherence and compliance to opioid therapy. With the current guidelines advocating liberal use of opioids by physicians even for non-cancer chronic pain, the situation is further complicated as these individuals are not undergoing palliative care and hence there cannot be any justification to subject these patients to the severe constipation brought on by opioid therapy which is no less debilitating than the chronic pain. The aim in these patients is to prevent the opioid-induced constipation but at the same time allow the analgesic activity of opioids. Many drugs have been used with limited success but the most specific among them were the peripherally acting mu opioid receptor antagonists (PAMORA). Methylnaltrexone and alvimopan were the early drugs in this group but were not approved for oral use in OIC. However naloxegol, the latest PAMORA has been very recently approved as the first oral drug for OIC. This article gives an overview of OIC, its current management and more specifically the development and approval of naloxegol, including pharmacokinetics, details of various clinical trials, adverse effects and its current status for the management of OIC.


Journal of Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapeutics | 2015

Inhaled insulin: A “puff” than a “shot” before meals

Dick B. S. Brashier; Anjan Khadka; Tejus Anantharamu; Ashok Kumar Sharma; Ajay Kumar Gupta; Sushil Sharma; Navdeep Dahiya

Diabetes is a metabolic disorder characterized by relative or absolute deficiency of insulin, resulting in hyperglycemia. The main treatment of diabetes relies on subcutaneous insulin administration by injection or continuous infusion to control glucose levels, besides oral hypoglycemic agents for type 2 diabetes. Novel routes of insulin administration are an area of research in the diabetes field as insulin injection therapy is burdensome and painful for many patients. Inhalational insulin is a potential alternative to subcutaneous insulin in the management of diabetes. The large surface area, good vascularization, immense capacity for solute exchange and ultra-thinness of the alveolar epithelium facilitates systemic delivery of insulin via pulmonary administration. Inhaled insulin has been recently approved by Food and Drug Administration (FDA). It is a novel, rapid-acting inhaled insulin with a pharmacokinetic profile that is different from all other insulin products and comparatively safer than the previous failed inhaled insulin (Exubera).


Indian Journal of Pharmacology | 2016

Are therapeutic vaccines an answer to the global problem of drug and alcohol abuse

Dick B. S. Brashier; Ashok Kumar Sharma; Neha Akhoon

Drug Abuse has become a major challenging problem for the society. It effects people of all countries economical stratas and all ages. According. Monetary loss all over the world regarding drug abuse is in million dollars, it not only has an impact on human productivity and healthcare cost but also on cost of crimes conducted by these drugs and alcohol abuse. Therapeutic vaccine has come as new approach to deal with this problem, after failures in search for a pharmaceutical agent to deal with drug of abuse and alcohol. Research in field of nicotine abuse has gone a way ahead with number of vaccines being tried clinically followed by cocaine, opioids, methamphetamine, phencyclidine and alcohol. All of them have a common mechanism of action by antibody production whereas alcohol acts by genetic intervention. None have being approved yet due to poor results in phase II trials, possibly due to not able to trigger an adequate immunological response. But still quest is on for cracking the ice by developing first successful vaccine against drug of abuse, that would follow for other drugs too. It would be great step in field of therapeutic vaccines for drug abuse after similar successful vaccines being approved for other diseases like cancer.


Muller Journal of Medical Sciences and Research | 2014

Perampanel: New drug for treatment of refractory partial onset seizures

Santosh Kumar Singh; Dick B. S. Brashier

Perampanel (2-[2-oxo-1-phenyl-5-pyridin-2-yl-1,2-dihydropyridin-3-yl] benzonitrile hydrate) is the latest antiepileptic drugs for treatment of refractory partial onset seizures. Perampanel inhibits α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole-propionic acid (AMPA)-induced increase in intracellular Ca 2+ and selectively blocks AMPA receptor-mediated synaptic trans-mission, thus reducing neuronal excitation. Three Phase III multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials demonstrated the efficacy and good tolerability of perampanel as adjunctive treatment in patients with refractory partial-onset seizures. The drug is approved for use in the European Union and United States. The pharmacology of perampanel offers potential as more than just another new antiepileptic drug. This first-in-class drug will provide another option for practitioners of rational polytherapy.


Muller Journal of Medical Sciences and Research | 2014

Fidaxomicin: A new fight against clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea

Dick B. S. Brashier; Amol Khanapure; Ashok Kumar Sharma

Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea (CDAD) occurs commonly as a side effect of broad-spectrum antibiotics. Drugs approved for CDAD are only two of them, metronidazole and vancomycin. Most promising drug for treatment of CDAD is vancomycin, but due to emergence of hypervirulent strains, outcomes have become poor. Fidaxomicin has being approved lately for treatment of CDAD, which has shown good results as compared to vancomycin. Fidaxomicin inhibits protein synthesis by inhibiting transcription carried out by sigma subunit of RNA polymerase. Fidaxomicin has been seen to be a well tolerated, with minimal adverse effects. Clinical trials has showed that fidaxomicin has similar results to vancomycin in showing clinical response, whereas it was superior to vancomycin in having sustained clinical effect, in CDAD.


Journal of Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapeutics | 2012

Boceprevir: A new hope against hepatitis C virus.

Dick B. S. Brashier; Sushil Sharma; Ag Mathur; Pragya Khare; Sparsh Gupta


Journal of Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapeutics | 2012

An adverse drug reaction clinic: Breathing fresh life into the pharmacovigilance programme

Dick B. S. Brashier; Sushil Sharma


International journal of basic and clinical pharmacology | 2018

Prescription pattern among patients having mild to moderate bronchial asthma using metered dose inhaler and dry powder inhaler in tertiary hospital in western india

Neha Akhoon; Dick B. S. Brashier

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Ashok Kumar Sharma

Armed Forces Medical College

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Sushil Sharma

Armed Forces Medical College

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Anjan Khadka

Armed Forces Medical College

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Navdeep Dahiya

Armed Forces Medical College

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Ajay Kumar Gupta

Armed Forces Medical College

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Santosh Kumar Singh

Armed Forces Medical College

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Tejus Anantharamu

Armed Forces Medical College

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Amol Khanapure

Armed Forces Medical College

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Amol Vijay Khanpure

Armed Forces Medical College

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Anantharamu Tejus

Armed Forces Medical College

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