Exposure of FRTL-5 cells to iodide (I-) in excess of 3 microM suppresses the concentrative uptake of I-. The depression of I- uptake measured at the steady state is due to decrease in the rate of I- influx and not to an effect on I- efflux. Exposure to NaI is associated with decreased T4 secretion and also depressed Na+-dependent amino acid accumulation. The depression in I- and amino acid transports increases proportionately with the duration of exposure and concentration of I- used but is not associated with alterations in FRTL-5 cell cAMP levels. The I- suppression effect is blocked, however, when methimazole is present during the incubation with NaI. In agreement with studies in vivo, I- suppression in FRTL-5 cells appears to depend on an intermediate in the organification process and to be independent of a TSH-induced cAMP-mediated action.
Since Freud's time, psychoanalytically oriented therapists have been wary of accepting gifts from patients, although they have done so in some circumstances within the sanctum of their offices. After providing a working definition of the word "gift" for the purposes of this clinical discussion, the article reviews the relevant literature on the subject. The author presents clinical material in which he describes how gifts were presented by patients within the context of their treatment processes. The article concludes with the author's attempt to define some of the variables that affect the response of the therapist to a patient's gift, and expounds on those variables in terms of their influence on technique.
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