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pubmed_389_14480 | BACKGROUND
Impaired heart functions in newborns with hypothyroidism should be reversed by levothyroxine substitution therapy. The aim of the study was to investigate heart functions with congenital hypothroidism (CH) in newborns and changes after levothyroxine substitution therapy, measured with tissue Doppler echocardiography and conventional echocardiography.
METHODS
The study included 30 neonates with CH and 34 healthy controls. Echocardiography were performed at baseline, 2nd week and 6th month of therapy.
RESULTS
Heart systolic function was normal. Mitral E velocities and mitral E/A ratios were significantly lower in patients at baseline. Tei indices were significantly higher in patients and a significant negative correlation was detected between free thyroxine levels and Tei indices.When early and late post-treatment echocardiography findings are compared, a non-significant difference was detected.
CONCLUSIONS
Neonates with CH may exhibit systolic and diastolic heart dysfunction, which can be reversed by early L-T4 substitution treatment. The Tei index index should be measured in addition to conventional echocardiography. | pubmed_389_14480 |
pubmed_409_4653 | Brain is not generally recognized as an organ that requires vitamin A, perhaps because no obvious histologic lesions have been observed in severely vitamin A-deficient animals. However, brain tissue does contain cellular vitamin A-binding proteins and a nuclear receptor protein for retinoic acid. In the present study, immunohistochemical techniques were used to determine the cell-specific location of cellular retinol-binding protein in human and rat brain tissue. Cellular retinol-binding protein was localized specifically within the endothelial cells of the brain microvasculature and within the cuboidal epithelial cells of the choroid plexus, two primary sites of the mammalian blood-brain barrier. In addition, autoradiographic procedures demonstrated binding sites for serum retinol-binding protein in the choroidal epithelium. These observations suggest that a significant movement of retinol across the blood-brain barrier may occur. | 10.1073/pnas.87.11.4265 |
pubmed_863_386 | Three all-female strains of the viviparous fish Poeciliopsis occur in the Río Fuerte of Sinaloa, Mexico. Poeciliopsis lucida, a bisexual species, provides sperm for these monosexual forms which I designate as Cx, Cy, and Cz. Form Cy is a triploid that when test-mated to males of various species produces all-female, triploid offspring devoid of paternal characters. Both Cx and Cz are diploid and express characteristics of both parents. | 10.1126/science.157.3796.1564 |
pubmed_787_23939 | This paper examines the performance of 13 mobile testing units (MTUs) and rapid HIV testing technology in Los Angeles County as reflected in the relationship between the cognitive strategies used by MTU staff regarding instructions to clients about picking up their test results and returning for test results, and following up with those clients who did not return, and the spatial distribution of MTUs and AIDS rates in 2003. Maps were created using geographic information systems (GIS) data on 93 MTU testing locations and 2003 AIDS cases data. MTU staff (N = 45) were interviewed and several themes were identified. MTU testing locations were clustered near high AIDS rate areas. Staff reports were obtained on 24 clients in the past 6 months who received HIV-negative test results and 24 clients during the same time period who received HIV-positive test results. Staff strategies that were used included keeping clients with them while rapid test results were being processed and adjusting to clients' schedules when arranging for picking up test results. Some staff used tangible incentives such as vouchers for area businesses to encourage preliminary HIV-positive clients to return for confirmatory test results. Staff also sought to convince clients who preliminarily tested HIV-positive to convert from anonymous to confidential testing in order to facilitate clients' linkage to treatment. The GIS findings and client risk data support the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention policy of implementing MTUs and rapid testing in large urban communities with high AIDS rates. | 10.1080/08964280903334501 |
pubmed_916_18531 | This paper is a short review of literature data and results of our own investigation into the adaptive response (AR). It was aimed at the analysis of the AR induction, its formation, some mechanisms, its expansion, and universality. It is supposed that a lot of mechanisms, a high variability degree, the absence of this phenomenon in some individuals, as well as dependence on many situations make the AR induction not predictable. Perhaps AR induction is not a universal phenomenon in practice, as it was supposed earlier. | pubmed_916_18531 |
pubmed_754_2492 | We have examined the effect of prior bronchoconstriction on the bronchial responsiveness to inhaled histamine in nine normal subjects. The airway response to increasing concentrations of histamine aerosol was assessed by measurement of specific airways conductance (sGaw) in a body plethysmograph. The threshold provocative dose of histamine needed to cause a 35% fall in starting sGaw (PD35) and the steepest slope of the response were measured from cumulative log dose response curves. Histamine challenges were performed in duplicate after premedication with 0.9% sodium chloride (control) or methacholine aerosol on separate days. The mean starting sGaw did not change significantly after inhalation of 0.9% sodium chloride but methacholine caused a mean reduction in sGaw of 42%. Mean control PD35 values did not differ significantly from mean PD35 values after methacholine. The mean steepest slope of the response after methacoline was 47% lower than the mean control value. There was a significant linear relationship between starting sGaw and the steepest slope for the control and for the methacholine premedicated challenges. The reduction in slope after methacholine was accounted for by the fall in starting sGaw. Because histamine PD35 was not altered by prior bronchoconstriction, it is concluded that the bronchial hyperresponsiveness of asthmatic subjects to non-specific bronchoconstrictor stimuli is unlikely to be a direct consequence of their low starting airway calibre. | 10.1136/thx.39.1.40 |
pubmed_533_5342 | Glioblastoma (GBM) generates a varied immune response and understanding the immune microenvironment may lead to novel immunotherapy treatments modalities. The goal of this study was to evaluate the expression of immunologic markers of potential clinical significance in primary versus recurrent GBM and assess the relationship between these markers and molecular characteristics of GBM. Human GBM samples were evaluated and analyzed with immunohistochemistry for multiple immunobiologic markers (CD3, CD8, FoxP3, CD68, CD163, PD1, PDL1, CTLA4, CD70). Immunoreactivity was analyzed using Aperio software. Degree of strong positive immunoreactivity within the tumor was compared to patient and tumor characteristics including age, gender, MGMT promoter methylation status, and ATRX, p53, and IDH1 mutation status. Additionally, the TCGA database was used to perform similar analysis of these factors in GBM using RNA-seq by expectation-maximization. Using odds ratios, IDH1 mutated GBM had statistically significant decreased expression of CD163 and CD70 and a trend for decreased PD1, CTLA4, and Foxp3. ATRX-mutated GBMs exhibited statistically significant increased CD3 immunoreactivity, while those with p53 mutations were found to have significantly increased CTLA4 immunoreactivity. The odds of having strong CD8 and CD68 reactivity was significantly less in MGMT methylated tumors. No significant difference was identified in any immune marker between the primary and recurrent GBM, nor was a significant change in immunoreactivity identified among age intervals. TCGA analysis corroborated findings related to the differential immune profile of IDH1 mutant, p53 mutant, and MGMT unmethylated tumors. Immunobiologic markers have greater association with the molecular characteristics of the tumor than with primary/recurrent status or age. | 10.1007/s11060-017-2732-1 |
pubmed_301_414 | During RNA interference (RNAi), Dicer generates short interfering RNAs (siRNAs), which then guide target mRNA cleavage by the RISC complex. Now, Liu et al. identify R2D2, a Dicer-associated protein that is important for siRNA incorporation into RISC, thus linking the initiation and execution phases of RNAi. | 10.1016/s0092-8674(03)00806-7 |
pubmed_165_11957 | The phagocytic plaque method developed for evaluation of the phagocytic function of leukocytes is not only very useful but convenient for both basic and clinical investigations. So far, only Staphylococcus aureus has been demonstrated to give clear phagocytic plaques. In this study, we successfully obtained clear phagocytic plaques with gram-negative bacilli (Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Escherichia coli). The plaques given by E. coli were morphologically nearly the same as those by S. aureus, whereas those of P. aeruginosa were elongated. | 10.3412/jsb.51.1049 |
pubmed_403_10370 | Burn injuries are severe problems for human. Accurate segmentation for burn wounds in patient surface can improve the calculation precision of %TBSA (total burn surface area), which is helpful in determining treatment plan. Recently, deep learning methods have been used to automatically segment wounds. However, owing to the difficulty of collecting relevant images as training data, those methods cannot often achieve fine segmentation. A burn image-generating framework is proposed in this paper to generate burn image datasets with annotations automatically. Those datasets can be used to increase segmentation accuracy and save the time of annotating. This paper brings forward an advanced burn image generation framework called Burn-GAN. The framework consists of four parts: Generating burn wounds based on the mainstream Style-GAN network; Fusing wounds with human skins by Color Adjusted Seamless Cloning (CASC); Simulating real burn scene in three-dimensional space; Acquiring annotated dataset through three-dimensional and local burn coordinates transformation. Using this framework, a large variety of burn image datasets can be obtained. Finally, standard metrics like precision, Pixel Accuracy (PA) and Dice Coefficient (DC) were utilized to assess the framework. With nonsaturating loss with R2 regularization (NSLR2) and CASC, the segmentation network gains the best results. The framework achieved precision at 90.75%, PA at 96.88% and improved the DC from 84.5 to 89.3%. A burn data-generating framework have been built to improve the segmentation network, which can automatically segment burn images with higher accuracy and less time than traditional methods. | 10.1093/jbcr/iraa208 |
pubmed_960_13507 | OBJECTIVES
In the present study, we evaluated functional activity of monocytes in experimental preeclampsia induced by low-dose endotoxin infusion.
STUDY DESIGN
Pregnant (n = 12) and cyclic rats (n = 12) were equipped with a permanent jugular vein cannula and infused with either low-dose endotoxin or saline. One day before the infusion, and 4, 24, 72, and 168 hours after the infusion, blood samples (400 microL) were taken and white blood cell (WBC) and differential cell counts were measured. Samples were (re)stimulated with endotoxin, and the percentage of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) producing monocytes was measured.
RESULTS
During experimental preeclampsia, monocyte TNFalpha production is persistently decreased, while total WBC and granulocyte counts are persistently increased compared with normal pregnant rats. No persistent effect of endotoxin was found in cyclic rats.
CONCLUSION
Because decreased endotoxin-induced TNFalpha production is a feature of activated monocytes, the present results indicate that monocytes are persistently activated in experimental preeclampsia. Increased WBC counts and granulocyte numbers in these rats also point to an activated inflammatory response. | 10.1016/j.ajog.2004.03.041 |
pubmed_249_10120 | A series of 2-methylbenzimidazole incorporated to different heterocycles through ethyl or carbamoylethyl groups at position 1 of benzimidazole were synthesized. Also 3-(2-methylbenzimidazol-1-yl)propanoic acid hydrazide incorporated with semicarbazides and thiosemicarbazides were prepared. Moreover, the triazole 5e underwent Michael addition and alkylation reaction. Some of the newly synthesized compounds showed considerable antimicrobial activity against gram positive, negative bacteria and yeast. | 10.1007/BF02976489 |
pubmed_39_12346 | Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are a novel family of hematopoietic effectors and regulators of innate immunity. Although these cells are morphologically similar to B cells and T cells, however they do not express antigen receptors. ILCs seems to have emerging roles in innate immune responses against infectious or non-infectious microorganisms, protection of the epithelial barrier, lymphoid organogenesis and inflammation, tissue remodeling and regulating homeostasis of tissue stromal cells. In addition, it has recently been reported that ILCs have a crucial role in several disorders such as allergy and autoimmunity. Based on their phenotype and functions, ILCs are classified into three major groups called ILCs1, ILCs2, and ILCs3. Here we reviewed the most recent data concerning diverse ILC phenotypes, subclasses, functions in immune responses as well as in immune mediated disorders. | pubmed_39_12346 |
pubmed_373_7397 | This paper introduces a new type of miniaturized coated silver-stripe reference electrode without internal solution for single use and intends to give in detail the method used to prepare a Ag/AgCl/Cl- miniaturized coated silver-stripe reference electrode of a second kind which acts as a half-cell of a sensor system measuring Ca2+ ion activity in human blood as well as the difficulties encountered. The technique described is a cost-effective and time saving method for biomedical measurement. | 10.1016/s1350-4533(96)00034-3 |
pubmed_1012_8935 | Ten adult patients with symmetrical calcifications in the bilateral basal ganglia (diagnosed as physiological calcifications) were analyzed for lymphocyte subsets and cytokines. Increased number of natural killer (NK) cells were identified in the peripheral blood of seven patients by lymphocyte subset analysis. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha was detected in the sera of five patients and interferon-gamma was detected in one patient. In summary, NK cell propagation and circulating cytokines, particularly tumor necrosis factor-alpha, may be involved in the etiology of basal ganglia calcification. | 10.1046/j.1468-1331.2002.00449.x |
pubmed_222_3445 | Compared to asymptomatic stenoses, asymptomatic carotid artery stenoses are associated with a relatively low risk of ipsilateral cerebral infarction: approximately 2% per year for stenoses reducing the diameter of the arterial lumen by 60% or more. The benefit of surgery is therefore limited. In the ACAS study, the risk of ipsilateral cerebral infarction was reduced by 50% by surgery, which corresponds to an absolute reduction of the risk of only 1% per year. Carotid endarterectomy should therefore be reserved for patients presumed to be at greater risk of cerebral infarction (stenosis greater than 80%, haemodynamic repercussions), provided that the patient's age and life expectancy are compatible with long-term prevention and that this treatment can be conducted at a low risk. In every case, the patient must be precisely informed about the expected benefits and risks of this operation. | pubmed_222_3445 |
pubmed_553_13053 | Electromyographic activity in six pregnant cynomolgus monkeys was recorded in vivo by means of bipolar electrodes individually attached to the surface of the uterine corpus. These data were compared with recordings of intra-amniotic pressure obtained simultaneously by means of an open-ended, fluid-filled catheter placed in the amniotic cavity. During the last third of pregnancy, the electromyograms showed recurrent electrical complexes (trains of potentials, TOP) which lasted for about 2 minutes and whose rate of occurrence varied during the nyctohemeral period. The initiation of electrical activity in various uterine areas was always synchronous with and was related to mechanical contraction. The complex, polyphasic contractions that were observed can be explained, largely, by the variations of potentials within a train of potentials. However, a simple quantitative relationship between the mean frequency of the potentials within the TOP and the mean amplitude of the change in pressure could not be demonstrated. In contrast to data available on the woman, the increase in contractile strength at the onset of labor in the macaque appears to be due to a higher frequency of excitation of individual cells rather than the result of an improved functional coordination between the active muscular elements. | 10.1016/0002-9378(82)90753-0 |
pubmed_539_3039 | Despite advances in our understanding of the nature of anxiety-related responding during periods of elevated bodily arousal, it is not necessarily evident by what psychological mechanisms anxiety is produced and maintained. To address this issue, researchers have increasingly employed biological challenge procedures to examine how psychological factors affect anxious responding during elevated bodily arousal. Of the challenging procedures, hyperventilation and inhalations of carbon dioxide-enriched air have been among the most frequently employed, and a relatively large body of literature using these procedures has now accumulated. Unfortunately, existing reviews do not comprehensively examine findings from hyperventilation and inhalations of carbon dioxide studies, and only rarely the methodological issues specific to these studies. To address these issues, we review the voluntary hyperventilation and carbon dioxide-enriched air literature in order to identify the primary methodological issues/limitations of this research and address the extent to which psychological variables influence anxious responding to such challenges. Overall, we conclude challenge research is a promising paradigm to examine the influence of psychological variables in anxious responding, and that such work will likely be enhanced with greater attention to psychological process issues. | 10.1016/s0272-7358(99)00053-7 |
pubmed_545_21393 | BACKGROUND
Stunting at birth is a chronic form of undernutrition majorly attributable to poor prenatal nutrition, which could persist in children's later life and impact their physical and cognitive health. Although multiple studies have been conducted in Ethiopia to show the magnitude of stunting and factors, all are concentrated on children aged between 6 to 59 months. Therefore, this study was done to determine the prevalence and associated factors of stunting at birth among newborns delivered at the University of Gondar Comprehensive Specialized Referral Hospital, Northwest, Ethiopia.
METHODS
An institution-based cross-sectional study was conducted from February 26th to April 25th/2020. A systematic random sampling technique was used, to select a total of 422 newborn-mother pairs. The binary logistic regression was employed to identify factors associated with stunting and all independent variables were entered into the multivariable logistic regression model to adjust for confounders. Variables that had significant association were identified based on p-value < 0.05 and the adjusted odds ratio with its respective 95% confidence interval was applied to determine the strength as well as the direction of the association.
RESULTS
About 30.5% (95% CI: 26.3%, 35.1%) of newborns were stunted at birth. Being male [Adjusted odds ratio (AOR) = 2.9(1.62, 5.21)], newborns conceived in Kiremt(rainy season) [AOR = 2.7(1.49, 4.97)], being low birth weight [AOR = 3.1(1.64, 6.06)] were factors associated with stunting at birth. Likewise, newborns born to short stature mothers [AOR = 2.8(1.21, 6.62)] and chronically malnourished mothers [AOR = 15.3(8.12, 29.1)] were at greater risk of being stunted.
CONCLUSION
Just under a third of newborns are stunted at birth, implying a pressing public health problem. Newborns born to chronically malnourished and short stature mothers were more stunted. Besides, stunting was prevalently observed among male neonates, newborns conceived in Kiremet, and being low birth weight. Thus, policymakers and nutrition programmers should work on preventing maternal undernutrition through nutrition education to reduce the burden of low birth weight and stunting. Further, paying due attention to newborns conceived in Kiremet season to improve nutritional status is recommended. | 10.1371/journal.pone.0245528 |
pubmed_803_9465 | Adult mouse hepatocytes respond in vivo to experimentally induced acute inflammation by an increased synthesis and secretion of alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, haptoglobin, hemopexin, and serum amyloid A. Concurrently, the production of albumin and apolipoprotein A-1 is reduced. To define possible mediators of this response and to study their action in tissue culture, we established primary cultures of hepatocytes. Various hormones and factors that have been proposed to regulate the hepatic acute phase reaction were tested for their ability to modulate the expression of plasma proteins in these cells. Acute phase plasma and conditioned medium from activated monocytes influenced the production of most acute phase plasma proteins, and the regulation appears to occur at the level of functional mRNA. Purified hormones produced a significant anabolic response in only a few cases: dexamethasone was found to be effective in maintaining differentiated expression of the cells; and glucagon produced a specific inhibition of haptoglobin synthesis. When cells were treated with a combination of conditioned monocyte medium and dexamethasone, secretion of proteins was markedly reduced. The carbohydrate moieties of all plasma glycoproteins were incompletely modified, apparently as a result of decreased intracellular transport of newly synthesized plasma proteins. Although primary hepatocytes were not phenotypically stable in tissue culture, the cells nevertheless retained a broad response spectrum to exogenous signals. We propose this as a useful system to study the production of plasma proteins and thereby pinpoint the nature and activity of effectors mediating the hepatic acute phase reaction. | 10.1083/jcb.97.3.866 |
pubmed_167_6763 | BACKGROUND
Nephrotic syndrome is a common nephrology disorder in children that can affect the quality of health of children and adolescents significantly. Training children with nephrotic syndrome with special emphasis on the use of blended training can provide new opportunities for improving the quality of life of these subjects. The present study was conducted in order to investigate the effect of blended training on quality of life in children with nephrotic syndrome.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The present non-randomized clinical trial was carried out, in a time period from January 2012 to June 2013, on 76 children aged 8-12 years with nephrotic syndrome; the subjects were through continuous sampling. The intervention group subjects were selected from the Ali Asghar and Pediatric Medical Centers and the control group subjects were selected from the Mofid Hospital of Tehran. The control group received only previous routine interventions, but the intervention group, in addition to previous routine interventions, received part of the training for nephrotic syndrome. The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ 4.0 (generic core scales) questionnaire was implemented in the present study. Collected data were analyzed by the SPSS 21; t-test and paired t-test were used to compare the mean scores of the two groups.
RESULTS
There was no significant difference between the two groups in terms of quality of life before intervention; but, the quality of life of the intervention group increased to the control group after intervention (P-value < 0.001).
CONCLUSION
Blended training can improve the quality of life of children with chronic diseases. Therefore, it is recommended to carry out educational intervention for parents of these children in order to increase their coping skills. | 10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_176_18 |
pubmed_545_15185 | Genotoxic insult causes nuclear and mitochondrial DNA damages with macroautophagy/autophagy induction. The role of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage in the requirement of autophagy for nuclear DNA (nDNA) stability is unclear. Using site-specific DNA damage approaches, we show that specific nDNA damage alone does not require autophagy for repair unless in the presence of mtDNA damage. We provide evidence that after IR exposure-induced mtDNA and nDNA damages, autophagy suppression causes non-apoptotic mitochondrial permeability, by which mitochondrial ENDOG (endonuclease G) is released and translocated to nuclei to sustain nDNA damage in a TET (tet methylcytosine dioxygenase)-dependent manner. Furthermore, blocking lysosome function is sufficient to increase the amount of mtDNA leakage to the cytosol, accompanied by ENDOG-free mitochondrial puncta formation with concurrent ENDOG nuclear accumulation. We proposed that autophagy eliminates the mitochondria specified by mtDNA damage-driven mitochondrial permeability to prevent ENDOG-mediated genome instability. Finally, we showed that HBx, a hepatitis B viral protein capable of suppressing autophagy, also causes mitochondrial permeability-dependent ENDOG mis-localization in nuclei and is linked to hepatitis B virus (HBV)-mediated hepatocellular carcinoma development.Abbreviations: 3-MA: 3-methyladenine; 5-hmC: 5-hydroxymethylcytosine; ACTB: actin beta; ATG5: autophagy related 5; ATM: ATM serine/threonine kinase; DFFB/CAD: DNA fragmentation factor subunit beta; cmtDNA: cytosolic mitochondrial DNA; ConA: concanamycin A; CQ: chloroquine; CsA: cyclosporin A; Dox: doxycycline; DSB: double-strand break; ENDOG: endonuclease G; GFP: green fluorescent protein; Gy: gray; H2AX: H2A.X variant histone; HBV: hepatitis B virus; HBx: hepatitis B virus X protein; HCC: hepatocellular carcinoma; I-PpoI: intron-encoded endonuclease; IR: ionizing radiation; MAP1LC3/LC3: microtubule associated protein 1 light chain 3; MOMP: mitochondrial outer membrane permeability; mPTP: mitochondrial permeability transition pore; mtDNA: mitochondrial DNA; nDNA: nuclear DNA; 4-OHT: 4-hydroxytamoxifen; rDNA: ribosomal DNA; ROS: reactive oxygen species; SQSTM1/p62: sequestosome 1; TET: tet methylcytosine dioxygenase; TFAM: transcription factor A, mitochondrial; TOMM20: translocase of outer mitochondrial membrane 20; VDAC: voltage dependent anion channel. | 10.1080/15548627.2021.1874209 |
pubmed_415_22397 | We developed a detailed, whole-body physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling tool for calculating the distribution of pharmaceutical agents in the various tissues and organs of a human or animal as a function of time. Ordinary differential equations (ODEs) represent the circulation of body fluids through organs and tissues at the macroscopic level, and the biological transport mechanisms and biotransformations within cells and their organelles at the molecular scale. Each major organ in the body is modeled as composed of one or more tissues. Tissues are made up of cells and fluid spaces. The model accounts for the circulation of arterial and venous blood as well as lymph. Since its development was fueled by the need to accurately predict the pharmacokinetic properties of imaging agents, BioDMET is more complex than most PBPK models. The anatomical details of the model are important for the imaging simulation endpoints. Model complexity has also been crucial for quickly adapting the tool to different problems without the need to generate a new model for every problem. When simpler models are preferred, the non-critical compartments can be dynamically collapsed to reduce unnecessary complexity. BioDMET has been used for imaging feasibility calculations in oncology, neurology, cardiology, and diabetes. For this purpose, the time concentration data generated by the model is inputted into a physics-based image simulator to establish imageability criteria. These are then used to define agent and physiology property ranges required for successful imaging. BioDMET has lately been adapted to aid the development of antimicrobial therapeutics. Given a range of built-in features and its inherent flexibility to customization, the model can be used to study a variety of pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic problems such as the effects of inter-individual differences and disease-states on drug pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, dosing optimization, and inter-species scaling. While developing a tool to aid imaging agent and drug development, we aimed at accelerating the acceptance and broad use of PBPK modeling by providing a free mechanistic PBPK software that is user friendly, easy to adapt to a wide range of problems even by non-programmers, provided with ready-to-use parameterized models and benchmarking data collected from the peer-reviewed literature. | 10.1007/s10928-011-9229-x |
pubmed_1105_13539 | 8-Oxo-8H-acenaphtho[1,2-b]pyrrole-9-carboxylic acid esters and derivatives were prepared and evaluated for cytotoxicity against A549 and P388 cell lines. Based on a novel chromophore precursor 8-oxo-8H-acenaphtho[1,2-b]pyrrol-9-carbonitrile 1, the very insoluble 1 was converted to more soluble esters 5 and a series of 3-amino derivatives from 5 were obtained by mild S(N)Ar(H) reaction between 5 and various amines. The biological evaluation indicated that methyl esters 5a are the most cytotoxic with IC(50) values of 0.45 and 0.80 microM (against A549 and P388, respectively) among the parent esters 5a-5f, but 3-amino derivatives 4b and 4c of 5f with bromine showed the highest activity (with IC(50) values of 0.019-0.60 microM) among the 3-amino derivatives. | 10.1016/j.bmc.2006.02.016 |
pubmed_690_20036 | Olfactory function, assessed by the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test, was normal in essential tremor (ET) patients and significantly reduced in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). This finding further supports a lack of association between ET and PD. | 10.1212/wnl.42.8.1631 |
pubmed_14_8155 | This study investigates how PM2.5 varies spatially and how these spatial characteristics can be used to identify potential monitoring sites that are most representative of the overall ambient exposures to PM2.5 among susceptible populations in the Seattle, WA, area. Data collected at outdoor sites at the homes of participants of a large exposure assessment study were used in this study. Harvard impactors (HIs) were used at 40 outdoor sites throughout the Seattle metropolitan area. Up to six sites at a time were monitored for 10 consecutive 24-hr average periods. A fixed-effect analysis of variance (ANOVA) model that included date and location effects was used to analyze the spatial variability of outdoor PM2.5 concentrations. Both date and location effects were shown to be highly significant, explaining 92% of the variability in outdoor PM2.5 measurements. The day-to-day variability was 10 times higher than the spatial variability between sites. The site mean square was more than twice the error mean square, showing that differences between sites, while modest, are potentially an important contribution to measurement error. Variances of the model residuals and site effects were examined against spatial characteristics of the monitoring sites. The spatial characteristics included elevation, distance from arterials, and distance from major PM2.5 point sources. Results showed that the most representative PM2.5 sites were located at elevations of 80-120 m above sea level, and at distances of 100-300 m from the nearest arterial road. Location relative to industrial PM2.5 sources is not a significant predictor of residential outdoor PM2.5 measurements. Additionally, for sites to be representative of the average population exposures to PM2.5 among those highly susceptible to the health effects of PM2.5, areas of high elderly population density were considered. These representative spatial characteristics were used as multiple, overlapping criteria in a Geographic Information System (GIS) analysis to determine where the most representative sites are located. | 10.1080/10473289.2002.10470778 |
pubmed_1094_1017 | Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease whose main feature is persistent joint inflammation. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) play critical roles in the activation of innate and adaptive immune responses, and influence the activity of NFκB, a key player in chronic inflammation. We aimed at investigating the association of TLR allelic variants with susceptibility and severity of RA through a systematic, high-throughput, analysis of TLR genes. All coding exons and flanking regions of nine members of the TLR family (TLR1-9) were analyzed in 66 patients with RA and 30 healthy controls by next generation sequencing. We focussed on three single allelic variants, N248S in TLR1, Q11L in TLR7 and M1V in TLR8 based on the allelic frequencies in both patient and control populations, the predicted impact on protein function and the novelty in RA research. Analysis of these selected variants in a larger cohort of 402 patients with RA and in 208 controls revealed no association with susceptibility. However, the M1V allele was associated with a lower need for disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) (p=0.008) and biologic treatments (p=0.021). Functional studies showed that the M1V variant leads to a reduced production of inflammatory cytokines, IL-1β, IL-6 and TNFα, in response to TLR8 agonists. Thus, the presence of this variant confers a significant protective effect on disease severity. These results show for the first time the association between the M1V variant of TLR8 and reduced disease severity in RA, which could have prognostic value for these patients. | 10.1016/j.imlet.2017.04.011 |
pubmed_1100_6790 | A process of progressive tendon failure leads to rotator cuff rupture in a significant percentage of the ageing population but many individuals remain asymptomatic. Aetiological factors are varied and not completely understood but greater knowledge of shoulder function and mechanics allows for improved non-operative and operative management. There is a definite role for comprehensive conservative treatment of rotator cuff disorders in those cases where surgery is not clearly indicated. Successful rehabilitation depends largely on proper clinical assessment and individualized treatment. This requires a good understanding of the biomechanics of shoulder, and especially rotator cuff, function. Few recent studies have properly evaluated the results of such non-operative treatment. | 10.1093/rheumatology/33.7.663 |
pubmed_445_3053 | A gas jointer developed dermatitis from epoxy resin of Bisphenol A type. This substance penetrates plastic and rubber gloves. The man was compelled to change his job. There is a need for new types of gloves which are impermeable. The wearing of the existing types of glove by those not sensitised may be worthwhile because it probably lessens the dose of allergen absorbed and hence lessens the incidence of sensitisation. | 10.1111/j.1600-0536.1979.tb04879.x |
pubmed_1058_10400 | An SAR model for inhibition of metabolic cooperation (iMC) was developed. The structural and physicochemical features associated with the ability to cause iMC are primarily lipophilic moieties consistent with the possibility that they represent receptor-binding ligands. There are also significant parallels between the structural descriptors associated with iMC and those associated with tumor promotion and with carcinogenesis in rodents. Overall, the present study provides structural evidence that iMC is a feature associated with the carcinogenic process. | 10.1016/s0027-5107(97)00165-6 |
pubmed_339_12903 | We designed and synthesized a series of haptens to elicit catalytic antibodies with phosphatase activity against nerve agents. The design is based on the novel concept of multiple reactive immunization which aims to afford two or more catalytic residues within the antibody's binding cleft. The haptens showed the desired reactivity in vitro and were submitted for immunization. | 10.1016/s0968-0896(01)00231-0 |
pubmed_320_8741 | A small ice cap (covering about 12 square kilometers) and at least two-probably four-cirque glaciers (each covering less than 1 square kilometer) occurred on St. George Island, Pribilof Islands, probably during the Illinoian; Glaciation. Snowbanks persisted during a later cold cycle, probably during the Wisconsin Glaciation, with no glaciers existing. We found no evidence of glaciation on other Pribilof islands. | 10.1126/science.152.3720.343 |
pubmed_898_19498 | BACKGROUND
Onchocerciasis transmission across international borders is not uncommon, yet a coordinated cross border stops mass drug administration (MDA) decision has not been documented.
METHODS/PRINCIPLE FINDINGS
The Galabat-Metema focus involves neighboring districts on the border between Sudan and Ethiopia. Mass drug administration (MDA) was provided once and subsequently twice per year in this focus, with twice-per-year beginning in Ethiopia's Metema subfocus in 2016 and in the Sudan's Galabat subfocus in 2008. Ov16 ELISA-based serosurveys were conducted in 6072 children under 10 years of age in the Metema subfocus in 2014, and 3931 in the Galabat in 2015. Between 2014 and 2016, a total of 27,583 vector Simulium damnosum flies from Metema and 9,148 flies from Galabat were tested by pool screen PCR for Onchocerca volvulus O-150 DNA. Only 8 children were Ov16 seropositive (all in the Metema subfocus); all were negative by skin snip PCR. The upper limit of the 95% confidence interval (UCL) for Ov16 seropositive was <0.1% for the overall focus and 0.14 positive fly heads per 2000 (UCL = 0.39/2000). However, an entomological 'hotspot' was detected on the Wudi Gemzu river in Metema district. The hotspot was confirmed when 4 more positive fly pools were found on repeat testing in 2017 (1.04 L3/2000 flies (UCL = 2.26/2000). Information exchange between the two countries led to stopping MDA in a coordinated fashion in 2018, with the exception of the hotspot at Wudi Gemzu, where MDA with ivermectin was increased to every three months to hasten interruption of transmission.
CONCLUSION
Coordinated stop MDA decisions were made by Sudan and Ethiopia based on data satisfying the World Health Organization's criteria for interruption of onchocerciasis transmission. Definitions of entomological 'hotspots' and buffer zones around the focus are proposed. | 10.1371/journal.pntd.0007830 |
pubmed_1026_5568 | In a special issue that focuses on complex presentations related to Autism, we ask the question in this editorial whether an Autism Spectrum Condition without complexity is a disorder, or whether it represents human diversity? Much research into Autism Spectrum Conditions (ASCs) over the years has focused on comparisons between neuro-typical people and people with Autism Spectrum Conditions. These comparisons have tended to draw attention to 'deficits' in cognitive abilities and descriptions of behaviours that are characterised as unwanted. Not surprisingly, this is reflected in the classification systems from the World Health Organisation and the American Psychiatric Association. Public opinion about ASC may be influenced by presentations in the media of those with ASC who also have intellectual disability. Given that diagnostic systems are intended to help us better understand conditions in order to seek improved outcomes, we propose a more constructive approach to descriptions that uses more positive language, and balances descriptions of deficits with research finding of strengths and differences. We propose that this will be more helpful to individuals on the Autism Spectrum, both in terms of individual self-view, but also in terms of how society views Autism Spectrum Conditions more positively. Commentary has also been made on guidance that has been adjusted for people with ASC in relation to the current COVID-19 pandemic. | 10.3390/medicina56050233 |
pubmed_460_23483 | The AMIA 2003 Spring Congress entitled "Bridging the Digital Divide: Informatics and Vulnerable Populations" convened 178 experts including medical informaticians, health care professionals, government leaders, policy makers, researchers, health care industry leaders, consumer advocates, and others specializing in health care provision to underserved populations. The primary objective of this working congress was to develop a framework for a national agenda in information and communication technology to enhance the health and health care of underserved populations. Discussions during four tracks addressed issues and trends in information and communication technologies for underserved populations, strategies learned from successful programs, evaluation methodologies for measuring the impact of informatics, and dissemination of information for replication of successful programs. Each track addressed current status, ideal state, barriers, strategies, and recommendations. Recommendations of the breakout sessions were summarized under the overarching themes of Policy, Funding, Research, and Education and Training. The general recommendations emphasized four key themes: revision in payment and reimbursement policies, integration of health care standards, partnerships as the key to success, and broad dissemination of findings including specific feedback to target populations and other key stakeholders. | 10.1197/jamia.M1535 |
pubmed_132_11238 | Graduation rates in drug courts average 50% to 70%, but it is unclear what proportion of graduates responded to the drug court services and what proportion might not have had serious drug problems upon entry. This study cluster-analyzed urine drug screen results during the first 14 weeks of treatment on 284 participants from three misdemeanor drug courts. A four-cluster solution (R(2) > .75) produced distinct subgroups characterized by (1) consistently drug-negative urine specimens (34% of the sample), (2) consistently drug-positive specimens (21%), (3) consistently missed urine specimens (26%), and (4) urine specimens that began as drug-positive but became progressively drug-negative over time (19%). These data suggest that approximately one-third of the participants might not have had serious drug problems upon entry. Approximately one-fifth appeared to respond to drug court services, and nearly one-half continued to exhibit problems after 14 weeks. Implications for adaptive programming in drug courts are discussed. | 10.1177/0093854809331547 |
pubmed_609_6550 | Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is an angiogenic protein which acts on both endothelial and trophoblast cells. In first trimester placenta, VEGF immunoreactive protein was detected in cytotrophoblast shell suggesting a role in the regulation of cytotrophoblast growth and differentiation as they also expressed VEGF receptor (flt-1) protein. VEGF and flt-1 immunoreactive proteins were expressed in Hofbauer cells within the villous mesenchyme, macrophages and in maternal decidual cells while weak VEGF immunoreactive protein was seen in syncytiotrophoblast surrounding the placental villi in first and second trimester placentae. At term, there was relatively weak VEGF and flt-1 immunostaining in the syncytiotrophoblast while intense VEGF immunostaining was seen in the Hofbauer and maternal decidual cells. Extravillous trophoblast showed immunostaining for flt-1 but no staining for VEGF. Both amnion and chorion expressed strong VEGF immunoreactivity throughout gestation. Smooth muscle cells surrounding the vein and arteries of the umbilical cord showed weak VEGF immunoreactivity while no immunoreactivity was localised in endothelial cells. VEGF stimulated parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) release (mean (+/- SD): basal, 0.96 +/- 0.03; 10 ng/ml VEGF165, 2.07 +/- 0.18 and 20 ng/ml VEGF165, 2.43 +/- 0.18 pmol/l/well of PTHrP1-86) in condition medium from immortalised first trimester trophoblast cell line. These results suggest that VEGF in addition to acting as an autocrine mitogen for trophoblast proliferation may also function as a paracrine mediator of vascular tone by releasing vasorelaxants from trophoblasts. | 10.3109/08977199509036883 |
pubmed_491_25019 | Magnetism is an intriguing physical cue that can alter the behaviors of a broad range of cells. Nanocomposite scaffolds that exhibit magnetic properties are thus considered useful 3D matrix for culture of cells and their fate control in repair and regeneration processes. Here we produced magnetic nanocomposite scaffolds made of magnetite nanoparticles (MNPs) and polycaprolactone (PCL), and the effects of the scaffolds on the adhesion, growth, migration and odontogenic differentiation of human dental pulp cells (HDPCs) were investigated. Furthermore, the associated signaling pathways were examined in order to elucidate the molecular mechanisms in the cellular events. The magnetic scaffolds incorporated with MNPs at varying concentrations (up to 10%wt) supported cellular adhesion and multiplication over 2 weeks, showing good viability. The cellular constructs in the nanocomposite scaffolds played significant roles in the stimulation of adhesion, migration and odontogenesis of HDPCs. Cells were shown to adhere to substantially higher number when affected by the magnetic scaffolds. Cell migration tested by in vitro wound closure model was significantly enhanced by the magnetic scaffolds. Furthermore, odontogenic differentiation of HDPCs, as assessed by the alkaline phosphatase activity, mRNA expressions of odontogenic markers (DMP-1, DSPP,osteocalcin, and ostepontin), and alizarin red staining, was significantly stimulated by the magnetic scaffolds. Signal transduction was analyzed by RT-PCR, Western blotting, and confocal microscopy. The magnetic scaffolds upregulated the integrin subunits (α1, α2, β1 and β3) and activated downstream pathways, such as FAK, paxillin, p38, ERK MAPK, and NF-κB. The current study reports for the first time the significant impact of magnetic scaffolds in stimulating HDPC behaviors, including cell migration and odontogenesis, implying the potential usefulness of the magnetic scaffolds for dentin-pulp tissue engineering. | 10.1371/journal.pone.0138614 |
pubmed_178_8788 | The involvement of the septum in central dopamine-acetylcholine (DA-ACh) interactions was investigated by analysis of the behavioural effects of intracerebrally injected drugs in cats pretreated with morphine (5 mg/kg, IP). The intracerebrally evoked effects on the morphine-induced behaviour were analyzed both quantitatively (changes in the incidence of locomotor patterns) and qualitatively (changes in the stereotyped nature of the behaviour patterns). Activation of a particular subclass of dopamine receptors (DAi receptors) within the septum by means of the DAi agonist (3,4-dihydroxyphenylamino)-2-imidazoline (DPI) suppressed the effect of intraseptal injections of the cholinergic agonist carbachol. Simultaneous activation of the DAi receptors within the septum and those within the caudate nucleus produced an effect characteristics of activation of septal DAi receptors; the effect characteristic of activation of caudate DAi receptors was suppressed. Analogous results were obtained when the DAi receptors within the septum and those within the caudate nucleus were simultaneously inhibited by the DAI antagonist ergometrine. Finally, it was found that the effect of intraseptal injections of the cholinergic agonist carbachol was suppressed by inhibition of the DAi receptors within the caudate nucleus. In the latter case, the effect characteristic of inhibition of caudate DAi receptors was also suppressed. The present results indicate the existence of interactions between (1) septal ACh activity and septal DAi activity, (2) septal DAi activity and caudate DAi activity, and (3) septal ACh activity . A mechanism of action for the observed interactions is discussed. | 10.1016/0091-3057(83)90020-5 |
pubmed_569_21249 | Of identified genetic variants, HLA polymorphisms confer the greatest risk for developing autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis (HLA-DRB1*04). There are strong influences of HLA polymorphisms on cell type-specific gene expression in B cells and monocytes. Their influence on gene expression in CD4(+) T cells is not known. We determined transcript and proteins levels of target genes in lymphocyte/monocyte subsets in healthy controls and rheumatoid arthritis subjects as a function of HLA-DRB1*04 haplotype. We identified gene expression dependent on HLA-DRB1*04 genotype in CD4(+) T cells. NF-κB activity in CD4(+) T cells was also dependent on HLA-DRB1*04 genotype, and blocking HLA-DR inhibited NF-κB activity in CD4(+) T cells and normalized gene expression, as did pharmacologic inhibition of NF-κB. We conclude that interactions between TCR and MHC class II encoded by HLA-DRB1*04 create a proinflammatory "hum" altering CD4(+) T cell phenotype. | 10.4049/jimmunol.1500267 |
pubmed_110_240 | A computational model is presented for unsteady flow through a collapsible tube with variable wall stiffness. The one-dimensional flow equations are solved for inlet, outlet and external conditions that vary with time and for a tube with time-dependent, spatially-distributed local properties. In particular, the effects of nonuniformities and local perturbations in stiffness distribution in the tube are studied. By allowing the flow to evolve in time, asymptotically steady flows are calculated. When simulating a quasi-steady reduction in downstream pressure, the model demonstrates critical transitions, the phenomena of wave-speed limitation and the sites of flow limitation. It also exhibits conditions for which viscous flow limitation occurs. Computations of rapid, unsteady changes of the exit pressure illustrate the phenomena occurring at the onset of a cough, and the generation and propagation of elastic jumps. | 10.1115/1.3108444 |
pubmed_453_21867 | The kinetics of stoichiometric (Ca/P = 1.67) and calcium-deficient (Ca/P = 1.5) hydroxyapatite formed in aqueous solution by acid-base reactions involving CaHPO4 and Ca4(PO4)2O were determined. Complete reaction occurs within 6 h at 37.4 degrees C regardless of composition with stoichiometric hydroxyapatite forming more rapidly. Stoichiometric hydroxyapatite formed more rapidly because the particle sizes of its precursors were smaller. Hydroxyapatite formation is characterized by an initial period of surface hydration of the precursors, an induction period, and a period during which the bulk of the conversion to hydroxyapatite occurs. During the first 3 h of reaction at 37.4 degrees C, the pH is about 8.25 and 7.6, respectively, as the stoichiometric and calcium-deficient hydroxyapatite are being formed. Subsequently the pH values move toward those of the related invariant points: Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2-Ca(OH)2 solution, and CaHPO4-Ca9HPO4(PO4)5OH solution. The concentrations of calcium and phosphate in solution never exceed those in serum. Seeding with 5 wt% hydroxyapatite eliminates induction regardless of composition. The kinetics are first-order and follow the Arrhenius relationship regardless of composition. The total heats of reaction (delta Hr) were determined at constant temperatures between 25 degrees C and 70 degrees C. delta Hr values of 261.3 and 320 kJ/mol were determined for the formation of calcium-deficient hydroxyapatite and stoichiometric hydroxyapatite, respectively. Activation energies of 84.5 and 87.4 kJ/mol were calculated for the formation of calcium-deficient and stoichiometric hydroxyapatite, respectively. Heats of formation for Ca4(PO4)2O and Ca9HPO4(PO4)5OH were calculated to be -4764.1 and -12707.7 kJ/mol, respectively. | 10.1002/(sici)1097-4636(19970605)35:3<299::aid-jbm4>3.0.co;2-c |
pubmed_1031_2567 | The effects of the snowdrop lectin, Galanthus nivalis agglutinin (GNA), delivered through an artificial diet, on growth, development, and life history parameters of the Mexican rice borer, Eoreuma loftini (Dyar), were evaluated in the laboratory. Incorporation of GNA at three treatment levels, 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0% of total dietary protein, in the larval diet significantly decreased larval survivorship and percentage of adults emerging relative to a control diet lacking GNA, whereas differences were not observed among the three treatment levels. Both larvae and pupae in the control were 8-25% larger than those in the GNA treatments, but differences were not observed between larvae in the GNA treatments. Furthermore, presence of GNA did not affect larval and pupal developmental periods, longevities, and fecundities compared with the control. Mexican rice borer life history parameters, such as net reproductive rate and intrinsic rate of increase, were substantially reduced by the presence of GNA in the diet, but differences were not evident among the three GNA treatment levels. | 10.1093/jee/96.3.950 |
pubmed_50_10378 | OBJECTIVES
Anxiety and adjustment disorders are among the most prevalent mental health conditions. This review focuses on γ-aminobutyric acid receptor type A (GABAAR)-mediated anxiolysis, describing the action of both endogenous and exogenous modulators of GABAAR. Future directions and innovative strategies to alleviate anxiety symptoms are discussed, with a particular emphasis on etifoxine.
METHODS
We used available data from the recent literature to update the mode of action of anxiolytics. We focussed our search on anxiolytics acting at GABAARs, as well as on the pharmacological properties of formerly and currently prescribed anxiolytics.
RESULTS
Considering the adverse effects of current treatments aimed at increasing inhibitory controls, optimisation of existing pharmacotherapies is of crucial importance. Among the alternative compounds targeting the GABAergic system, translocator protein (TSPO) ligands, such as etifoxine (EFX), which promote endogenous neurosteroidogenesis, are emerging as promising candidates for anxiety relief. In several papers comparing the efficacy of benzodiazepines and EFX, EFX showed interesting properties with limited side effects. Indeed, neurosteroids are potent GABAAR modulators with highly underrated anxiolytic properties.
CONCLUSIONS
Novel therapeutic strategies have been emerging following the recognition of neurosteroids as potent anxiolytics. Featured at the top of the list for well-tolerated anxiety relief, TSPO ligands such as etifoxine appear promising. | 10.1080/15622975.2018.1468030 |
pubmed_175_5514 | Neural networks enjoy widespread success in both research and industry and, with the advent of quantum technology, it is a crucial challenge to design quantum neural networks for fully quantum learning tasks. Here we propose a truly quantum analogue of classical neurons, which form quantum feedforward neural networks capable of universal quantum computation. We describe the efficient training of these networks using the fidelity as a cost function, providing both classical and efficient quantum implementations. Our method allows for fast optimisation with reduced memory requirements: the number of qudits required scales with only the width, allowing deep-network optimisation. We benchmark our proposal for the quantum task of learning an unknown unitary and find remarkable generalisation behaviour and a striking robustness to noisy training data. | 10.1038/s41467-020-14454-2 |
pubmed_548_21773 | Current evidence suggests that periodontal infection may aggravate diabetes control. The aim of this study was to determine the changes in the frequency with which Porphyromonas gingivalis, Tannerella forsythia, Treponema denticola and Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans were detected in patients with diabetes with the use of non-surgical therapy plus azithromycin in a randomized clinical trial. One hundred and five (105) patients with diabetes and chronic periodontitis were randomly assigned to three treatment groups: subgingival mechanical therapy with azithromycin, subgingival mechanical therapy with placebo and supragingival prophylaxis with azithromycin. Complete periodontal clinical examinations and detection of periodontal pathogens using polymerase chain reaction were carried out at baseline, 3, 6 and 9 months after periodontal therapy. The frequency with which Porphyromonas gingivalis, Treponemadenticola and Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans were detected decreased at 3 months in all groups. Tannerella forsythia increased after3 months in all groups. All organisms had similar frequencies at 9 months in all groups. Subgingival mechanical therapy with adjunctive azithromycin had no additional effect on the frequency with which the periodontal pathogens investigated were detected in patients with diabetes. | pubmed_548_21773 |
pubmed_392_20044 | On the 19th of September 2020 Ernest Rossi, my husband, professional partner, and best friend of 30 years left this mortal world. His passing was a comparatively rapid process of dissipation extended over a period of approximately six days. In addition to the complex of emotions and physical responses, I experienced grief. This grief affected me more than any prior loss or sadness in my life as my consciousness was altered into fluctuating quantum trance states characteristic of hypnosis while dancing on the spacetime continuum. As I transformed grief to peace, I utilized established "Rossi" principles as guidelines for effective therapeutic hypnosis and developing a satisfying life. In the tradition of our life together, I was the "operator" who had a subjective experience and yet, at the same time, I was also the "observer" who would watch, learn, and discover new knowledge. This paper is the emergent outpouring of the dynamic interplay between the observer and the operator, which is, therefore experiential, revealing, revelational, and numinous. | 10.1080/00029157.2021.1947768 |
pubmed_1018_14966 | BACKGROUND
Although mass screening for prostate cancer does not meet the criteria for an effective screening programme, multiphasic screening which includes PSA testing is still being carried out.
AIM
We decided to study and evaluate the usefulness of PSA testing in multiphasic health screening and at the same time establish age-specific ranges of normal PSA values in our local population.
RESULTS
Six hundred and ninety five male patients who had their PSA levels tested during a multiphasic health screening from October 1992 to August 1995 were evaluated. Abnormal PSA levels were repeated and subjected to a DRE and TRUS biopsy if they were persistently high using age-specific PSA ranges. Our results showed 14 (4.1%) out of 695 patients who had an abnormal PSA of > 4 ng/mL. compared to 19 who had abnormal PSA levels using the age-specific PSA ranges. Of the patients who were < 40 yrs of age, no further investigations were done. Amongst those 80 years and older, none had abnormal age-specific PSA rates. No prostate cancers were picked up amongst all the patients investigated. Median age specific PSA values at the 95th percentile was calculated for each age group. A rise in the median PSA values with age was also noted.
CONCLUSION
We recommend that in patients less than 40 years of age, PSA should not be carried out as the probability of prostate cancer is almost zero. Similarly, in patients who are 80 years and above and asymptomatic, such screening may not be indicated given the limited options available. Age-specific rates are a better way to reduce the negative biopsy rates in the age-groups that are amenable to curative treatment. With a local set of age-specific PSA ranges, we hope to increase the positive predictive value of PSA for prostate cancers in our local population until more specific and equally sensitive tests are made available. | pubmed_1018_14966 |
pubmed_490_25386 | The functional role(s) of peroxisomes in osteoarthritis remains unclear. We demonstrated that peroxisomal dysfunction in osteoarthritis is responsible for very-long-chain fatty acid (VLCFA) accumulation. Through gene-profiling analyses, we identified CRAT as the gene responsible for this event. CRAT expression was suppressed in osteoarthritis chondrocytes, and its knockdown yielded pathological osteoarthritic characteristics, including VLCFA accumulation, apoptosis, autophagic inhibition, and mitochondrial dysfunction. Subsequent miRNA profiling revealed that peroxisomal dysfunction upregulates miR-144-3p, which overlapped with the osteoarthritis pathological characteristics observed upon CRAT knockdown. Moreover, knocking down HIF-1α in normal chondrocytes suppressed CRAT expression while stimulating miR-144-3p. Our data indicate that deregulation of a HIF-1a:CRAT:miR-144-3p axis impairs peroxisomal function during the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis. | 10.18632/oncotarget.20615 |
pubmed_297_24161 | PURPOSE
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of a biologically active dental implant surface (treated with sandblasting and acid etching [SLA] followed by immersion in simulated body fluid [SBF]) on osseointegration.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
We randomly divided 9 healthy adult male beagles (aged 8 months; body weight, 12 kg) into 3 groups: machined, SLA, and SLA-biomineralization (SLA-Bio). Six pure titanium implants (diameter of 3.5 mm and length of 8 mm) were used in the mandible of each dog after observation of the surface morphology, as well as analysis of the composition of the surface elements by scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy. At 4, 8, and 12 weeks after implantation, animals were euthanized to collect the mandibles so that we could perform the removal torque test to evaluate the implant stability in bone and histomorphometry to analyze the implant-bone osseointegration.
RESULTS
Scanning electron microscopy results showed that uniformly distributed sponge-like structures were found on the SLA-treated surface and an apatite layer was observed on the SLA-SBF-treated surface (SLA-Bio group). In the energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy analysis, the elements titanium, oxygen, carbon, calcium, and phosphorus were found on the surfaces of the SLA-Bio group, whereas titanium was the only element found in the other groups. The removal torque test showed that the peak removal torque values of the 3 groups increased gradually with the passage of time, and the peak removal torque values of the SLA-Bio group were significantly higher than those of the other groups (P < .01) at 4, 8, and 12 weeks after implantation. Histomorphometric analysis showed that osseointegration was being enabled more rapidly in the SLA-Bio group, as well as that the mineral apposition rate and percentage of bone-to-implant contact of the SLA-Bio group were higher than those of the remaining groups at 4, 8, and 12 weeks after implantation (P < .01).
CONCLUSIONS
Treating titanium implants with SLA-SBF can improve osseointegration as well as increase the interfacial shear strength. | 10.1016/j.joms.2018.06.015 |
pubmed_372_7682 | The pandemic caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has lasted for almost 2 years. Stemming its spread has posed severe challenges for clinical virus detection. A long turnaround time, complicated operation, and low accuracy have become bottlenecks in developing detection techniques. Adopting a direct antigen detection strategy, we developed a fast-responding and quantitative capacitive aptasensor for ultratrace nucleocapsid protein detection based on a low-cost microelectrode array (MEA) chip. Employing the solid-liquid interface capacitance with a sensitivity of picofarad level, the tiny change on the MEA surface can be definitively detected. As a result, the limit of detection reaches an ultralow level of femtogram per milliliter in different matrices. Integrated with efficient microfluidic enrichment, the response time of this sensor from the sample to the result is shortened to 15 s, completely meeting the real-time detection demand. Moreover, the wide linear range of the sensor is from 10-5 to 10-2 ng/mL, and a high selectivity of 6369:1 is achieved. After application and evaluation in different environmental and body fluid matrices, this sensor and the detection method have proved to be a label-free, real-time, easy-to-operate, and specific strategy for SARS-CoV-2 screening and diagnosis. | 10.1021/acs.analchem.1c04296 |
pubmed_1001_2178 | We conducted a meta-analysis of 13 randomised clinical trials evaluating the efficacy of influenza vaccine in healthy children. Against culture-confirmed influenza the overall efficacy was 74% (95% confidence interval, CI, 57%-84%), 65% for inactivated and 80% for live-attenuated vaccine. Corresponding figures were 59% (95% CI 43%-71%), 63% and 54% for serologically-confirmed influenza, and 33% (95% CI 29%-36%), 33% and 34% for clinical illness. Influenza vaccine is effective in preventing laboratory-confirmed and clinical influenza in healthy children, with no clear difference between inactivated and live-attenuated vaccine. Data on infants and younger children were too scanty to allow separate assessment. | 10.1016/j.vaccine.2004.11.053 |
pubmed_290_13101 | Donation after circulatory death (DCD) or controlled cardiac death (Maastricht type III donors) is that in which the irreversible cessation of circulatory and respiratory function occurs after the withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies. The shortage of available donor lungs has prompted the development of programs of controlled DCD for lung transplantation. The combined thorax-abdomen extraction in these cases is carried out only in a few centers in Spain, being even more exceptional considering the combined use of super rapid lung extraction with abdominal normothermic regional perfusion. The success achieved with the first cases of combined thorax-abdomen extraction in Maastricht type III donors in Navarra shows that it is a feasible and safe procedure. | 10.1016/j.transproceed.2019.08.020 |
pubmed_710_2879 | INTRODUCTION
Nurses play an important role in caring for dying patients. However, little is known about the attitude towards death of the registered nurses in China.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
A knowledge, attitude, and the practice (KAP) survey using standardized questionnaires was conducted at eight teaching hospitals in Jiangsu Province, China. In total, 366 nursing interns were recruited and 357 turned in valid response. Data about the interns' demographic characteristics and their attitudes to death in five domains, including fear of death, death avoidance, natural acceptance, approach acceptance, and escape acceptance, were collected.
RESULTS
Compared to the norms, the nursing interns had statistically significantly higher scores in the domains death avoidance, approach acceptance, and fear of death (14.9 vs. 11.1, 26.2 vs. 24.2, and 20.3 vs. 19.0, respectively); however, statistically significantly lower scores were in the domains natural acceptance and escape acceptance (18.4 vs. 22.0, and 13.6 vs. 15.1, respectively). Religious belief, experience of a deceased relative in family, death education, and family atmosphere of discussing death are positively associated with one or more domains of attitude towards death.
CONCLUSION
The positive attitude towards death and death education before clinical practice are helpful for nursing interns when they care for dying patients. In general, the scores of attitude towards death are at a moderate level in the surveyed Chinese nursing interns. The death education for nursing students needs to be reinforced in China. | 10.1155/2019/3107692 |
pubmed_753_25176 | In electron ionization source, electrons are produced through thermionic emission by heating a wire filament, accelerating the electrons by high voltage, and ionizing the analyzed molecules. In such a system, one important parameter is the filament emission current that determines the ionization rate; therefore, one needs to regulate this current. On the one hand, fast responses control is needed to keep the emission current constant, but on the other hand, we need to protect the filament from damage that occurs by large filaments current transients and overheating. To control our filament current and emission current, we developed a digital circuit based on a digital signal processing controller that has several modes of operation. We used a smart algorithm that has a fast response to a small signal and a slow response to a large signal. In addition, we have several protective measures that prevent the current from reaching unsafe values. | 10.1063/1.3555340 |
pubmed_476_15519 | BACKGROUND
Onchocerca lupi is a filarial nematode affecting dogs, and occasionally cats and humans, in continental Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, and the USA. Adult worms are usually found in periocular nodules and enucleation is sometimes required if the infection fails to respond to other treatment options.
CASE PRESENTATION
Here, we report the presence of O. lupi in the UK for the first time. Of two dogs re-homed from continental Europe, one developed an ocular nodule seven years after arrival from Portugal. The conjunctival perilimbal mass in its left eye was surgically removed but despite anthelminthic treatment, a further nodule developed in the same eye six months later. In the second case - a dog imported from Romania 12 months earlier - a perilimbal mass was excised from the left eye and prior anthelminthic treatment was supplemented with oral prednisolone and doxycycline. However, nodules recurred, and the left globe was subsequently enucleated. Conjunctival hyperaemia then appeared in the right eye and neither additional anthelminthic treatment nor removal of worm masses failed to prevent the further development of lesions. Excised adult worms were identified in both cases as O. lupi based on morphological characteristics, as well as PCR and sequencing of cytochrome c oxidase subunit I and 12S rRNA gene fragments.
CONCLUSION
O. lupi parasitosis can apparently remain cryptic in dogs for several years before any clinical signs manifest. Moreover, the progression of infection can be highly aggressive and recalcitrant to both surgical intervention and anthelminthic treatment. Increasingly, former stray dogs of unknown infection status are entering the UK, raising both veterinary and public health concerns. | 10.1186/s12917-022-03169-9 |
pubmed_261_1127 | Tumor extracellular matrix has an abundance of cancer related proteins that can be used as biomarkers for cancer molecular imaging. Innovative design and development of safe and effective targeted contrast agents to these biomarkers would allow effective MR cancer molecular imaging with high spatial resolution. In this study, we synthesized a low molecular weight CLT1 peptide targeted Gd(III) chelate CLT1-dL-(Gd-DOTA)(4) specific to clotted plasma proteins in tumor stroma for cancer MR molecular imaging. CLT1-dL-(Gd-DOTA)(4) was synthesized by conjugating four Gd-DOTA monoamide chelates to a CLT1 peptide via generation 1 lysine dendrimer. The T(1) relaxivity of CLT1-dL-(Gd-DOTA)(4) was 40.4 mM(-1) s(-1) per molecule (10.1 mM(-1) s(-1) per Gd) at 37 °C and 1.5 T. Fluorescence imaging showed high binding specificity of CLT1 to orthotopic PC3 prostate tumor in mice. The contrast agent resulted in improved tumor contrast enhancement in male athymic nude mice bearing orthotopic PC3 prostate tumor xenograft at a dose of 0.03 mmol Gd/kg. The peptide targeted MRI contrast agent is promising for high-resolution MR molecular imaging of prostate tumor. | 10.1021/bc300009t |
pubmed_263_6086 | INTRODUCTION
Night float rotations (NF) have been developed as a means of achieving duty hour compliance among residency programs. These were initially pioneered in the late 1980s as a response to fatigue among residents. The NF experience had its genesis in work hour reform and providing hospital service moreso than education. However, as NF has become ubiquitous, it is not clear that we have adequately revisited the educational component of this experience. We systematically reviewed the literature on educational aspects of a night float experience.
METHODS
PubMed searches were conducted for the terms "night float" and "night, curriculum, residency." This yielded 320 articles. Concerning educational aspects of the NF reduced the total to 134 articles. Editorials and those concerning procedural volumes or handoffs were also excluded. Most articles used surveys as methodology, so formal statistical analysis was not possible.
RESULTS
In total, 42 independent articles were found that directly related to the educational value of NF rotations, spanning all of the medical disciplines. Each study was searched for interventions or strategies that may affect the educational value of the NF experience. These may be grouped broadly into 3 discrete categories: (1) attention to the sleep-wake cycle, (2) addition of personal to augment the experience and (3) incorporation of formal educational elements to night rotations. A summary of these strategies is presented in Table 3.
CONCLUSIONS
NF is a practical solution to the challenge of work hour restrictions in residency, and is likely to persist in the future. Some educational issues arise due to the altered physiology of a reversed sleep-wake cycle, which may be best resolved through structural limitations of the night rotations. Other deficiencies are based on lack of interactions, for which there are strategies to improving the NF educational experience. | pubmed_263_6086 |
pubmed_510_11482 | The effect of extracellular calcium on testosterone synthesis in response to luteinizing hormone (LH) or 22-hydroxycholesterol (22-OH-C) by isolated adult mouse Leydig cells was studied. Leydig cells were isolated by linear density gradient centrifugation. The cells were incubated in minimum essential medium with or without calcium (1.36 mmol/L) in an atmosphere of 95% air and 5% carbon dioxide at 37 degrees C for 3 hours with or without LH (10 ng/sample), or with or without 22-OH-C (10 mumol/L). Testosterone production in response to LH was significantly lower (P less than 0.02) in the absence of extracellular calcium and in the presence of verapamil (10 mumol/L), a calcium channel blocking agent. Extracellular calcium did not significantly (P greater than 0.05) affect testosterone production in cells incubated with 22-OH-C in either the presence or absence of LH. The results suggest that steps in steroidogenesis from 22-OH-C to testosterone are unaffected by extracellular calcium content and that extracellular calcium affects the use of intracellular cholesterol by the cholesterol side-chain cleavage enzyme. | pubmed_510_11482 |
pubmed_703_14216 | A 63-year-old woman had abnormal shadows on a chest radiograph taken on a medical examination during treatment for rheumatoid arthritis. The chest radiograph showed linear and reticular shadows and ground glass opacities in the bibasilar lung fields. Though we considered rheumatoid arthritis due to joint disorder and a positive reaction for serum anti-CCP antibody, there were no bone lesions or articular narrowing on radiographs of the fingers. We diagnosed antisynthetase syndrome after we obtained a positive reaction for serum anti-PL-7 antibody. Antisynthetase syndrome demonstrates findings similar to those of rheumatoid arthritis, and this disease should be taken into consideration if chest computed tomography demonstrates consolidation with predominant patchy and irregular bronchovascular bundle thickening with a subpleural distribution. | pubmed_703_14216 |
pubmed_837_16132 | An infectious proviral clone of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) was microinjected into the cell nucleus in six cell lines derived from caprine, ovine, bovine, or human solid tissue to study the utility of this method in effecting viral gene expression in nonlymphoid cells. Immunofluorescence assays for HIV demonstrated viral gene expression in only 5% of cells (100-200 cells per line) 24-48 h after microinjection; however, no reverse transcriptase activity was detectable, presumably due to a low level of virus release in this limited number of cells. Therefore, to indirectly assess infectious virus release, microinjected cells were cocultured with human T4 antigen-positive lymphocytes (H9) sensitive to HIV infection. Syncytia formation, electron microscopy, reverse transcriptase activity, and radioimmunoassay for HIV p24 were used to monitor viral gene expression in cocultures. HIV was efficiently recovered by cocultivating H9 with microinjected cells 48 h after microinjection, regardless of the tissue type or species of origin. H9 syncytia were visualized in some cocultures as early as day 5 but were readily apparent in all experiments on days 7-10. Syncytia induction in H9 was the earliest and most reliable indicator of infectious virus release. A recombinant construct containing a subgenomic envelope gene derived from the proviral clone of HIV was microinjected into human glioblastoma cells. Twenty-four to 48 h after manipulation, 5-20% of microinjected cells were found by immunofluorescence assay to express low levels of a putative gp120. These results suggest a possible approach to producing virus-free HIV envelope antigens in mammalian cells and may be relevant to subunit vaccine development. | 10.1089/aid.1988.4.31 |
pubmed_689_16822 | Sporothrix schenckii and related species are the agents of human and animal sporotrichosis. Routine diagnoses using classical mycological approaches are unspecific due to overlapping phenotypes. As the frequency and prevalence of sporotrichosis increases worldwide, developing specific, sensitive and cost-effective diagnostic tools is essential to understand the distribution patterns, map-affected areas and promote specific public health strategies to mitigate future outbreaks. Polymorphisms among the β-tubulin gene were exploited to speciate S. brasiliensis, S. schenckii and S. globosa in a one-tube multiplex probe-based qPCR assay. A panel of 84 Sporothrix revealed 100% specificity (AUC = 1.000, 95% CI = 0.971-1.000, p < .0001) without cross-reacting with other medically relevant fungi, human, feline or murine DNA. Speciation via multiplex qPCR matched phylogenetic identification (Kappa = 1.0; 95% CI = 1.0-1.0; very good agreement), supporting its use as a reliable alternative to DNA sequencing. Remarkably, the lower limit of detection was 3 copies of the target for all species. As a proof of concept, we used swabs of wound exudate of 70 cats suspected of sporotrichosis to reveal an overwhelming occurrence of S. brasiliensis in 69 specimens (sensitivity = 98.57%; 95%CI: 92.3-100.0 and specificity = 100%; 95% CI = 78.2-100). In comparison to culture, qPCR showed a larger area under the curve (AUC = 0.993±0.007; 95% CI = 0.944-1.000; p < .0001; Youden's index = 0.9857), supporting that qPCR is an essential tool for accurately detect Sporothrix DNA directly from clinical samples, thus accelerating the diagnosis of sporotrichosis. Moreover, our multiplex qPCR system has the potential to increase diagnostic capacity in Sporothrix-affected areas, helping the local animal health agent or veterinarian to quickly identify and isolate new cases, which will likely benefit thousands of patients infected every year worldwide. | 10.1111/tbed.14350 |
pubmed_949_6599 | The bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a protein from Chlorobium tepidum, which participates in energy transfer in green photosynthetic bacteria, has been crystallized using the sitting drop method of vapor diffusion. X-ray diffraction data collected from these crystals indicate that the crystals belong to the cubic space group P4132 with cell dimensions of a=b=c=169.5 A. A native X-ray diffraction data set has been collected to a resolution of 2.2 A. The initial solution was determined by using the molecular replacement method using the structure of the previously solved BChl a protein from Prosthecochloris aestuarii. A unique rotation and translation solution was obtained for two monomers in the asymmetric unit giving a pseudo-body centered packing. After rebuilding and refinement the model yields an R factor of 19.0%, a free R-factor of 28.3%, and good geometry with root-mean-square deviations of 0.013 A and 2.1 degrees for the bond lengths and angles, respectively. The structure of the BChl a protein from C. tepidum consists of three identical subunits related by a 3-fold axis of crystallographic symmetry. In each subunit the polypeptide backbone forms large beta-sheets and encloses a central core of seven BChl a molecules. The distances between neighboring bacteriochlorin systems within a subunit range between 4 A to 11 A and that between two bacteriochlorins from different subunits is more than 20 A. The overall structure is comparable with that of P. aestuarii but significant differences are observed for the individual bacteriochlorophyll structures. The surface of the trimer has a hydrophobic region that is modeled as the complex being a peripheral membrane protein partially embedded in the membrane. A general model is presented for the membrane organization with two of the bacteriochlorophyll structures in the membrane and transferring energy to the reaction center complex. In this model these two bacteriochlorophyll structures serve a similar role to the cofactors of integral membrane light-harvesting complexes although the protein structure surrounding the cofactors is significantly different for the BChl a protein compared with the integral membrane complexes. | 10.1006/jmbi.1997.1189 |
pubmed_217_18989 | BACKGROUND
Incidence rates of colorectal cancer (CRC) in New Zealand rank among the highest worldwide. Internationally, there has been evidence of a shift in colon cancer from left- to right-sided. The objective of this study was to determine trends in left- and right-sided colon and rectal cancers incidence by sex, age and ethnicity.
METHODS
Using datasets created by linking data from the New Zealand Cancer Registry to the census data, we analysed a total of 47,694 CRCs from 1981 to 2004. Cancers were divided into right-sided colon (cecum to the splenic flexure); left-sided colon (descending and sigmoid colon); and rectal (rectosigmoid junction and rectum).
RESULTS
Left- and right-sided colon, and rectal cancer incidence rates increased by 13-20% among men. In women, colon cancer rates increased by 25% for right-sided cancers, decreased by 8% for left-sided cancers and remained unchanged for rectal cancers. This corresponds with an increase in right-sided cancers from 57% to 65% of total colon cancers in women. The incidence of all CRCs increased at a faster rate among Māori than non-Māori.
CONCLUSION
We identified a left- to right-sided shift in colon cancer limited to women over the age of 65. While Māori trends in site distribution parallel those of their non-Māori counterparts, the rapid increase in Māori incidence rates is noteworthy. It is unclear why such shifts in CRC site distribution are occurring. | 10.1111/j.1445-2197.2011.05995.x |
pubmed_125_19721 | OBJECTIVES
Men who have sex with men (MSM) are at increased risk for STIs and mental disorders. Syndemic theory holds that psychosocial issues co-occur and interact, and thus increase sexual risk behaviour. Psychosocial issue identification, referral and management might reduce risk behaviour.
METHODS
In the syndemic-based intervention study, an open-label randomised controlled trial, MSM were enrolled at the STI outpatient clinic of the Public Health Service of Amsterdam. We screened participants using validated questionnaires on the following problem domains: alcohol and substance use, sexual compulsivity, anxiety, depression, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, alexithymia, intimate partner violence and childhood sexual abuse. Individuals were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either tailored, face-to-face feedback and help-seeking advice on mental health screening, or no feedback and no help-seeking advice. Participants were followed trimonthly for a year. The primary outcomes were self-reported and confirmed help-seeking behaviour.
RESULTS
We included 155 MSM: 76 in the intervention group and 79 in the control group. At inclusion, 128 participants (83.1%) scored positive in at least one problem domain. We found no significant differences in self-reported or confirmed help-seeking behaviour between the intervention and the control group: 41% vs 29% (p=0.14) and 28% vs 22% (p=0.44), respectively. There were also no differences in STI incidence and condomless anal sex acts between the two groups.
CONCLUSION
Screening showed high prevalence of problems related to mental health and substance use, while tailored feedback, advice and referral did not significantly increase help-seeking behaviour. Other interventions are needed to tackle the high burden of mental disorders among MSM.
TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER
NCT02859935. | 10.1136/sextrans-2020-054438 |
pubmed_403_1707 | Natural killer (NK) cells are innate lymphocytes with the capacity to elicit adaptive features, including clonal expansion and immunological memory. Because signal transducer and activator of transcription 5 (STAT5) is essential for NK cell development, the roles of this transcription factor and its upstream cytokines interleukin-2 (IL-2) and IL-15 during infection have not been carefully investigated. In this study, we investigate how STAT5 regulates transcription during viral infection. We demonstrate that STAT5 is induced in NK cells by IL-12 and STAT4 early after infection and that partial STAT5 deficiency results in a defective capacity of NK cells to generate long-lived memory cells. Furthermore, we find a functional dichotomy of IL-2 and IL-15 signaling outputs during viral infection, whereby both cytokines drive clonal expansion, but only IL-15 is required for memory NK cell survival. We thus highlight a role for STAT5 signaling in promoting an optimal anti-viral NK cell response. | 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.108498 |
pubmed_692_12420 | BACKGROUND
Age-related balance impairments, particularly in mediolateral direction (ML) may cause falls. Sufficiently sensitive and reliable ML balance tests are, however, lacking. This study is aimed to determine (1) the effect of age on and (2) the reliability of ML balance performance using Center of Mass (CoM) tracking.
METHODS
Balance performance of 19 young (26±3 years) and 19 older (72±5 years) adults on ML-CoM tracking tasks was compared. Subjects tracked predictable and unpredictable target displacements at increasing frequencies with their CoM by shifting their weight sideward. Phase-shift (response delay) and gain (amplitude difference) between the CoM and target in the frequency domain were used to quantify performance. Thirteen older and all young adults were reassessed to determine reliability of balance performance measures. In addition, all older adults performed a series of clinical balance tests and conventional posturography was done in a sub-sample.
RESULTS
Phase-shift and gain dropped below pre-determined thresholds (-90 degrees and 0.5) at lower frequencies in the older adults and were even lower below these frequencies than in young adults. Performance measures showed good to excellent reliability in both groups. All clinical scores were close to the maximum and no age effect was found using posturography. ML balance performance measures exhibited small but systematic between-session differences indicative of learning.
CONCLUSIONS
The ability to accurately perform ML-CoM tracking deteriorates with age. ML-CoM tracking tasks form a reliable tool to assess ML balance in young and older adults and are more sensitive to age-related impairment than posturography and clinical tests. | 10.1371/journal.pone.0110757 |
pubmed_791_22721 | PURPOSE
Pediatric gastrostomy tubes (G-tubes) are associated with considerable utilization of healthcare resources. G-tube dislodgement can result in tract disruption and abdominal sepsis. We aimed to reduce early G-tube dislodgement by 25%.
METHODS
An interdisciplinary team convened to identify key drivers of G-tube dislodgement and implement initiatives to reduce this complication. A G-tube care bundle was implemented in 2018. Rates of early G-tube dislodgement (within 90 days of insertion) were tracked. 15 months of cases after bundle implementation were compared to 20 months of cases before implementation. Length of stay (LOS, balancing measure) and bundle compliance (process measure) were tracked.
RESULTS
G-tube dislodgements decreased 47% after bundle implementation. Overall, dislodgements after G-tube insertion decreased from 43% to 19% dislodgements per tube inserted, p = 0.004. Reductions were observed for dislodgements occurring in both the inpatient (14% vs. 1.5%) and outpatient (29% vs. 18%) settings. Median LOS was reduced from 15.3 to 7.1 days following implementation, p = 0.004. Process measures demonstrated 75% or greater compliance one year after implementation.
CONCLUSION
An interdisciplinary team using quality improvement science methodology can significantly reduce G-tube dislodgement and improve value after pediatric gastrostomy tube insertion.
TYPE OF STUDY
Longitudinal cohort study.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE
III. | 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2020.09.045 |
pubmed_418_7197 | OBJECTIVE
Yiqifumai injection is a compound Chinese medicine used to treat microcirculatory disturbance-related diseases clinically. Our previous study proved that Yiqifumai injection pretreatment inhibited lipopolysaccharide-induced venular albumin leakage in rat mesentery. This study aimed to investigate whether Yiqifumai injection attenuated cerebral microvascular hyperpermeability and corresponding contribution of its main ingredients.
METHODS
Rats were challenged by lipopolysaccharide infusion (5 mg/kg/h) for 90 minutes. Yiqifumai injection (160 mg/kg/h), Rb1 (5 mg/kg/h), Sch (2.5 mg/kg/h), and Rb1 (5 mg/kg/h) + Sch (2.5 mg/kg/h) were infused 30 minutes before (pretreatment) or after (post-treatment) lipopolysaccharide administration.
RESULTS
Both pretreatment and post-treatment with Yiqifumai injection attenuated cerebral venular albumin leakage during lipopolysaccharide infusion and cerebrovascular hyperpermeability at 72 hours after lipopolysaccharide infusion. Yiqifumai injection restrained the decreased junction protein expression, adenosine triphosphate content, and mitochondria complex I, II, IV, and V activities. Moreover, Yiqifumai injection inhibited toll-like receptor-4 expression, Src phosphorylation, and caveolin-1 expression. Its main ingredients Rb1 and Sch alone worked differently, with Rb1 being more effective for enhancing energy metabolism, while Sch attenuating toll-like receptor-4 expression and Src activation.
CONCLUSION
Yiqifumai injection exerts a protective and ameliorated effect on cerebral microvascular hyperpermeability, which is more effective than any of its ingredients, possibly due to the interaction of its main ingredients through a multi-pathway mode. | 10.1111/micc.12553 |
pubmed_99_16834 | Twenty-three isolations of Serratia spp were made from 21 horses at the University of Florida Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital between Jan 1, 1979 and July 1, 1983. Three Serratia spp were involved in single-organism and mixed infections of various tissues. Eight horses of this group died. All horses that died had massive, mixed, gram-negative infection. The other 13 responded to treatment, including systemic antibiotic therapy. Most of these horses were stressed and under antibiotic therapy prior to the time of culture. Possible nosocomial infection, variable antibiotic sensitivity, and a trend toward decreased antibiotic sensitivity after antibiotic administration were noted. | pubmed_99_16834 |
pubmed_990_16384 | BACKGROUND
The radial artery was proposed and then abandoned as a coronary artery bypass graft in the 1970s. Development of new pharmacologic antispasmodic agents and minimally traumatic harvesting techniques has led to a revival of the use of the radial artery in coronary artery bypass surgery. Usually the main reasons for the spasm are thermal injury caused by electrocautery and traumatic harvesting technique.
METHODS
In our technique an ultrasonically activated scalpel (Harmonic Scalpel; Ultracision Inc, Smithfield, RI) was used for radial artery harvesting without using hemostatic clips for vessel side branches. The patients in the study were divided into two groups of 10 patients each. In the first group radial arteries were harvested with this technique, and in the second group with hemostatic clips, scissors, and minimal electrocautery. Harvesting time, frequency of spasm, and use of hemostatic clips were compared between the two groups.
RESULTS
The Harmonic Scalpel decreased the harvesting time, frequency of spasm, and excessive use of hemostatic clips.
CONCLUSIONS
Good coagulation capacity with markedly decreased use of hemostatic clips and minimized thermal injury offers the surgeon the ability to perform less traumatic, spasm free, and rapid radial artery harvesting. | 10.1016/s0003-4975(98)00059-9 |
pubmed_200_95 | Pemphigoid vegetans is a very rare type of bullous pemphigoid which usually affects the elderly and has not been reported in children. It shows a clinical resemblance to pemphigus vegetans but has distinct histological and immunopathological features of bullous pemphigoid. A 9-year-old girl presented with recurrent purulent and verrucous vegetating lesions on her forehead, groin and vulva along with scaling, crusted, bullous and purulent lesions on the eyelids, periorbital, periauricular, perioral region and lips. She had oral lesions and a cerebriform tongue. Though she showed clinical features of pemphigus vegetans, histology revealed a subepidermal blister with the absence of acantholysis. Direct immunofluorescence studies were suggestive of bullous pemphigoid. On clinicopathological correlation, a diagnosis of pemphigoid vegetans was made. She responded well to oral corticosteroids and dapsone therapy with complete resolution of the lesions. | 10.4103/0019-5154.160534 |
pubmed_418_5448 | BACKGROUND AND AIMS
General anesthesia using agents like Desflurane or Sevoflurane are beneficial for early recovery especially for ambulatory procedures. The aim of this randomised controlled double-blind study was to compare the early recovery profiles of sevoflurane and desflurane in patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
ASA I, II patients, undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy were randomly assigned to receive desflurane (n = 30) or sevoflurane (n = 30), using Bispectral Index System (BIS) to determine the depth of anaesthesia. An independent adjudicator, who was blinded to the agent used, recorded the events during the recovery phase. The time required for extubation, eye opening, verbal response and achievement of a modified Aldrete score of 9 were recorded.
RESULTS
The time required for extubation and for eye opening was significantly shorter in the Desflurane group as compared to the Sevoflurane group [9.1 min ± 5.0 versus 12.5 min ± 7.1, P = 0.049 and 10.1 min ± 5.2 versus 6.3 min ± 4.0, P = 0.008]. Verbal Response also occurred significantly faster in the Desflurane group [12.7 min ± 5.4 versus 8.7 min ± 4.7, P = 0.002]. A significantly higher mean modified Aldrete score was seen at extubation [7.1 ± 0.6 vs 6.0 ± 0.8, P < 0.001] in the Desflurane group, which also achieved a modified Aldrete score of ≥9 significantly sooner [11.1 min ± 4.6 versus 17.8 min ± 6.9, P < 0.001] than the Sevoflurane group. The frequency of adverse effects was not significantly different in either of the groups.
CONCLUSION
The time required for early recovery from anaesthesia, was significantly shorter in the Desflurane group compared to the Sevoflurane group. | 10.4103/joacp.JOACP_375_17 |
pubmed_310_12396 | Using a recombinant retrovirus with ecotropic envelope we have achieved high efficiency of transduction of endothelial cells in the vasculature of subcutaneous xenografts arising from the co-injection of tumour cells and irradiated virus producers. We have used this experimental system to assess the efficacy of the herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase (HSV-tk)/ganciclovir (GCV) prodrug activation system in anti-vascular therapy. Treatment of KSY-1 xenografts with HSV-tk transduction in the vascular compartment with the S-phase-dependent drug GCV resulted in extensive haemorrhagic necrosis, indicative of vascular damage. Therapeutic potential in tumours with transduced endothelial cells comprising 5% or less of the total tumour mass was similar to that of tumours with HSV-tk expression in over 46% of tumour cells. GCV treatment of animals bearing MDA-MB-361 breast carcinoma, SW620 and CACO2 colon carcinomas with HSV-tk expression in the vascular compartment also resulted in reduced tumour growth. We conclude that HSV-tk/GCV prodrug activation is an effective strategy for eradicating tumour vasculature, and that direct targeting of proliferating endothelial cells in established vasculature results in reduced tumour growth. The therapeutic potential observed with the slow-growing CACO2 colon and MDA-MB-361 breast carcinomas supports the notion that anti-vascular therapy targeted at proliferating endothelium is likely to prove efficacious in human cancers that generally grow at a lower rate than experimental tumours. | 10.1038/sj.gt.3301483 |
pubmed_103_5732 | A major flaw in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) management is late diagnosis. Activity-dependent neuroprotective protein (ADNP) is a most frequent de novo mutated ASD-related gene. Functionally, ADNP protects nerve cells against electrical blockade. In mice, complete Adnp deficiency results in dysregulation of over 400 genes and failure to form a brain. Adnp haploinsufficiency results in cognitive and social deficiencies coupled to sex- and age-dependent deficits in the key microtubule and ion channel pathways. Here, collaborating with parents/caregivers globally, we discovered premature tooth eruption as a potential early diagnostic biomarker for ADNP mutation. The parents of 44/54 ADNP-mutated children reported an almost full erupted dentition by 1 year of age, including molars and only 10 of the children had teeth within the normal developmental time range. Looking at Adnp-deficient mice, by computed tomography, showed significantly smaller dental sacs and tooth buds at 5 days of age in the deficient mice compared to littermate controls. There was only trending at 2 days, implicating age-dependent dysregulation of teething in Adnp-deficient mice. Allen Atlas analysis showed Adnp expression in the jaw area. RNA sequencing (RNAseq) and gene array analysis of human ADNP-mutated lymphoblastoids, whole-mouse embryos and mouse brains identified dysregulation of bone/nervous system-controlling genes resulting from ADNP mutation/deficiency (for example, BMP1 and BMP4). AKAP6, discovered here as a major gene regulated by ADNP, also links cognition and bone maintenance. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that early primary (deciduous) teething is related to the ADNP syndrome, providing for early/simple diagnosis and paving the path to early intervention/specialized treatment plan. | 10.1038/tp.2017.27 |
pubmed_952_152 | Transplantable spontaneous mammary adenocarcinoma and sarcoma P 1798 cells were incubated with vibrio cholera neuraminidase (VCN), then fixed cells demonstrated ability to exclude trypan blue dye and to immunized animals and produce cytotoxic sera of high titers. The fixed neuramindase-treated tumor cells became non-oncogenic and protected the host against high doses of fresh untreated homologous tumors. | 10.1007/BF01922248 |
pubmed_618_5191 | Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related mortality worldwide, and more than 80% of cases are of non-small cell lung cancer. Although chemotherapy and molecularly targeted therapy may provide some benefit, there is a need for newer therapies for the treatment of patients with advanced NSCLC. Immunotherapy aims to augment the recognition of cancer as foreign, to stimulate immune responsiveness, and to relieve the inhibition of the immune response that allows tolerance to tumor survival and growth. Two immunotherapeutic approaches showing promise in NSCLC are immune checkpoint inhibition and cancer vaccination. Although currently immunotherapy does not have an established role in the treatment of NSCLC, these patients should be enrolled in formal clinical trials. | 10.4046/trd.2014.77.3.111 |
pubmed_260_1970 | BACKGROUND
If a HIV positive mother delivers in a health facility, interventions can be effected to reduce the risk of transmission of HIV to the baby The study was done to evaluate the interventions offered to HIV positive women who delivered at Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital (AKTH) Kano.
METHOD
Retrospective review of the case records of all HIV positive patients that delivered at AKTH over a 27 month period (October 2003 to December 2005) was used.
RESULTS
There were 4922 deliveries out of which 125 were HIV positive, giving a prevalence rate of 2.54%. Most (75.2%) of the patients received Nevirapine alone in labour, 20.8% received a combination of antiretroviral drugs while 4% received none because their records were not available. Majority (88%) of the patients had spontaneous vaginal delivery, 10.4% by elective CS and 1.6% by emergency CS. There was no maternal death but 3.2% of the babies were stillbirths. All the babies received a single dose of Nevirapine. Most (96%) mothers chose exclusive breast milk substitute.
CONCLUSION
HIV positive mothers need to deliver in health facilities to receive the full compliment of care they deserve. Highly Active Antiretroviral therapy (HAART) should be introduced, as it is more effective for PMTCT. | 10.4314/njm.v16i1.37278 |
pubmed_216_3200 | OBJECTIVE
The objective of this study is to determine the relationship between facility policies regarding autonomy and depression among residents of residential care/assisted living (RC/AL) facilities.
METHOD
A stratified sample of RC/AL facilities in Florida, Maryland, New Jersey, and North Carolina participated in the study. Patient characteristics for individuals 65 years and older were obtained from medical record reviews and in-person interviews. Facility administrators provided data on facility characteristics. Data on 1,098 residents were used to examine the relationship between facility policies as measured by domains of the Policy and Program Information Form and resident depressive symptoms and its factors as measured by the Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia. Generalized estimating equation regression analysis was used to examine this relationship and control for other explanatory variables and clustering.
RESULTS
Among the policy variables examined, only the degree to which residents were involved in facility administration was consistently associated with depressive symptoms. Greater resident influence over facility policies and involvement in facility administration was significantly associated with lower levels of depressive symptoms. Resident control over their daily activities, the facility's tolerance for disruptive behavior, and the extent to which facilities had formal mechanisms for defining expected behavior were not significantly associated with levels of depressive symptoms.
CONCLUSIONS
Although some facilities provide residents with opportunities to select activities or meal times, these policies were not associated with depressive symptoms. However, results are consistent with the hypothesis that resident involvement in facility administrative decision-making is associated with fewer depressive symptoms. Future research should explore the causal nature of this relationship and might provide guidance for policy and practice. | 10.1097/01.JGP.0000247163.49665.5b |
pubmed_278_4112 | OBJECTIVE
This study aimed to identify the clinical characteristics of Chinese patients with ovarian endometrioid carcinoma (EC) and clear cell carcinoma (CCC) and to assess the impact of concurrent endometriosis on this group.
METHODS
The present study reviewed the medical records of patients who received initial treatment and a postoperative pathological diagnosis of EC or CCC at our center in China between 1998 and 2018.
RESULTS
Of 211 patients, 73 had pure EC, and 91 had pure CCC, and the remaining 47 had mixed cancer. The proportion of EC and CCC remained stable over past 21 years. The proportion of EC declined with aging and the age of EC onset to incline to the young. And the age of CCC onset had two peaks, namely, 36 and 77 years. After review by the pathologist, the number of endometriosis cases found in the pathological section of the analysis increased to 114, accounting for 54% of patients. As the stage progressed, the appearance of endometriosis became increasingly scarce in pathological sections(p = 0.001). Compared with CCC, EC had a higher frequency of concurrent endometrial cancer (independent endometrial lesions) and estrogen and progesterone receptor expression(p = 0.000). And more patients were in premenopausal state in EC group(p = 0.040). In the pure group, multivariate analysis showed that correlation existed between relevance to endometriosis and worse outcomes(p = 0.041). In patients with mixed cancer, mixed endometrioid histology was associated with better survival than other subtypes, even with stage III or poorly differentiated tumors(p = 0.001).
CONCLUSIONS
CCC and EC which are common in ovarian cancer patients who have associated with endometriosis have distinct clinicopathological characteristics. Attention should be paid to ovarian cancer patients with a history of endometriosis and those with concurrent endometriosis in pathological sections. | 10.1186/s13048-021-00804-1 |
pubmed_89_9228 | OBJECTIVE
Shorter courses of intravenous antibiotics for young infants with urinary tract infection (UTI) have myriad advantages. As practice shifts toward shorter intravenous treatment courses, this study aimed to determine the safety of early intravenous-to-oral antibiotic switch and identify risk factors for bacteraemia with UTI.
METHODS
Retrospective audit of infants aged ≤90 days with a positive urine culture at a quaternary paediatric hospital over 4 years (2016-2020). Data were collected from the hospital electronic medical record and laboratory information system. Short-course intravenous antibiotic duration was defined as <48 hours for non-bacteraemic UTI and <7 days for bacteraemic UTI. Multivariate analysis was used to determine patient factors predicting bacteraemia.
RESULTS
Among 427 infants with non-bacteraemic UTI, 257 (60.2%) were treated for <48 hours. Clinicians prescribed shorter intravenous courses to infants who were female, aged >30 days, afebrile and those without bacteraemia or cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis. Treatment failure (30-day UTI recurrence) occurred in 6/451 (1.3%) infants. All had non-bacteraemic UTI and one received <48 hours of intravenous antibiotics. None had serious complications (bacteraemia, meningitis, death). Follow-up audiology occurred in 21/31 (68%) infants with cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis, and one had sensorineural hearing loss. Bacteraemia occurred in 24/451 (5.3%) infants, with 10 receiving <7 days intravenous antibiotics with no treatment failure. Fever and pyelonephritis were independent predictors of bacteraemia.
CONCLUSION
Short-course intravenous antibiotics for <48 hours for young infants with non-bacteraemic UTI should be considered, provided meningitis has been excluded. Treatment failure and serious complications were rare in young infants with UTI. | 10.1136/archdischild-2021-323554 |
pubmed_150_12547 | OBJECTIVES
Accumulating evidence implicates altered DNA methylation in psychiatric disorders, including bipolar disorder (BD) and major depressive disorder (MDD). It is not clear, however, whether these changes are causative or result from illness progression or treatment. To disentangle these possibilities we profiled genome-wide DNA methylation in well, unrelated individuals at high familial risk of mood disorder. DNA methylation was compared between individuals who subsequently developed BD or MDD [ill later (IL)] and those who remained well [well later (WL)].
METHODS
DNA methylation profiles were obtained from whole-blood samples from 22 IL and 23 WL individuals using the Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip. Differential methylation was assessed on a single-locus and regional basis. Pathway analysis was performed to assess enrichment for particular biological processes amongst nominally significantly differentially methylated loci.
RESULTS
Although no locus withstood correction for multiple testing, uncorrected P-values provided suggestive evidence for altered methylation at sites within genes previously implicated in neuropsychiatric conditions, such as Transcription Factor 4 (TCF4) and Interleukin 1 Receptor Accessory Protein-Like 1 ([IL1RAPL1]; P≤3.11×10(-5) ). Pathway analysis revealed significant enrichment for several neurologically relevant pathways and functions, including Nervous System Development and Function and Behavior; these findings withstood multiple testing correction (q≤0.05). Analysis of differentially methylated regions identified several within the major histocompatibility complex (P≤.000 479), a region previously implicated in schizophrenia and BD.
CONCLUSIONS
Our data provide provisional evidence for the involvement of altered whole-blood DNA methylation in neurologically relevant genes in the aetiology of mood disorders. These findings are convergent with the findings of genome-wide association studies. | 10.1111/bdi.12415 |
pubmed_828_12660 | Vascular smooth muscle cells maintained in normal (5.6 mm) glucose respond to insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) with increased protein synthesis but do not proliferate. In contrast, hyperglycemia alters responsiveness to IGF-I, resulting in increased SHPS-1 phosphorylation and assembly of a signaling complex that enhances MAPK and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase pathways. Hyperglycemia also reduces the basal IRS-1 concentration and IGF-I-stimulated IRS-1-linked signaling. To determine if failure to down-regulate IRS-1 alters vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) responses to IGF-I, we overexpressed IRS-1 in VSMCs maintained in high glucose. These cultures showed reduced SHPS-1 phosphorylation, transfer of SHP-2 to SHPS-1, and impaired Shc and MAPK phosphorylation and cell proliferation in response to IGF-I. In vitro studies demonstrated that SHPS-1 was a substrate for type I IGF receptor (IGF-IR) and that IRS-1 competitively inhibited SHPS-1 phosphorylation. Exposure of VSMC cultures to a peptide that inhibited IRS-1/IGF-IR interaction showed that IRS-1 binding to IGF-IR impairs SHPS-1 phosphorylation in vivo. IRS-1 also sequestered SHP-2. Expression of an IRS-1 mutant (Y1179F/Y1229F) reduced IRS-1/SHP-2 association, and exposure of cells expressing the mutant to the inhibitory peptide enhanced SHPS-1 phosphorylation and SHP-2 transfer. This result was confirmed by expressing an IRS-1 mutant that had both impaired binding to IGF-IR and to SHP-2 IGF-I increased SHPS-1 phosphorylation, SHP-2 association with SHPS-1, Shc MAPK phosphorylation, and proliferation in cells expressing the mutant. We conclude that IRS-1 is an important factor for maintaining VSMCs in the non-proliferative state and that its down-regulation is a component of the VSMC response to hyperglycemic stress that results in an enhanced response to IGF-I. | 10.1074/jbc.M109.092270 |
pubmed_428_21297 | BACKGROUND
Forty to sixty-six percent of patients resuscitated from cardiac arrest remain comatose, and historic outcome predictors are unreliable. Quantitative spectral analysis of continuous electroencephalography (cEEG) may differ between patients with good and poor outcomes.
METHODS
Consecutive patients with post-cardiac arrest hypoxic-ischemic coma undergoing cEEG were enrolled. Spectral analysis was conducted on artifact-free contiguous 5-min cEEG epochs from each hour. Whole band (1-30 Hz), delta (δ, 1-4 Hz), theta (θ, 4-8 Hz), alpha (α, 8-13 Hz), beta (β, 13-30 Hz), α/δ power ratio, percent suppression, and variability were calculated and correlated with outcome. Graphical patterns of quantitative EEG (qEEG) were described and categorized as correlating with outcome. Clinical outcome was dichotomized, with good neurologic outcome being consciousness recovery.
RESULTS
Ten subjects with a mean age = 50 yrs (range = 18-65) were analyzed. There were significant differences in total power (3.50 [3.30-4.06] vs. 0.68 [0.52-1.02], p = 0.01), alpha power (1.39 [0.66-1.79] vs 0.27 [0.17-0.48], p < 0.05), delta power (2.78 [2.21-3.01] vs 0.55 [0.38-0.83], p = 0.01), percent suppression (0.66 [0.02-2.42] vs 73.4 [48.0-97.5], p = 0.01), and multiple measures of variability between good and poor outcome patients (all values median [IQR], good vs. poor). qEEG patterns with high or increasing power or large power variability were associated with good outcome (n = 6). Patterns with consistently low or decreasing power or minimal power variability were associated with poor outcome (n = 4).
CONCLUSIONS
These preliminary results suggest qEEG metrics correlate with outcome. In some patients, qEEG patterns change over the first three days post-arrest. | 10.1007/s12028-017-0419-2 |
pubmed_244_7736 | Human granulosa cells acquired as leftover from IVF treatment can be used to study infertility problems and are a valuable tool in the research of follicle maturation and ovulation. There is a need for more defined and long-term culture protocols for studying the response of granulosa cells upon treatment with selected hormones/chemicals. In the current study, we tested the effect of adding FGF2, IGF2 and FSH into defined basal medium in order to find culture conditions that would support proliferation of cumulus and mural granulosa cells along with the expression of common granulosa cell type markers such as FSHR, AMHR2, LHR and CYP19A1. We found that FGF2, IGF2 together with FSH helped to retain granulosa cell marker expression while supporting cell survival at least for two weeks of culture. The defined serum-free culture conditions for long-term culturing will be valuable in providing new standards in the research of human granulosa cells. | 10.1016/j.mce.2020.110816 |
pubmed_602_17326 | Anxiety, shame, guilt, and depression accompany the absence or loss of urinary sphincter control at both ends of the life cycle. The economic costs are high when one reflects that incontinence limits access to child-care facilities and thus the mothers return to gainful employment. It is often the prime reason for admission to nursing home care for the grandmother. Poise and increased self-esteem go along with "being dry." Dysuria accompanying acute or interstitial cystitis also interferes with personal peace and the ability to work productively. A psychoanalytic review of developmental stages and their constellation of affects and defenses in regard to "wetness" will be discussed as well as when to refer, clarify, or make or receive a urological referral for your patient, their child, or parent. | 10.1521/jaap.32.1.21.28325 |
pubmed_715_13265 | Previous studies show that cessation of resistance training, commonly known as "detraining," is associated with strength loss, decreased neural drive, and muscular atrophy. Detraining may also increase the expression of fast muscle myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms. The present study examined the effect of detraining subsequent to resistance training on contractile performance during slow-to-medium velocity isokinetic muscle contraction vs. performance of maximal velocity "unloaded" limb movement (i.e., no external loading of the limb). Maximal knee extensor strength was measured in an isokinetic dynamometer at 30 and 240 degrees/s, and performance of maximal velocity limb movement was measured with a goniometer during maximal unloaded knee extension. Muscle cross-sectional area was determined with MRI. Electromyographic signals were measured in the quadriceps and hamstring muscles. Twitch contractions were evoked in the passive vastus lateralis muscle. MHC isoform composition was determined with SDS-PAGE. Isokinetic muscle strength increased 18% (P < 0.01) and 10% (P < 0.05) at slow and medium velocities, respectively, along with gains in muscle cross-sectional area and increased electromyogram in response to 3 mo of resistance training. After 3 mo of detraining these gains were lost, whereas in contrast maximal unloaded knee extension velocity and power increased 14% (P < 0.05) and 44% (P < 0.05), respectively. Additionally, faster muscle twitch contractile properties along with an increased and decreased amount of MHC type II and MHC type I isoforms, respectively, were observed. In conclusion, detraining subsequent to resistance training increases maximal unloaded movement speed and power in previously untrained subjects. A phenotypic shift toward faster muscle MHC isoforms (I --> IIA --> IIX) and faster electrically evoked muscle contractile properties in response to detraining may explain the present results. | 10.1152/japplphysiol.00091.2005 |
pubmed_937_15867 | Chiral organomagnesium amides (COMAs), readily prepared from dialkylmagnesiums and chiral secondary amines, can reduce trifluoromethyl ketones to form secondary alcohols with excellent enantioselectivities (up to 98:2 er) and chemical yields (typically >95% conversion, >85% isolated yields). These MPV-type reductions use an achiral hydride source, and the chiral amine is readily recovered. [reaction: see text] | 10.1021/ol026901p |
pubmed_864_13298 | OBJECTIVE
To evaluate lung function and clinical manifestations suggestive of asthma in children of mothers with a reported medical diagnosis of asthma.
METHODS
An observational cross-sectional analytical study nested in a cohort of 4,757 pregnant women. A total of 86 six-year-old children were evaluated, born to mothers with a medical diagnosis of asthma before pregnancy. Information was collected regarding clinical symptoms of atopy and respiratory diseases, as well as socioeconomic and exposure variables; the children were submitted to spirometry.
RESULTS
Spirometric alterations were observed in 30.3% of cases, with a prevalence of asthma in those who had an obstructive pattern. 9.3% of the children had a previous medical diagnosis of asthma; however, the established diagnosis based on the presence and frequency of asthma symptoms was 18.6%. Of the 86 participating children, 37.2% had a score of five or more points in the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC) questionnaire, which was associated with spirometry alterations (p=0.002). After multiple logistic regression analysis, higher paternal education, higher number of bedrooms in the family's home, and mother who did not have "wheezing" episodes during pregnancy were statistically significant as protective factors for the presence of respiratory disorder detected by spirometry.
CONCLUSIONS
The frequency of spirometry alterations in children of asthmatic mothers was high; the restrictive pattern was more often observed that the obstructive. There was a higher incidence of obstructive test results in those who presented clinical symptoms of asthma, with a higher frequency of clinical diagnosis of asthma than that found in the literature. | pubmed_864_13298 |
pubmed_669_9716 | BACKGROUND
Post-cardiac injury syndrome (PCIS) is an inflammatory condition following myocardial or pericardial damage. In response to catheter ablation, PCIS most frequently occurs after extensive radiofrequency (RF) ablation of large areas of atrial myocardium. Minor myocardial injury from right septal slow pathway ablation for atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia (AVNRT) is not an established cause of the syndrome.
CASE PRESENTATION
A 62-year-old women with a 6-year history of symptomatic narrow-complex tachycardia was referred to perform an electrophysiological study. During the procedure AVNRT was recorded and a total of two RF burns were applied to the region between the coronary sinus and the tricuspid annulus. Pericardial effusion was routinely ruled out by focused cardiac ultrasound. In the following days, the patient developed fever, elevated inflammatory and cardiac markers, new-onset pericardial effusion, characteristic ECG changes, and complained of pleuritic chest pain. An extensive workup for infectious, metabolic, rheumatologic, neoplastic, and toxic causes of pericarditis and myocarditis was unremarkable. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging showed no signs of ischemia, infiltrative disease or structural abnormalities. The patient was diagnosed with PCIS and initiated on aspirin and low-dose colchicine. At a 1-month follow-up visit the patient was free of symptoms but still had a small pericardial effusion. After three months of treatment the pericardial effusion had resolved completely.
CONCLUSIONS
Inflammatory pericardial reactions can occur after minor myocardial damage from RF ablation without involvement of structures in close proximity to the pericardium. | 10.1186/s12872-021-02436-1 |
pubmed_327_7256 | To determine whether the helmets currently used by cricket batsmen offer sufficient protection against impacts of a cricket ball, the impact absorption characteristics of six helmets were measured using the drop test at an impact velocity equivalent to a cricket ball with a release speed of 160 km x h(-1) (44.4 m x s(-1)). An accelerometer transducer attached to a 5.0 kg striker was dropped from a height of 3.14 m onto the batting helmets to measure the impact characteristics at the three different impact sites: right temple, forehead and back of the helmet. These data were further expressed as a percentage above (-) or below (+) the recommended safety standard of 300 g. The results indicate that the force absorption characteristics of the helmets showed inter- and intra-helmet variations, with 14 of the 18 impact sites (66.7%) assessed meeting the recommended safety standards. Helmets 1, 2 and 4 succeeded in meeting the safety standards at all impact sites; helmets 5 and 6 both failed at the back and forehead, while helmet 3 failed at all impact sites. These differences were due to the structure and composition of the inner protective layer of the helmets. The helmets that succeeded in meeting the standards were made with a moulded polystyrene insert, a heat-formed ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) insert, or EVA with a relatively high density that allows a minimal amount of movement of the helmet at ball impact. | 10.1080/026404100446766 |
pubmed_785_18145 | Epitaxial antiperovskite superconducting CuNNi3 thin films have been grown by chemical solution deposition. The film is a type II superconductor and shows a Tc of 3.2 K with a transition of 0.13 K. The Hc2(0) and ξ0 are estimated to be 8.1 kOe and 201 Å, respectively. | 10.1039/c4cc05281a |
pubmed_15_20597 | The human body is continuously exposed to a wide array of structurally diverse chemicals. Such exposure occurs even at the fetal stage as almost all chemicals that are present in the mother's blood can readily cross the placenta and reach the fetus. Some of these chemicals are ingested voluntarily, for example, medicines and food additives, but the vast majority are taken involuntarily, as environmental contaminants present in the air or in the occupational environment. Undoubtedly, the most important source of such chemicals is the diet, and many dietary constituents have been shown to induce many forms of toxicity including cancer (1). Exposure to chemicals is thus inevitable and unavoidable. The body cannot exploit these chemicals either to generate energy or transform them to building blocks and consequently its response is to rid itself of their presence. This chapter discusses the role of drug-metabolizing enzyme systems in this process and the effects of age. The measurement of drug-metabolizing activities is of increasing importance in the safety evaluation of drugs in humans. This chapter describes the use of alkylphenoxazone derivatives for investigating selected activities of drug-metabolizing enzymes. | 10.1385/1-59259-070-5:119 |
pubmed_543_4464 | A longitudinal human biomonitoring study has been performed in two Hungarian primary aluminium production plants that operated Söderberg cells. Carcinogen-DNA adducts have been determined by 32P-postlabelling and competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in peripheral blood lymphocytes from potroom workers and occupationally unexposed control individuals. Blood samples were collected on three occasions; the first two occasions were 1 year apart during normal operation, and the last samples were taken 6 months after close-down of aluminium production. Assays of the first set of samples demonstrated no significant difference between the control group and workers in Plant I. Workers in Plant II had significantly higher DNA adduct levels than individuals in the control group and workers in Plant I. One year later a significant elevation of DNA adducts was detected in Plant I so that values approached those seen in Plant II, which remained unchanged. In the last sample set there was no difference between former potroom workers and occupationally unexposed individuals. The results suggest that carcinogen-DNA adducts are a useful biomarker for monitoring occupational genotoxic exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and that the findings can contribute to improved health risk assessment. | 10.1016/0048-9697(95)04492-j |
pubmed_899_3164 | Despite ongoing local and international peace efforts, the Jews, Arabs, and other residents of Israel and the Palestinian territories (i.e., the West Bank and Gaza) have endured decades of political, social, and physical upheaval, with periodic eruptions of violence. It has been theorized that the psychological impact of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict extends beyond the bounds of psychiatric disorders such as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Exposure to the ongoing conflict may lead to changes in the way Israelis and Palestinians think, feel, and act; while these changes may not meet the thresholds of PTSD or depression, they nonetheless could have a strong public health impact. It is unclear whether existing studies have found associations between exposure to the conflict and nonclinical psychological outcomes. We conducted a systematic review to synthesize the empirical research on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and its psychological consequences. As a whole, the body of literature we reviewed suggests that exposure to regional political conflict and violence may have detrimental effects on psychological well-being and that these effects likely extend beyond the psychiatric disorders and symptoms most commonly studied. We found evidence that exposure to the conflict informs not only the way Israelis and Palestinians think, feel, and act but also their attitudes toward different religious and ethnic groups and their degree of support for peace or war. We also found that Palestinians may be at particularly high risk of experiencing psychological distress as a result of the conflict, though more research is needed to determine the extent to which this is due to socioeconomic stress. Our review suggests the need for more studies on the nonclinical psychological aspects of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as well as for longitudinal studies on the impact of the conflict on both Israelis and Palestinians. | 10.1177/1524838015613774 |
pubmed_861_10279 | BACKGROUND
Following abdominoperineal resection (APR) for rectal cancer, perineal wound complications are common. Omental flap creation may allow for decreased morbidity. The aim of this study was to assess wound complications in rectal cancer patients undergoing APR with and without the addition of an omental flap.
METHODS
The National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Proctectomy targeted database from 2016 to 2017 was used to identify all patients undergoing APR for rectal cancer. The primary outcomes were wound complications such as superficial site infection, deep wound infection, organ space infection, and wound dehiscence.
RESULTS
There were 3063 patients identified. One hundred seventy-three (5.6%) patients underwent APR with an omental flap repair while 2890 (94.4%) patients underwent APR without an omental flap repair. Patients in both groups were similar with regard to age, gender, body mass index, American Society of Anesthesia class, and neoadjuvant cancer treatment (all p > 0.05). Patients who underwent an omental flap repair were significantly more likely to have a postoperative organ space infection (10.4% vs. 6.5%, p = 0.04). There was no significant difference in rates of superficial site infection, deep wound infection, wound dehiscence, or reoperation between the two patient groups. In multivariable analysis, omental flap creation was independently associated with organ space infection (OR 1.72, 95%CI 1.02-2.90, p = 0.04).
CONCLUSIONS
This is the largest study to evaluate omental flap use in rectal cancer patients undergoing APR. Omental flaps are independently associated with organ space infection. | 10.1007/s00384-019-03319-w |
pubmed_1079_2273 | We evaluated both the short-and long-term efficacy of micafungin in patients with chronic pulmonary aspergillosis (CPA). We treated 26 patients with CPA, 19 with chronic necrotizing pulmonary aspergillosis (CNPA) and 7 with aspergilloma, with micafungin between February 2003 and September 2005. On completion of treatment (short-term efficacy evaluation), the efficacy rates of micafungin for CNPA and aspergilloma were 52.6% (10/19) and 71.4% (5/7), respectively, and the overall efficacy rate was 57.7% (15/26). Long-term efficacy was evaluable in 25 of 26 patients, and 15 patients, who responded favorably to micafungin, received maintenance therapy with itraconazole (200mg). In long-term efficacy evaluation, 10 patients were unchanged, but in 5 patients symptoms were exacerbated after 1.8 months (median time). This result suggests that establishing effective maintenance therapy, as well as acute-phase therapy, is important in the treatment of patients with CPA. | pubmed_1079_2273 |
pubmed_538_3129 | The study on the N and P removal and N2O release of eutrophic water body under planted float Ipomoea aquatica and Oenanthe javanica showed that planted float had a good effect on the removal of N and P from eutrophic water body. The bioaccumulation of N and P by the plants accounted for 40.32% approximately 63.87% of the N and P removal, respectively, suggesting that plant uptake was the main removal process. Within the treating period, there was a rapid and sufficient nitrification but a slow and insufficient denitrification in the planted float system, and thereby, planted float system had a high NH4+-N removal rate and NO3(-)-N accumulation. The presence of planted float reduced the release flux of N2O, which was 17.14 microg N x m(-2) x h(-1) for Ipomoea aquatica, 37.38 microg N x m(-2) x h(-1) for Oenanthe javanica, and 85.08 microg N x m(-2) x h(-1) for the control. | pubmed_538_3129 |
pubmed_756_25254 | Long interspersed nucleotide element (LINE)-1 ORF-1p is encoded by the human pro-oncogene LINE-1. It is involved in the development and progression of several human carcinomas, such as hepatocellular carcinoma and lung and breast cancers. The hepatocyte growth factor (HGF)/ETS-1 signaling pathway is involved in regulation of cancer cell proliferation, metastasis and invasion. The biological function of the interaction between LINE-1 ORF-1p and the HGF/ETS-1 signaling pathway in regulation of human breast cancer proliferation remains largely unknown. Here, we showed that LINE-1 ORF-1p enhanced ETS-1 transcriptional activity and increased expression of downstream genes of ETS-1. Interaction between ETS-1 and LINE-1 ORF-1p was identified by immunoprecipitation assays. LINE-1 ORF-1p modulated ETS-1 activity through cytoplasm/nucleus translocation and recruitment to the ETS-1 binding element in the MMP1 gene promoter. We also showed that LINE-1 ORF-1p promoted proliferation and anchorage-independent growth of MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells. By investigating a novel role of the LINE-1 ORF-1p in the HGF/ETS-1 signaling pathway and MDA-MB-231 cells, we demonstrated that LINE-1 ORF-1p may be a novel ETS-1 coactivator and molecular target for therapy of human triple negative breast cancer. | pubmed_756_25254 |
pubmed_335_25685 | Cu2O cubes, octahedra, and rhombic dodecahedra can be pseudomorphically converted into Cu crystals of corresponding shapes through reduction by ammonia borane in ethanol at 50 °C or below within 3 min, demonstrating the feasibility of making challenging polyhedral metal particles from metal oxide crystals. Hydrogen gas is also produced from ammonia borane in the process. The obtained Cu crystals have a slightly nanoporous interior. Addition of diphenylacetylene in the formation of Cu rhombic dodecahedra leads to complete stereoselective production of sterically hindered (Z)-stilbene. Semihydrogenation of other alkynes also gives pure (Z)-alkenes. Cu cubes and octahedra also showed considerable (Z)-stilbene selectivity along with minor formation of (E)-stilbene and bibenzyl as compared to CuCl2 and commercial Cu2O particles. Mechanistic studies reveal that the low binding affinity of alkenes on the rhombic dodecahedra surfaces leads to high product selectivity. These Cu crystals act as a green and low-cost catalyst for the synthesis of high-purity (Z)-alkenes. | 10.1039/c7sc05232d |
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