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pubmed_226_4341 | This article outlines a disaster medicine team response to the Texas-Mexico border during a coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) surge. The team consisted of emergency medicine attending providers, as well as a nurse practitioner and a physician assistant, who were asked to work in the intensive care unit (ICU) under the guidance of an intensivist. The article highlights the medicolegal and ethical implications of providers working outside of their designated scope of practice. A framework for future staff augmentation during a disaster is explained. | 10.1017/S1049023X22000024 |
pubmed_344_4081 | OBJECTIVE
The influences of genetic determinants on the magnitude of postprandial lipaemia are presently unclear. Here the impact of the common apolipoprotein (apo)E epsilon mutation on the postprandial triglyceride (TG) response is determined, along with an assessment of genotype penetrance according to age, body mass index and gender.
METHODS AND RESULTS
Healthy adults (n=251) underwent a postprandial investigation, in which blood samples were taken at regular intervals after a test breakfast (0 min, 49 g fat) and lunch (330 min, 29 g fat) until 480 min after the test breakfast. There was a significant impact of apoE genotype on fasting total cholesterol (TC), (P=0.027), LDL-cholesterol (LDL-C), (P=0.008), and %LDL(3) (P=0.001), with higher and lower levels in the E4 and E2 carriers respectively relative to the E3/E3 genotype. Reflective of a higher fasting TG (P=0.001), a significantly higher area under the curve for the postprandial TG response (TG AUC) was evident in the E4 carriers relative to the E3/E3 group (P=0.038). In the group as a whole, a significant age×genotype interaction was observed for fasting TC (P=0.021). In the participants>50 years there was a significant impact of genotype on TC (P=0.005), LDL-C (P=0.001) and TAG AUC (P=0.028).
CONCLUSIONS
It is possible that an exaggerated postprandial lipaemia contributes to the increased coronary heart disease risk associated with carriers of the E4 allele; an effect which is more evident in older adults. | 10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2010.06.036 |
pubmed_769_14506 | BACKGROUND
This integrative review synthesized the findings of studies to determine the uses and outcomes of guided reflection in simulation-based education (SBE) with prelicensure nursing students.
METHOD
A search of Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health (CINAHL) Plus, Education Resources Information Center (ERIC), Education Research Complete (ERC), and PsychINFO using the key words reflection, guided reflection, simulation (nursing education or nursing student), traditional, and baccalaureate identified 18 articles.
RESULTS
Findings suggest facilitation of guided reflection in SBE has a positive effect on leadership development, clinical judgment, student satisfaction, and critical thought. Development of a tool to accurately measure guided reflection is warranted.
CONCLUSION
Current evidence on the use of guided reflection in SBE calls for a major paradigm shift in higher education. Guided SBE experiences enhance participant knowledge, and guided reflection should be used as an innovative teaching strategy in SBE. [. | 10.3928/01484834-20211213-01 |
others_65_7960 | The monoamine metabolites 5-hydroxindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), homovanillic acid (HVA) and 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylethyleneglycol (MHPG) were measured on the lumbar cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 27 chronic schizophrenic patients who at some time had attempted suicide, and were compared with values from 27 chronic schizophrenic patients without a history of attempted suicide. There were no significant differences between either the violent or non-violent attempters and those without a history of attempted suicide on the mean lumbar CSF concentrations of the serotonin metabolite 5-HIAA, the dopamine metabolite HVA, or the norepinephrine metabolite MHPG. Significantly more of the suicide attempters had a previous major depressive episode, had received a course of ECT, and had significantly more psychiatric admissions than those who had never attempted suicide. © 1985, Cambridge University Press. All rights reser | 10.1017/S0033291700023618 |
pubmed_464_20727 | Starch is the most abundant glycemic carbohydrate in the human diet. Consumption of starch-rich food products that elicit high glycemic responses has been linked to the occurrence of noncommunicable diseases such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes mellitus type II. Understanding the structural features that govern starch digestibility is a prerequisite for developing strategies to mitigate any negative health implications it may have. Here, we review the aspects of the fine molecular structure that in native, gelatinized, and gelled/retrograded starch directly impact its digestibility and thus human health. We next provide an informed guidance for lowering its digestibility by using specific enzymes tailoring its molecular and three-dimensional supramolecular structure. We finally discuss in vivo studies of the glycemic responses to enzymatically modified starches and relevant food applications. Overall, structure-digestibility relationships provide opportunities for targeted modification of starch during food production and improving the nutritional profile of starchy foods. | 10.1111/1541-4337.12847 |
pubmed_1072_14354 | BACKGROUND
Equine odontoclastic tooth resorption and hypercementosis (EOTRH) is a painful and progressive dental disease that mainly affects the incisors and canine teeth of aged horses. Diagnosis is based on radiographs to detect early stages of the disease. EOTRH is probably underdiagnosed and its prevalence in Germany unknown.
OBJECTIVE
This study was performed to determine the radiological prevalence of EOTRH in a large horse population in Berlin-Brandenburg, Germany.
STUDY DESIGN
Prevalence study.
METHODS
The study population (142 horses) consisted of all horses 10 years and older that were presented at the Equine Hospital for a routine dental examination. The horses were either presented as clinical cases (CC population) or belonged to a riding school (RS population). Digital radiographs of the incisor dentition were taken and evaluated for changes related to EOTRH, leading to an overall classification for each horse.
RESULTS
The mean age of the study population was 21 years and ranged from 10 to 37 years. Overall, 94% of all horses had at least minor and 62% had moderate to severe radiological changes of the incisor teeth associated to EOTRH. No horse older than 14 years was without radiological signs of EOTRH and all horses over 28 years of age had at least moderate radiological changes of the incisor teeth.
MAIN LIMITATIONS
The clinical cases group might have a bias towards horses with existing dental problems such as EOTRH, because they were presented explicitly for dental care to a clinic.
CONCLUSION
Focusing on radiological changes, this study shows that EOTRH is a common condition of horses in Berlin-Brandenburg. With older age, disease is more frequent and radiological changes become more severe. Since no horse older than 14 years was without radiological findings, it is likely that mild changes may be associated with the normal tooth ageing process. | 10.1111/evj.12776 |
pubmed_949_14797 | Pseudomonas mendocina KR1 toluene 4-monooxygenase is a multicomponent diiron enzyme. the diiron center is contained in the tmoA polypeptide of teh hydroxylase component [alphabetagamma)2,Mr approximately 212 kDa]. Product distribution studies reveal that the natural isoform is highly specific for para hydroxylation of toluene (kcat approximately 2 s-1 with respect to an alphabetagamma promoter), o-xylene (kcat approximately 0.8 s-1), m-xylene (kcat approximately 0.6 s-1), and other aromatic hydrocarbons. This degree of regioselectivity for methylbenzenes is unmatched by numerous other oxygenase enzymes. However, during the T4MO-catalyzed oxidation of p-xylene (kcat approximately 0.4 s-1), 4-methyl benzyl alcohol is the major product, showing that the enzyme could catalyze either aromatic or benzylic hydroxylation with the appropriate substrate. Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to study the contributions of tmoA active site residues Q141, I180, and F205 to the regiospecificity. Isoforms Q141C and F205I yielded shifts of regiospecificity away from p-cresol formation, with F205I giving an approximately 5-fold increase in the percentage of m-cresol formation relative to that of the natural isoform. The kcat of purified Q141C for toluene oxidation was approximately 0.2 s-1. Isoform Q141C also functioned predominantly as an aromatic ring hydroxylase during the oxidation of p-xylene, in direct contrast to the predominant benzylic hydroxylation observed for the natural isoform, while isoform F205I gave nearly equivalent amounts of benzylic and phenolic products from p-xylene oxidation. Isoform I180F gave no substantial shift in product distributions relativeto the natural isoform for all substrates tested. Upon the basis of a proposed active site model, both Q141 anf F205 are suggested to lie in a hydrophobic region closer to the FeA iron site, while I180 will be closer to FeB. These studies reveal that changes in the hydrophobic region predicted to be nearest to FeA can influence the regiospecificity observed for toluene 4-monooxygenase. | 10.1021/bi971049t |
pubmed_508_2018 | Primary and secondary liver tumors are highly malignant with a very high morbidity and mortality. Although surgical resection is generally accepted as the mainstay of treatment, only a small number of patients are suitable for curative resection. Interventional multimodality therapies provide an alternative to liver resection with minimal morbidity and mortality and quite promising outcomes. These include transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE), percutaneous ethanol (PEI) or other injection techniques, radiofrequency ablation (RFA), microwave coagulation therapy (MCT), cryoablation and interstitial laser photocoagulation (ILP). Techniques, indications and outcomes are discussed. | pubmed_508_2018 |
pubmed_147_2535 | OBJECTIVE
To investigate the effects of pioglitazone on transforming growth factor beta1 (TGFbeta1) expression in ischemia/reperfusion injury myocardium of rats.
METHODS
Thirty SD rats were randomly divided into five groups (n = 6): ischemia/reperfusion group, pioglitazone 5 mg/(kg x d) group, pioglitazone 10 mg/(kg x d) group, pioglitazone 20 mg/(kg x d) group and pioglitazone 20 mg/(kg x d) + peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARgamma) specific antagonist GW9662 group. Left anterior descending coronary artery of rats were ligated for 30 min and reperfused for 120 min to establish the model of ischemia/reperfusion in vivo. RT-PCR was performed to detect the expression of TGFbeta1 mRNA. Western blot was performed to detect the expression of TGFbeta1 protein.
RESULTS
Myocardial apoptosis was significantly suppressed by pioglitazone. Pioglitazone upregulated TGFPbeta1 expression both in mRNA and protein level. GW9662 reversed the inhibition of myocardial apoptosis and the upregulation of TGFbeta1 expression by pioglitazone.
CONCLUSION
Pioglitazone can inhibit the myocardial apoptosis induced by ischemia/reperfusion. Pioglitazone may protect the myocardium from ischemia/reperfusion via upregulation of TGFbeta1. This protection may be mediated by PPARgamma. | pubmed_147_2535 |
pubmed_330_12889 | INTRODUCTION
Type II endoleaks occur in up to a fifth of endoluminal repairs for abdominal aortic aneurysms and are commonly treated when aortic sac expansion can be demonstrated. Technical failure is common when catheter-guided particulates or coil embolic agents are used. Presented here is a feasibility study using catheter-directed N-butyl-2-cyanoacrylate (Histoacryl, Braun, Tuttlingen, Germany) embolotherapy.
METHOD
A retrospective review of the case notes of patients undergoing embolization procedures for type II endoleaks with expanding sacs was performed from this centre's cohort of endoluminal aortic repair patients under surveillance. Data on patients with type II endoleaks who were treated with either or both cyanoacrylate and coil embolization were extracted. The outcomes were then compared.
RESULTS
In total, five cases were identified, and four of these cases had both coil and glue embolization. Technical success was defined as endoleak closure proven on follow-up computed tomographic imaging. Technical success was achieved in all four patients treated with intra-sac cyanoacrylate. One case treated initially with coil embolization was successful. All patients had a computed tomographic scan at 3 months. One minor complication occurred that resolved without treatment.
DISCUSSION
Type II endoleaks after EVAR with expanding sacs require treatment. Percutaneous catheter-directed cyanoacrylate embolization offers an alternative to coil or particulate embolization and, in this series, was found to be more likely to result in endoleak closure. | 10.1111/j.1445-2197.2009.05113.x |
pubmed_299_1088 | AIM
To investigate if the clinical outcome of intra-articular lumbar facet joint injections is affected by the therapist's attitude.
METHODS
A total of 40 patients with facet joint-associated chronic low back pain were randomly divided into two groups. All patients received computed tomography-guided, monosegmental intra-articular facet joint injections. Following the therapeutic procedure, the patients of the experimental group (EG) held a conversation with the radiologist in a comfortable atmosphere. During the dialog, the patients were encouraged to ask questions and were shown four images. The patients of the control group (CG) left the clinic without any further contact with the radiologist. Outcome was assessed using a pain-based Verbal Numeric Scale at baseline, at 1 wk and at 1, 3, and 6 mo after first treatment.
RESULTS
The patient demographics showed no differences between the groups. The patients of the EG received 57 interventional procedures in total, while the patients of the CG received 70 interventional procedures. In both groups, the pain scores decreased significantly over the entire observation period. Compared to the CG, the EG showed a statistically significant reduction of pain at 1 wk and 1 mo post-treatment, while at 3 and 6 mo after treatment, there were no significant differences between both groups.
CONCLUSION
Our results show a significant effect on pain relief during the early post-interventional period in the EG as compared to the CG. The basic principle behind the higher efficacy might be the phenomenon of hetero-suggestion. | 10.4329/wjr.v8.i6.628 |
pubmed_504_9955 | The article introduces the novel concept of "Cultural Immersion", going beyond cultural competency to immerse oneself into the local culture for sustainable community impact. | 10.7812/TPP/20.017 |
pubmed_769_15723 | BACKGROUND
Increased protein carbonylation is a hallmark of oxidative stress, protein homeostasis dysregulation and aging in the nervous system and skin. Sensory neurons interact with skin cells and are involved in skin homeostasis. We have previously reported that the 5-octanoyl salicylic acid (C8-SA), a salicylic acid derivative, increased C. elegans lifespan and delayed the accumulation of carbonylated proteins, through the stimulation of autophagy.
OBJECTIVES
In this study we aimed to investigate if C8-SA protects human sensory neurons and human skin from extrinsic oxidative stressors as an approach to delay skin aging.
METHODS
In vitro reconstituted human epidermis innervated with hiPSc-derived human sensory neurons, as well as ex vivo human organotypic full skin models were used. The fully differentiated sensory neurons were pretreated with C8-SA before oxidative stress induction. Skin explants were maintained in culture and treated topically with C8-SA before the application of urban pollutants. Carbonylated proteins were detected using amino-oxy functionalized fluorophores and quantified. Chaperone mediated autophagy was monitored with LAMP2A immunofluorescence. Inflammation, ROS detoxification and autophagy were assessed by RT-PCR.
RESULTS
C8-SA prevented the accumulation of carbonylated proteins, both in human sensory neurons and skin explants. C8-SA stimulated chaperone-mediated autophagy and modulated NRF2 antioxidant response genes, as well as catalase enzymatic activity.
CONCLUSIONS
C8-SA acts at two levels to protect skin against oxidative stress: 1) it prevents protein oxidation by stimulating endogenous antioxidant defense and 2) it increases the clearance of oxidized proteins by stimulating chaperone-mediated autophagy. These results suggest that C8-SA maintains skin health in urban polluted environments. | 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2022.01.029 |
pubmed_1061_11560 | The oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (oxiPPP) contributes to cell metabolism through not only the production of metabolic intermediates and reductive NADPH but also inhibition of LKB1-AMPK signaling by ribulose-5-phosphate (Ru-5-P), the product of the third oxiPPP enzyme 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PGD). However, we found that knockdown of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD), the first oxiPPP enzyme, did not affect AMPK activation despite decreased Ru-5-P and subsequent LKB1 activation, due to enhanced activity of PP2A, the upstream phosphatase of AMPK. In contrast, knockdown of 6PGD or 6-phosphogluconolactonase (PGLS), the second oxiPPP enzyme, reduced PP2A activity. Mechanistically, knockdown of G6PD or PGLS decreased or increased 6-phosphogluconolactone level, respectively, which enhanced the inhibitory phosphorylation of PP2A by Src. Furthermore, γ-6-phosphogluconolactone, an oxiPPP byproduct with unknown function generated through intramolecular rearrangement of δ-6-phosphogluconolactone, the only substrate of PGLS, bound to Src and enhanced PP2A recruitment. Together, oxiPPP regulates AMPK homeostasis by balancing the opposing LKB1 and PP2A. | 10.1016/j.molcel.2019.09.007 |
pubmed_458_20438 | Migration of cells is critical to development of the central nervous system. Reelin, which was identified from the reeler mutant mice having a defect in the multilamellar structure of the brain, is thought to be a key signalling molecule that functions as a cue for determination of cell position. mDab1 (mouse Disabled homologue 1) functions downstream of Reelin. However, the mechanism by which mDab1 regulates cell migration during brain development is unknown. In the present paper, we show that mDab1 associates with N-WASP (neuronal Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein) in vitro and in brains of embryonic mice. mDab1 activates N-WASP directly, and induces actin polymerization through the Arp2/3 (actin-related protein 2/3) complex. mDab1 induces formation of filopodia when it is overexpressed in COS-7 cells. This filopodium formation is dependent on N-WASP, because expression of an N-WASP mutant that cannot induce Arp2/3-complex-mediated actin polymerization suppressed filopodium formation. The PTB (phosphotyrosine-binding) domain of mDab1 binds to N-WASP via the NRFY (Asn-Arg-Phe-Tyr) sequence close to the CRIB (Cdc42/Rac-interactive binding) motif of N-WASP and activates N-WASP in vitro. When mDab1 is phosphorylated by Fyn kinase in COS-7 cells, mDab1 is ubiquitinated in a Cbl-dependent manner, and mDab1 does not induce filopodium in the presence of activated Fyn. These findings suggest that mDab1 regulates the actin cytoskeleton through N-WASP, which is negatively regulated by phosphorylation-mediated ubiquitination of mDab1. | 10.1042/BJ20041103 |
others_417_3181 | Environmental disturbances can be monitored using sentinel species. We present 30 temporally explicit metagenomes and 166 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) from the gut of the South American sea lion (Otaria flavescens) to further understanding of whether variations in the gut microbiome composition and gene content might reflect environmental disturbances from salmon farming. © 2023 Guajardo-Leiva et al | 10.1128/mra.00183-23 |
pubmed_459_1320 | The effect of water activity (aw 0.98, 0.84 and 0.60) and reaction temperature (100, 120, 140 and 160 degrees C) on the mutagenic activity of the Maillard reaction products in heated ribose-lysine and glucose-lysine model systems, was investigated. In the ribose-lysine system, heated at 100 degrees C, the mutagenic activity of the mixture increased as the water activity was lowered. On the contrary, no dependence between mutagenic activity and water activity was observed in the glucose-lysine system. At higher temperatures, in both systems, the presence in the browned mixtures of an antibacterial activity interfering with the bacterial mutagenicity assay was observed. Under all the conditions tested, the ribose-lysine system turned out to be the most reactive by producing higher levels of mutagens. Furthermore, in this system, the antimicrobial interference was more easily detectable. In the model systems used, the browning reaction mixtures were analysed for their absorption spectrum between 200-460 nm, and for the accumulation of furfurals. The results obtained showed that, at temperatures between 120 and 140 degrees C there is a correlation among reaction temperature, absorbance at 420 and around 280 nm, mutagenic activity of the mixture and the level of furfurals. Changes in the levels of furfurals can be related to changes in mutagenicity of the browned mixtures. | 10.1016/0278-6915(88)90020-8 |
pubmed_304_23608 | TLRs sense components of microorganisms and are critical host mediators of inflammation during infection. Different TLR agonists can profoundly alter inflammatory effects of one another, and studies suggest that the sequence of exposure to TLR agonists may importantly impact on responses during infection. We tested the hypothesis that synergy, priming, and tolerance between TLR agonists follow a pattern that can be predicted based on differential engagement of the MyD88-dependent (D) and the MyD88-independent (I) intracellular signaling pathways. Inflammatory effects of combinations of D and I pathway agonists were quantified in vivo and in vitro. Experiments used several D-specific agonists, an I-specific agonist (poly(I:C)), and LPS, which acts through both the D and I pathways. D-specific agonists included: peptidoglycan-associated lipoprotein, Pam3Cys, flagellin, and CpG DNA, which act through TLR2 (peptidoglycan-associated lipoprotein and Pam3Cys), TLR5, and TLR9, respectively. D and I agonists were markedly synergistic in inducing cytokine production in vivo in mice. All of the D-specific agonists were synergistic with poly(I:C) in vitro in inducing TNF and IL-6 production by mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages. Pretreatment of bone marrow-derived macrophages with poly(I:C) led to a primed response to subsequent D-specific agonists and vice versa, as indicated by increased cytokine production, and increased NF-kappaB translocation. Pretreatment with a D-specific agonist augmented LPS-induced IFN-beta production. All D-specific agonists induced tolerance to one another. Thus, under the conditions studied here, simultaneous and sequential activation of both the D and I pathways causes synergy and priming, respectively, and tolerance is induced by agonists that act through the same pathway. | 10.4049/jimmunol.178.2.1164 |
pubmed_908_1326 | WHAT WE ALREADY KNOW ABOUT THIS TOPIC
WHAT THIS ARTICLE TELLS US THAT IS NEW: BACKGROUND:: Traumatic brain injury induces cellular proliferation in the hippocampus, which generates new neurons and glial cells during recovery. This process is regulated by N-methyl-D-aspartate-type glutamate receptors, which are inhibited by ketamine. The authors hypothesized that ketamine treatment after traumatic brain injury would reduce hippocampal cell proliferation, leading to worse behavioral outcomes in mice.
METHODS
Traumatic brain injury was induced in mice using a controlled cortical impact injury, after which mice (N = 118) received either ketamine or vehicle systemically for 1 week. The authors utilized immunohistochemical assays to evaluate neuronal, astroglial, and microglial cell proliferation and survival 3 days, 2 weeks, and 6 weeks postintervention. The Morris water maze reversal task was used to assess cognitive recovery.
RESULTS
Ketamine dramatically increased microglial proliferation in the granule cell layer of the hippocampus 3 days after injury (injury + vehicle, 2,800 ± 2,700 cells/mm, n = 4; injury + ketamine, 11,200 ± 6,600 cells/mm, n = 6; P = 0.012). Ketamine treatment also prevented the production of astrocytes 2 weeks after injury (sham + vehicle, 2,400 ± 3,200 cells/mm, n = 13; injury + vehicle, 10,500 ± 11,300 cells/mm, n = 12; P = 0.013 vs. sham + vehicle; sham + ketamine, 3,500 ± 4,900 cells/mm, n = 14; injury + ketamine, 4,800 ± 3,000 cells/mm, n = 13; P = 0.955 vs. sham + ketamine). Independent of injury, ketamine temporarily reduced neurogenesis (vehicle-exposed, 105,100 ± 66,700, cells/mm, n = 25; ketamine-exposed, 74,300 ± 29,200 cells/mm, n = 27; P = 0.031). Ketamine administration improved performance in the Morris water maze reversal test after injury, but had no effect on performance in sham-treated mice.
CONCLUSIONS
Ketamine alters hippocampal cell proliferation after traumatic brain injury. Surprisingly, these changes were associated with improvement in a neurogenesis-related behavioral recall task, suggesting a possible benefit from ketamine administration after traumatic brain injury in mice. Future studies are needed to determine generalizability and mechanism. | 10.1097/ALN.0000000000002197 |
pubmed_88_7788 | "A sample survey was conducted [in China]: more than 6,000 questionnaires were submitted and retrieved from domestic tourists in Shanghai, Xi'ian, Huangshan, and Huashan in order to provide data for demographic analysis of the special fluid population of tourists. The paper looks at the relationship between tourists' gender, age, income, occupation, education, and family structure, as well as their tourist activity, selection of destinations, shopping, and other tourist behaviors." | pubmed_88_7788 |
pubmed_277_21517 | PURPOSE
To evaluate the efficacy of unilateral photorefractive keratectomy to correct anisometropia induced by retinal detachment surgery.
METHODS
Photorefractive keratectomy was performed in 10 eyes of 10 patients with anisometropia induced by previous retinal detachment surgery. The Aesculap Meditec MEL 60 excimer laser was used.
RESULTS
Preoperative mean spherical equivalent refraction was -5.20 D. Mean postoperative spherical equivalent refraction was -0.25 D after a mean follow-up of 12.9 months. Mean preoperative spherical equivalent refraction difference between two eyes of 4.87 D was decreased to a mean 0.60 D postoperatively (t-test, P < .0001). All patients were free of anisometropic symptoms after laser surgery.
CONCLUSION
Unilateral photorefractive keratectomy seems to be an effective method to correct anisometropia induced by conventional retinal detachment surgery, especially for patients with spectacle and contact lens intolerance. | 10.3928/1081-597X-20000101-10 |
pubmed_787_11601 | A pilot study was performed on adult polycystic kidney disease (PCKD) patients to examine the effects of the anti-proliferative mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor sirolimus on the growth of renal cysts. Eight consecutive PCKD patients were given sirolimus (1 mg/d PO) for 6 consecutive months, in addition to an angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB), namely telmisartan. Another 8 PCKD patients served as a control group given only telmisartan. All PCKD patients had a serum creatinine value <2 mg/dL with a negative urine culture before enrollment. All patients were diagnosed by renal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to measure renal volumes. After a 6-month follow-up, patients were rescanned to remeasure the MRI volumes. Renal function was stable in 5/8 subjects in the sirolimus group, improved in 2 cases, and worsened in 1 with an increase of serum creatinine to >2 mg/dL resulting in his withdrawal after 5 months of follow-up. In contrast, the serum creatinine value was stable in 3 control group subjects, worsen in 3, and improved in 2. Four patients in the sirolimus group experienced infectious complications, namely, urinary tract infections (UTI) in 2 which were treated with antibiotics, and monilial pharyngitis in 2, who were treated and cured with a topical antifungal. In the control group, only 2 developed and were treated for UTIs. Hematologic tests were normal in all patients. There was an insignificant rise in kidney volume as measured by MRI in the sirolimus group (2845 vs 3221 mL after 6 months; P = NS) compared with a significant increase in the control group (2667 vs 3590 mL after 6 months; P < .05). We concluded that sirolimus, in addition to an ARB, might be beneficial for PCKD patients who present early in their illness. | 10.1016/j.transproceed.2009.05.032 |
pubmed_528_12095 | Superior vena cava syndrome (SVCS) can result from extrinsic compression by a primary tumor, mediastinal lymph nodes metastases, benign lesions, or intraluminal thrombosis. The association between obstructive sleep apnea and SVCS has not been extensively evaluated. To our knowledge, only 5 cases of obstructive sleep apnea in SVCS have been reported in the literature. We presented a 53-year-old man who was admitted with dyspnea, edema of the face, and excessive daytime sleepiness. Chest radiography and computed tomography revealed lung cancer. A biopsy of the tumor revealed squamous cell carcinoma. Obstructive sleep apnea was diagnosed by polysomnography (apnea hypopnea index: 13 per hour). After radiation and chemotherapy, edema of the face, snoring, and daytime sleepiness were alleviated, and the patient's apnea hypopnea index decreased to 0.6 per hour. In conclusion, there is a relationship between obstructive sleep apnea and SVCS. | 10.3816/CLC.2007.n.036 |
pubmed_726_19635 | To understand the mechanisms of soil respiration and accurately estimate its magnitude are the crucial basis of evaluating global carbon balance. However, the previously built soil respiration forecast models usually neglect the physiological processes that photosynthesis supplies substrates for rhizospheric respiration, leading to the defect in evaluating the mechanisms of soil respiration. This paper summarized the research progress on the mechanisms of photosynthetic regulation and control of soil respiration, introduced the related main research methods, and discussed the existing problems and research hotspots. | pubmed_726_19635 |
pubmed_341_1975 | The first synthesis of well-defined poly[(phenylmethylene-co-methylpropenylene)-b-methylene, [(C1-co-C3)-b-C1], terpolymers was achieved by one-pot borane-initiated random copolymerization of ω-methylallyl (C3 units, chain is growing by three carbon atoms at a time) and benzyltriphenylarsonium (C1 units, chain is growing by one carbon atom at a time) ylides, followed by polymerization of sulfoxonium methylide (C1 units). Other substituted arsonium ylides, such as prenyltriphenyl, propyltriphenyl and (4-fluorobenzyl)triphenyl can also be used instead of benzyltriphenylarsonium. The obtained terpolymers are well-defined, possess a predictable molecular weight and low polydispersity (Mn,NMR =1.83-9.68×103 g mol-1 , Đ=1.09-1.22). An unexpected light emission phenomenon was discovered in these non-conjugated terpolymers, as confirmed by fluorescence and NMR spectroscopy. This phenomenon can be explained by the isomerization of the double bonds of allylic monomeric units along the chain of the terpolymers (isomerization-induced light emission). | 10.1002/anie.201901094 |
pubmed_332_7432 | BACKGROUND
Smoking is a major cause of premature facial aging. Skin aging in general, often accompanied by wrinkling and furrowing, plays a significant role in the decision to undergo aesthetic surgery. Smoking may therefore be related to the demand for cosmetic surgery. This study aimed to compare smoking habits with respect to a standard cosmetic procedure (blepharoplasty) in the general population and to evaluate whether the age at surgery differs between smokers and nonsmokers.
METHODS
A questionnaire was sent to 517 patients with valid reports describing dermatochalasis of the upper eyelid who subsequently underwent an upper-eyelid correction in 2004. Smoking habits, socioeconomic status, and medical history were evaluated. The patients were classified as smokers, ex-smokers with at least 1 year of smoking cessation, and never-smokers.
RESULTS
Of the 353 questionnaires (68.3 %) returned, 345 were eligible for statistical analysis. The smoking habits did not differ between the blepharoplasty group and the general population. However, the smokers underwent surgery an average of 3.7 years earlier than the ex-smokers (p=0.0007) and 3.5 years earlier than the never-smokers (p=0.006). No significant difference was observed between the ex-smokers and the never-smokers.
CONCLUSIONS
This is the first study to describe an association between smoking habits and an earlier need for upper-eyelid correction among ex- and never-smokers. The mechanism of skin restoration could result in a regenerative mechanism among ex-smokers, but further research is needed to support this hypothesis.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE III
This journal requires that authors assign a level of evidence to each article. For a full description of these Evidence-Based Medicine ratings, please refer to the Table of Contents or the online Instructions to Authors at www.springer.com/00266. | 10.1007/s00266-012-9913-2 |
pubmed_1041_5853 | OBJECTIVE
To examine the efficacy of a single progressive muscle relaxation session compared with a control condition on state anxiety, psychological stress, fatigue and subjective well-being in patients with schizophrenia.
DESIGN
Randomized controlled trial.
SETTING
An acute inpatient care unit of an University Psychiatric Centre.
SUBJECTS
Sixty-four out of 88 eligible patients with schizophrenia.
INTERVENTIONS
Patients were randomly assigned to either a single progressive muscle relaxation session during 25 minutes or a resting control condition with the opportunity to read for an equal amount of time.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Before and after the single interventions the State anxiety inventory and the Subjective exercise experiences scale were completed. Effect sizes were calculated.
RESULTS
Only within progressive muscle relaxation, participants (n=27) showed decreased state anxiety, psychological stress and fatigue and increased subjective well-being. Between-group differences in post scores were found for state anxiety, subjective well-being and psychological stress, but not for fatigue. The effect size favouring progressive muscle relaxation was 1.26 for subjective well-being and -1.25 and -1.02 for respectively state anxiety and psychological stress.
CONCLUSIONS
Progressive muscle relaxation is highly effective in reducing acute feelings of stress and anxiety in patients with schizophrenia. A reduction in stress and state anxiety is associated with an increase in subjective well-being. | 10.1177/0269215510395633 |
pubmed_1029_646 | A cohort mortality study of cadmium-exposed workers initially followed to the end of 1979 has been updated for a further five years. The update has confirmed the findings of the original study with a significant excess risk from bronchitis related to intensity of exposure, although over the five-year period the excess mortality was no longer significant, a finding suggesting that the risk from bronchitis may now be declining in this cohort. In contrast, there is now a stronger indication of a excess risk from lung cancer related to intensity of exposure, significant for both the total and the five-year periods. There was again no increased risk from prostatic cancer, and from this and other studies it appears unlikely that cadmium, in the concentrations encountered in this and other recent studies, acts as a prostatic carcinogen. As in the initial study, there was no significant excess risk from hypertensive disease, nor any suggestion of an increased risk from cerebrovascular or renal disease. | 10.5271/sjweh.1929 |
pubmed_254_26125 | Hyperpolarization (HP) of a carbon-13 molecule via dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) involves polarization at low temperature, followed by a dissolution procedure producing a solution with highly polarized spins at room temperature. This dissolution DNP method significantly increases the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) over 10,000-fold and facilitates the use of magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) to image not only metabolism but also the extracellular microenvironment. The extracellular tumor microenvironment (TME) closely interacts with tumor cells and stimulates their growth and metastasis. Thus, the ability to detect pathological changes in the TME is pivotal for the detection and study of cancers. This review highlights the potential use of MRS to study features of the TME-elevated export of lactate, reduced interstitial pH, imbalanced redox equilibrium, and altered metal homeostasis. The promising outcomes of both in vitro and in vivo assays suggest that DNP-MRS may be a useful technique to study aspects of the TME. With continued improvements, this tool has the potential to study the TME and provide guidance for accurate patient stratification and precise personal therapy. Graphical Abstract. | 10.1007/s11307-020-01570-0 |
pubmed_409_4837 | A murine aging model was employed to assess effects of ethanol exposure on the T-cell proliferative response to mitogenic stimulation and on the T cell-dependent primary antibody response to sheep red blood cells (RBC) in vitro. Splenic cells from young (3-5 months) and old (28-32 months) BALB/c mice were first assessed for their ability to produce interleukin (IL) 2 and proliferate in response to mitogenic stimulation in the presence of various doses of ethanol. Then, splenic T blast cells from young and old mice, generated by Con A-activation, were assessed for their IL2-dependent proliferative capacity in the presence of various doses of ethanol. Finally, splenic cells of young and old mice were assessed for their ability to generate plaque-forming cells (PFC) in response to sheep RBC in the presence of various doses of ethanol. The results revealed that ethanol has a much greater suppressive effect on old than young splenic T cells (10-15 times), as judged by their ability to proliferate in response to mitogenic stimulation. However, the magnitude of the difference in the suppressive effect is less when the cells are cycling (2 times). Furthermore, ethanol had only a minimal suppressive effect on IL2 production by T cells of both young and old mice, even at the concentration of 100 mM. These findings would suggest that the ethanol-mediated suppression of T cell proliferation of both young and old mice is more likely due to an impairment of metabolic event(s) associated with or subsequent to the interaction of IL2 and IL2 receptor leading to cellular replication.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) | 10.1111/j.1530-0277.1990.tb00474.x |
pubmed_322_13289 | α-L-rhamnosidase is a very important industrial enzyme that is widely distributed in a variety of organisms. α-L-rhamnosidase of different origins show functional diversity. For example, the optimal pH of α-L-rhamnosidase from bacteria is close to neutral or alkaline, while the optimal pH of α-L-rhamnosidase from fungi is in the acidic range. Furthermore, the enzymatic properties of α-L-rhamnosidases of different origins differ in terms of the optimal temperature, the thermal stability, and the substrate specificity, which determine the different applications of these enzymes. In this connection, it is crucial to elucidate the similarities and differences in the catalytic mechanism and substrate specificity of α-L-rhamnosidase of different origins through analyzing its enzymatic properties. Moreover, it is important to explore and understand the effects of aglycon and metal cations on enzyme activity and the competitive inhibition of L-rhamnose and glucose on enzymes. These knowledge can help discover α-L-rhamnosidase of industrial significance and promote its industrial application. | 10.13345/j.cjb.200565 |
pubmed_695_3715 | AIM2 is a cytosolic DNA sensor of the inflammasome, which induces critical innate immune responses against various invading pathogens. Earlier biochemical studies showed that the binding of AIM2 to DNA triggered the self-oligomerization of AIM2, which is essential for AIM2 inflammasome activation. We recently reported that VP22, a virion tegument protein of herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1), inhibited activation of the AIM2 inflammasome in HSV-1-infected cells by preventing AIM2 oligomerization. VP22 binds non-specifically to DNA; however, its role in HSV-1 replication is unclear. We investigated the role of VP22 DNA binding activity in the VP22-mediated inhibition of AIM2 inflammasome activation. We identified a VP22 domain encoded by amino acids 227 to 258 as the minimal domain required for its binding to DNA in vitro Consecutive alanine substitutions in this domain substantially impaired the DNA binding activity of VP22 in vitro and attenuated the inhibitory effect of VP22 on AIM2 inflammasome activation in an AIM2 inflammasome reconstitution system. The inhibitory effect of VP22 on AIM2 inflammasome activation was completely abolished in macrophages infected with a recombinant virus harboring VP22 with one of the consecutive alanine substitutions, similar to the effect of a VP22-null mutant virus. These results suggested that the DNA binding activity of VP22 is critical for VP22-mediated AIM2 inflammasome activation in HSV1-infected cells.IMPORTANCE VP22, a major component of the HSV-1 virion tegument, is conserved in alphaherpesviruses and has structural similarity to ORF52, a component of the virion tegument that is well-conserved in gammaherpesviruses. Although the potential DNA binding activity of VP22 was discovered decades ago, its significance in the HSV-1 life cycle is poorly understood. Here, we show that the DNA binding activity of VP22 is critical for the inhibition of AIM2 inflammasome activation induced in HSV-1-infected cells. This is the first report to show a role for the DNA binding activity of VP22 in the HSV-1 life cycle, allowing the virus to evade AIM2 inflammasome activation, which is critical for its replication in vivo. | 10.1128/JVI.02172-20 |
pubmed_471_9740 | Although many studies on choking under pressure used closed skills, such as golf putting, we examined the influence of pressure on movement during a dynamic skill by studying participants' kinematic and kinetic changes during a table tennis forehand task under pressure. Thirty novice table tennis players hit forehand shots toward a target for 135 practice trials and then performed 10 no-pressure and 10 pressure trials. We added psychological pressure by instructing participants they could earn monetary rewards for successful performance and by cancelling accumulated scores for a poor performance. We measured racket head and ball movements as kinematic variables and grip force as a kinetic variable. We also measured state anxiety and heart rate as checks on our manipulation of psychological pressure. In the pressure condition, both state anxiety and heart rate increased significantly ( p < .025), though the pressure level was relatively small. Analysis of kinematic measures revealed that back swing and forward swing were reduced in length; speed of forward swing and ball speed decreased significantly ( p < .008) under pressure. Also, under pressure, ball and racket contact point shifted forward significantly ( p < .008) to reduce the distance between impact and target locations, and performance declined as the ball-landing locations shifted leftward ( p < .007). Grip force showed no significant change. We conclude that, under pressure, movement was modified toward reduced displacement and lower speed in an apparent risk-aversive hitting strategy; these modifications resulted in a performance decrement. | 10.1177/0031512518809725 |
pubmed_1129_10910 | Importance
Recently, the red hair variants of MC1R were found to contribute differently to pigmentation phenotype in males and females.
Objective
To investigate the role of these variants in melanoma risk in males and females separately because carriers of the red hair variants of MC1R are at increased risk of melanoma.
Design, Setting, and Participants
In this hospital-based, case-control study, we evaluated the effect of MC1R and melanoma risk for males and females separately by performing multivariate logistic regression analyses.
Main Outcomes and Measures
Association of MC1R variants and melanoma risk in males and females.
Results
A total of 905 females (473 melanoma cases, 432 controls) and 886 males (518 melanoma cases, 368 controls) were included in the analyses. The mean (SD) age of the study population was 59.2 (15.6). In females, carrying any MC1R red hair variants remained an independent risk factor of melanoma in a multivariable analysis (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 2.19 [95% CI, 1.60-2.99]), whereas in males, only signs of actinic skin damage (lentigines on the back [OR, 2.56; 95% CI, 1.47-4.45; P = .001] and the hands [OR, 2.31; 95% CI, 1.24-4.29; P = .008] and wrinkling on the neck [OR, 2.17; 95% CI, 1.23-3.82; P = .007]) and sunburns (OR, 1.65; 95% CI, 1.12-2.42; P = .01) remained significant risk factors.
Conclusions and Relevance
MC1R variants contribute differently to melanoma risk in males and females. This could be helpful to better classify melanoma risk factors between the sexes. | 10.1001/jamadermatol.2018.1252 |
pubmed_875_5939 | Single wall carbon nanotubes due to their unique structural and electronic characteristics have revolutionized the field of nanotechnology and are widely used the field of transistors, drug delivery, and nanocomposities. For improved efficiency of these applications, the utilized tubes must of preeminent purity. Here, we report key parameters that are optimized to achieve their highest purity upto 98 wt%, and yield as high as 50 wt% by thermal and chemical oxidation. The as-produced SWCNT were heated in air at 470 °C, for 90 min, and later subjected to chemical oxidation. The chemical oxidation involved the treatment of thermally treated SWCNT with different concentrations of HCl (4N, 6N, 8N) and 30% H₂O₂, for different time periods (4 hr, 6 hr). This method does not cause damage to the walls of the tubes, observing no loss of nanotubes. The sheet resistance of as-produced and purified tubes was measured and the conductivity was calculated. | 10.1166/jnn.2016.10509 |
pubmed_115_14615 | Here we demonstrate the independent acquisition of strikingly similar brain architectures across divergent insect taxa and even across phyla under similar adaptive pressures. Convoluted cortical gyri-like structures characterize the mushroom body calyces in the brains of certain species of insects; we have investigated in detail the cellular and ecological correlates of this morphology in the Scarabaeidae (scarab beetles). "Gyrencephalic" mushroom bodies with increased surface area and volume of calycal synaptic neuropils and increased intrinsic neuron number characterize only those species belonging to generalist plant-feeding subfamilies, whereas significantly smaller "lissencephalic" mushroom bodies are found in more specialist dung-feeding scarab beetles. Such changes are not unique to scarabs or herbivores, because the mushroom bodies of predatory beetles display similar morphological disparities in generalists vs. specialists. We also show that gyrencephalic mushroom bodies in generalist scarabs are not associated with an increase in the size of their primary input neuropil, the antennal lobe, or in the number of antennal lobe glomeruli but rather with an apparent increase in the density of calycal microglomeruli and the acquisition of calycal subpartitions. These differences suggest changes in calyx circuitry facilitating the increased demands on processing capability and flexibility imposed by the evolution of a generalist feeding ecology. | 10.1073/pnas.0508430102 |
pubmed_1060_818 | There have been reports of a high prevalence of bulimic episodes and the syndromes of bulimia nervosa and DSM-III bulimia in community samples. A group of American authors recently compared the findings of a contemporary survey with those of a survey they had conducted previously and reported a three-fold increase in the prevalence of DSM-III bulimia. The present study replicates a community survey conducted four years ago in Britain. The prevalence of bulimic episodes, self-induced vomiting and bulimia nervosa found in the present survey was very similar to that found in the earlier study. | 10.1192/bjp.151.5.684 |
pubmed_964_2635 | The hypothesis that aggressive-rejected children are unaware of their social status because they are self-protective when processing negative peer feedback was tested in 3 studies. In Study 1, fourth-grade girls and boys were asked to name peers they liked or disliked, as well as peers they thought liked or disliked them. Comparisons of aggressive-rejected, nonaggressive-rejected, and average status groups revealed that aggressive-rejected children were more unrealistic in their assessments of their social status than were nonaggressive-rejected children. In Study 2, rejected and average boys identified in Study 1 were asked to name who they thought liked or disliked other children from their classroom. Comparisons of perceived and actual nominations for peers revealed that aggressive-rejected children were able to assess the social status of others as well as did nonaggressive-rejected and average status children. Because the difficulties aggressive-rejected children demonstrated in Study 1 did not generalize to judging the status of others in Study 2, the self-protective hypothesis was supported. Study 3 provided a parallel test of this hypothesis under more controlled conditions. Subjects from Study 2 viewed other children receiving rejection feedback from peers in videotaped interactions and received similar feedback themselves from experimental confederates. While all subjects rated self-directed feedback somewhat more positively than other-directed feedback, aggressive-rejected subjects had the largest self-favoring discrepancy between their judgments of self- and other-directed feedback. These findings also suggest that aggressive-rejected children may make self-protective "errors" when judging other children's negative feelings about them. Ethnicity differences in evaluating peer feedback emerged in Studies 1 and 3, raising questions about the impact of minority status on children's evaluations of rejection feedback. | pubmed_964_2635 |
pubmed_649_40 | A premature infant with arachnodactyly and congenital cyanotic heart disease had severe pulmonary emphysema, a little-known manifestation of Marfan syndrome. The possible etiologies of emphysema in this syndrome are discussed. | 10.1007/BF02387973 |
pubmed_953_24322 | We describe the development of a novel wrist-mounted apnea dive computer. The device is able to measure and display transcutaneous oxygen saturation, heart rate, plethysmographic pulse waveform, depth, time and temperature during breath-hold dives. All measurements are stored in an external memory chip. The data-processing software reads from the chip and writes the processed data into a comma-separated values file which can be analysed by applications such as Microsoft Excel™ or Open Office™. The housing is waterproof and pressure-resistant to more than 20 bar (2.026 MPa) (breath-hold divers have already exceeded 200 metres' sea water depth). It is compact, lightweight, has low power requirements and is easy to use. | pubmed_953_24322 |
pubmed_556_13966 | BACKGROUND
Odontogenic keratocysts (OKC) are cystic lesions appearing in the jaws, usually asymptomatic with a progressive growth into the bone. Many of them are diagnosed by a routine radiological examination.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
This study reports a 12-year-old girl that presented an asymptomatic large radiolucent unilocular lesion associated to the crown of 3.8 that caused displacement of the molar and the inferior alveolar canal. Differential diagnosis included OKC, unicystic ameloblastoma, ameloblastic fibroma, dentigerous cyst and orthokeratinized odontogenic cyst. Two surgical interventions were performed; first, a marsupialization, and 10 months after, the third molar extraction plus cyst enucleation, mucosa excision and the application of Carnoy's solution.
RESULTS
The anatomopathological exam confirmed diagnosis of OKC. There was no evidence of recurrence after 2 years of follow-up.
CONCLUSIONS
Marsupialization followed by surgical enucleation with mucosa excision and Carnoy's solution can help manage treatment of OKC, a lesion characterized by an aggressive behavior. Key words:Odontogenic keratocyst, mucosa excision, carnoy solution, third molar, tooth extraction. | 10.4317/jced.56722 |
pubmed_27_22164 | Repetitive local application of a short train of stimuli to the rat substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area elicited a predominant depolarizing, slow, long-lasting synaptic response in the dopaminergic cells intracellularly recorded in vitro. This slow excitatory postsynaptic potential ranged between 13 and 27 mV at holding potentials of about-75 mV and lasted for 0.2-6 s. It was not greatly affected by the perfusion of 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (10-20 microM), while it was potentiated in the presence of bicuculline methiodide (30 microM) or picrotoxin (50-100 microM) and 2-hydroxysaclofen (100-300 microM). In contrast, a substantial component of the slow excitatory postsynaptic potential was reversibly depressed, in a concentration-dependent manner, by the application of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonists D,1-2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate (10-100 microM). Furthermore, the slow excitatory postsynaptic potential was reversibly increased by the superfusion of nominally magnesium-free solution. It was graded, increasing in amplitude with increased stimulus intensity, and was blocked by tetrodotoxin (0.5 microM). We suggest that a sustained activation of synaptic terminals containing excitatory amino acids mediates a slow excitatory postsynaptic potential in the dopaminergic cells of the midbrain. N-Methyl-D-aspartate receptors participate in the generation of this slow potential, while the alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-proprionate/kainate receptors do not seem to contribute substantially to this potential. This N-methyl-D-aspartate-mediated synaptic event could be implicated in the release of dopamine as well as in the excitotoxic injury of the dopaminergic neurons. | 10.1016/0306-4522(96)00189-3 |
pubmed_807_18525 | OBJECTIVE
Hereditary Multiple Exostoses (HME) is a genetically transmitted bone dysplasia that is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner. It usually presents after the age of two years as multiple bony growths on the appendicular skeleton. As a rare condition (incidence of 0.9-2/100,000), it is not commonly seen in our environment. This paper presents the clinical and radiological features of two patients seen in our hospital within a period of six months.
METHOD
The case records of two patients with hereditary multiple exostoses are presented to highlight the clinical presentation and management options of the condition.
RESULTS
A boy and a girl who respectively manifested the features of hereditary multiple exostoses at the age of two and six years are presented. The main presenting features were painless progressively increasing bony swellings in both upper and lower limbs, with forearm deformity and ulnar deviation of the wrist. One of them had pressure symptoms which necessitated surgical excision of the symptomatic exostosis. Fine needle aspiration cytology confirmed the diagnosis ofosteochondroma.
CONCLUSION
Hereditary multiple exostoses though rare, do occur in our environment and the management is essentially by masterly inactivity except when the bony swellings exhibit any complications or there is concomitant deformity. | pubmed_807_18525 |
pubmed_703_3286 | AIM
Phimosis is a common paediatric urological disorder and often necessitates circumcision. We prospectively evaluated local steroid therapy (LST) as the first choice therapy for such children.
METHODS
Two hundred and sixty symptomatic boys up to 15 years of age (mean 34 months) with phimosis were started on betamethasone dipropionate (0.05%) application on gently stretched prepuce twice a day. Follow-up visits were arranged at the end of weeks 1, 2 and 4 and 6 months. Grade of phimosis was objectively graded.
RESULTS
Ninety one percent of the boys showed a successful outcome at the end of 4 weeks; 72% responded in first week, further 16% responded in week 2, and only 2.6% achieved alleviation of phimosis on further application of LST beyond 2 weeks. Fourty two (17.8%) boys had a recurrence of phimosis on a long-term follow-up (mean - 25.4 months, range 6-48 months); thus, the long-term success rate was 77%, while 60 (23%) boys underwent surgery.
CONCLUSION
Local steroid therapy is safe and successful in alleviating symptomatic tight foreskin in a large majority of children. The response can be seen as early as 1 week; most of the children respond by week 2 and continuing therapy further may not be very effective. | 10.1111/j.1651-2227.2011.02534.x |
pubmed_247_20371 | The titer of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha) secreted by placental blocks was determined by enzyme immunoassay. The source of placental TNF alpha was immunohistochemically demonstrated with monoclonal anti-TNF alpha antibody to be only trophoblasts. Purified trophoblasts produced 174.4 ng/L TNF alpha by 24 h of culture in vitro. To investigate the role of TNF alpha in placental hormonogenesis, purified trophoblasts were stimulated with recombinant TNF alpha (rTNF alpha) to determine the hCG titer by enzyme immunoassay. Trophoblasts stimulated with rTNF alpha released hCG in a dose-dependent fashion with kinetics similar to those of recombinant interleukin-1 (rIL-1)-stimulated trophoblasts. The stimulated trophoblasts released IL-6 before hCG, but failed to show hCG release when pretreated with anti-IL-6 receptor (anti-IL-6-R) monoclonal antibody PM-1. However, the pretreatment of trophoblasts with PM-1 did not interfere with rTNF alpha-induced IL-6 release, ruling out the possibility of a nonspecific toxic effect of PM-1 on trophoblasts. These results suggest that trophoblast-derived TNF alpha induced IL-6 release and then activated the IL-6-R system in trophoblasts to release hCG. Since IL-1 has also been demonstrated to induce similar release of IL-6 and hCG from trophoblasts, the effects of TNF alpha and IL-1 on these trophoblast functions were also examined. Simultaneous stimulation of trophoblasts with rTNF alpha and gamma IL-1 alpha resulted in synergistic enhancement of IL-6 release, subsequently leading to enhanced hCG release. Collectively, trophoblast-derived TNF alpha and IL-1 synergistically regulated the level of IL-6 secreted by trophoblasts, the magnitude of which determined the level of hCG released by activating the IL-6-R system in trophoblasts. | 10.1210/jcem.74.1.1727819 |
pubmed_781_21085 | Factor V deficiency secondary to inhibitors is extremely rare and can be caused by a wide collection of exposures such as bovine thrombin and beta lactamase antibiotics. The management of factor V deficiency with inhibitor is a condition treated based on case reports due to the rarity of this condition. We describe a complicated case of an elderly patient with severe factor V deficiency with high inhibitor titer refractory to FEIBA (anti-inhibitor coagulation complex) treated with NovoSeven concurrently with cyclosporine immunosuppression and Rituxan. Given that there are no consensus guidelines on treatment, this case offers important insight into the therapeutic approaches that can be used to treat such patients. | 10.1155/2015/603402 |
pubmed_612_16675 | BACKGROUND
The scope of care coordination in VA primary care increased with the launch of the Veterans Choice Act, which aimed to increase access through greater use of non-VA Community Care. These changes may have overburdened already busy providers with additional administrative tasks, contributing to provider burnout. Our objective was to understand the role of challenges with care coordination in burnout. We analyzed relationships between care coordination challenges with Community Care reported by VA primary care providers (PCPs) and VA PCP burnout.
METHODS
Our cross-sectional survey contained five questions about challenges with care coordination. We assessed whether care coordination challenges were associated with two measures of provider burnout, adjusted for provider and facility characteristics. Models were also adjusted for survey nonresponse and clustered by facility. Trainee and executive respondents were excluded. 1,543 PCPs in 129 VA facilities nationwide responded to our survey (13 % response rate).
RESULTS
51 % of our sample reported some level of burnout overall, and 46 % reported feeling burned out at least once a week. PCPs were more likely to be burned out overall if they reported more than average challenges with care coordination (odds ratio [OR] 2.04, 95 % confidence interval [CI] 1.58 to 2.63). These challenges include managing patients with outside prescriptions or obtaining outside tests or records.
CONCLUSIONS
VA primary care providers who reported greater than average care coordination challenges were more likely to be burned out. Interventions to improve care coordination could help improve VA provider experience. | 10.1186/s12913-021-06769-7 |
pubmed_595_12499 | The adverse event (AE) profiles of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitor (statin) agents are of great interest, in particular the most recently approved statin, rosuvastatin. The forwarding of reports of AEs has been shown to be influenced by several reporting biases, including secular trend, the new drug reporting effect, product withdrawals, and publicity. Comparative assessments that use AE reporting rates are difficult to interpret under these circumstances, because such effects can themselves lead to marked increases in AE reporting. Consequently, many comparative reporting rate analyses are best carried out in conjunction with other metrics that put reporting burden into context, such as report proportion. All-AE reporting rates showed a temporal profile that resembled those of other statins when marketing cycle and secular trend were taken into account. A before-and-after cerivastatin withdrawal comparison showed a substantial increase in the reporting of AEs of interest for the statin class overall. Report proportion analyses indicated that the burden of rosuvastatin-associated AEs was similar to that for other statin agents. Analyses of monthly reporting rates showed that the reporting of rosuvastatin-associated rhabdomyolysis and renal failure have increased following AE-specific mass media publicity. Postrosuvastatin AE reporting patterns were comparable to those seen with other statins and did not resemble cerivastatin. | 10.1016/j.amjcard.2005.12.008 |
pubmed_399_10685 | Two hundred and forty-three patients with lung cancer were biopsied pretherapeutically and bilaterally on the anterior iliac crest. Tumor infiltration into the bone marrow could be demonstrated in 7 patients. No tumor-positive biopsies were found in the 163 patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). In small cell lung cancer (SCLC), however, the infiltration rate was 9% (7/80). In 3 of the 7 patients (43%) only 1 of the 2 sides biopsied had been infiltrated. All 7 patients with tumor-positive bone marrow samples were found to have additional metastases elsewhere (stage IV, 7/26; 27%). Therefore, according to our results, we cannot recommend iliac crest biopsy as a routine pretherapeutic procedure to aid in the staging of SCLC and NSCLC. | 10.1159/000226721 |
pubmed_877_1296 | BACKGROUND
Duplex ultrasound (DUS) mapping of the veins and arteries of the upper extremity is a well-established practice in arteriovenous fistula creation for long-term hemodialysis access. Previous publications have shown that vein diameters varying from 2 to 3 mm are predictive of success. Regional anesthesia is known to result in vasodilation and thus to increase the diameter of upper extremity veins. This study compares the sizes of veins measured by preoperative DUS mapping with those obtained after regional anesthesia to determine whether intraoperative DUS results in increased vein diameters and thus changes in the operative plan. A second goal was to determine whether such changes resulted in functional access.
METHODS
This was a prospective observational study conducted between July 2013 and December 2014. Consecutive patients were preoperatively mapped and then intraoperatively mapped after administration of a regional anesthetic. Comparison of vein mapping sizes and comparison of preoperative plan and operative procedure based on the preoperative and intraoperative DUS mapping, respectively, were analyzed with a repeated-measures linear model. Significance testing was two sided, with a significance level of 5%.
RESULTS
Sixty-five patients with end-stage renal disease underwent placement of arteriovenous access with preoperative and intraoperative DUS mapping after regional anesthesia. Comorbidities were representative of the vascular population. After regional anesthesia, intraoperative mid forearm and distal forearm cephalic veins were significantly larger than their respective preoperative measurements. Average increase in diameter of the mid forearm cephalic vein and distal forearm was 0.96 mm (P < .001) and 0.50 mm (P = .04), respectively. There was a significant difference in the number and configuration of arteriovenous accesses (P < .0001). There was more than a twofold significant increase in radial artery-based access procedures concomitant with a significant reduction of brachial-based access procedures and a reduction in graft access procedures. Overall functional access rate was 63%, and patency rates were comparable to those reported in the literature.
CONCLUSIONS
The routine use of intraoperative DUS mapping after regional anesthesia is recommended to determine the optimal access site for chronic hemodialysis access. Identifying additional access options not seen with physical examination and preoperative DUS mapping will provide end-stage renal disease patients with more fistula options and hence a longer access life span for a lifelong disease. | 10.1016/j.jvs.2017.10.067 |
pubmed_57_13693 | Classification plays a critical role in false positive reduction (FPR) in lung nodule computer aided detection (CAD). The difficulty of FPR lies in the variation of the appearances of the nodules, and the imbalance distribution between the nodule and non-nodule class. Moreover, the presence of inherent complex structures in data distribution, such as within-class imbalance and high-dimensionality are other critical factors of decreasing classification performance. To solve these challenges, we proposed a hybrid probabilistic sampling combined with diverse random subspace ensemble. Experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method in terms of geometric mean (G-mean) and area under the ROC curve (AUC) compared with commonly used methods. | pubmed_57_13693 |
pubmed_575_19586 | BACKGROUND
Myocarditis is a known cause of sudden cardiac death of the athlete. The impact of direct chest trauma in at-risk sports or activities in patients with a history of myocarditis has never been demonstrated or studied. We report herein two cases of life-threatening ventricular arrhythmia secondary to non-penetrating blunt chest trauma while playing contact sports.
CASE SUMMARY
The first patient, a 26-year-old man described a brief loss of consciousness after having received blunt impact to the chest (typical intensity) while playing a rugby match. The loss of consciousness was total and proceeded by rapid and regular palpitations. He had a history of viral myocarditis 10 years prior with a fibrotic sequalae in the inferolateral wall on cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (left ventricular ejection fraction 71%). Right apical ventricular pacing induced a sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia reproducing the patient's symptoms. A subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator was implanted. The second patient is a 22-year-old professional rugby player with no known notable history. During a match, a direct blow to the chest wall was followed by a cardiac arrest. A ventricular fibrillation was cardioverted to pulseless electrical activity. Patient died despite cardiopulmonary resuscitation. An autopsy identified a myocardial sequela of fibrosis with no acute inflammatory remodelling compatible with a previous myocarditis.
DISCUSSION
Myocarditis may increase the risk of life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias caused by blunt impact to the chest, particularly in contact sports. Screening and prevention measures should be considered to reduce this risk. | 10.1093/ehjcr/ytab054 |
pubmed_596_23404 | Infection is the most challenging and life-threatening complication of vascular access and causes significant morbidity, loss of access, and mortality. The aims of this review are to determine the magnitude of the infection problem, identify possible factors, and provide an update on the management of vascular access infections. Infections account for approximately 15% to 36% of all deaths in dialysis patients (the second leading cause after cardiovascular events) and for about 20% of admissions. Several studies demonstrate a hierarchy of infection risk from temporary catheter, tunnelled cuffed catheter, arteriovenous grafts, to arteriovenous fistula in decreasing order. Suspicion of infection must be followed by appropriate blood cultures, including possible simultaneous sampling from a peripheral vein and the access. The best way to treat vascular access infection is prevention, bearing in mind the idea "fistula first" and "lines last", with the appropriate use of arteriovenous grafts and newer devices sandwiched in between. | 10.1007/s11908-011-0192-x |
pubmed_661_22565 | The segregation of voltage-dependent sodium channels to specialized regions of the neuron is crucial for propagation of an action potential. Studies of their lateral mobility indicate that sodium channels are freely mobile on the neuronal cell body but are immobile at the axon hillock, presynaptic terminal and at focal points along the axon. To elucidate the mechanisms that regulate sodium channel topography and mobility, we searched for specific proteins from the brain that associate with sodium channels. Here we show that sodium channels labelled with 3H-saxitoxin (STX) are precipitated in the presence of exogenous brain ankyrin by anti-ankyrin antibodies and that 125I-labelled ankyrin binds with high affinity to sodium channels reconstituted into lipid vesicles. The cytoplasmic domain of the erythrocyte anion transporter competes for the latter interaction. Neither the neuronal GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid) receptor channel complex nor the dihydropyridine (DHP) receptor bind brain ankyrin. The results indicate that brain ankyrin links the voltage-dependent sodium channel to the underlying cytoskeleton and may help to maintain axolemmal membrane heterogeneity and control sodium channel mobility. | 10.1038/333177a0 |
others_206_13442 | At the current time, the belief that total gastrectomy (TG) offers a better survival benefit compared with distal gastrectomy (DG) in distal gastric cancer still persists among many surgeons. The aim of the study was to determine whether TG in patients with distal stomach cancer offers a benefit in long term survival compared with DG. Methods. Data on 180 consecutive patients with adenocarcinoma of the distal stomach that underwent surgery during the period 2000-2003 were analyzed. Distal gastrectomy was performed on 91 patients (50.5%), and 89 patients (49.5%) underwent TG. Results. The postoperative morbidity (anastomotic leakage, intraperitoneal hemorrhage and pulmonary complications) was significantly higher in the TG group than in the DG group. The TG group had a significantly higher rate of 30-day postoperative mortality than DG group, and a longer mean postoperative hospital stay. The 5-year survival rate was significantly higher for the DG group than for the TG group. The number of lymph node metastases and TNM stages are significant predictors of poor survival. Conclusions. Compared with patients undergoing TG, a better long-term survival time, lower postoperative morbidity and mortality rates and a lower hospitalization stay was obtained in patients that underwent DG for distal gastric cancer. This observation justifies the use of this procedure for the surgical therapy of the cancer of distal stomach | others_206_13442 |
pubmed_1131_12900 | The metallization of porous silicon (PSi) is generally realized through physical vapor deposition (PVD) or electrochemical processes using aqueous solutions. The former uses a strong vacuum and does not allow for a conformal deposition into the pores. In the latter, the water used as solvent causes oxidation of the silicon during the reduction of the salt precursors. Moreover, as PSi is hydrophobic, the metal penetration into the pores is restricted to the near-surface region. Using a solution of organometallic (OM) precursors in ionic liquid (IL), we have developed an easy and efficient way to fully metallize the pores throughout the several-µm-thick porous Si. This process affords supported metallic nanoparticles characterized by a narrow size distribution. This process is demonstrated for different metals (Pt, Pd, Cu, and Ru) and can probably be extended to other metals. Moreover, as no reducing agent is necessary (the decomposition in an argon atmosphere at 50 °C is fostered by surface silicon hydride groups borne by PSi), the safety and the cost of the process are improved. | pubmed_1131_12900 |
pubmed_517_2987 | PURPOSE
Most anthropometric data on the proximal humerus has been obtained from deceased healthy individuals with no deformities. Endoprostheses are implanted for primary and secondary osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis,humeral-head necrosis, fracture sequelae and other humeral-head deformities. This indicates that pathologicoanatomical variability may be greater than previously assumed. We therefore investigated a group of patients with typical shoulder replacement diagnoses, including posttraumatic and rheumatic deformities.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
One hundred and twenty-two patients with a double eccentrically adjustable shaft endoprosthesis served as a specific dimension gauge to determine in vivo the individual humeral-head rotation centres from the position of the adjustable prosthesis taper and the eccentric head.
RESULTS
All prosthesis heads were positioned eccentrically.The entire adjustment range of the prosthesis of 12 mm medial/lateral and 6 mm dorsal/ventral was required. Mean values for effective offset were 5.84 mm mediolaterally[standard deviation (SD) 1.95, minimum +2, maximum +11]and 1.71 mm anteroposteriorly (SD 1.71, minimum −3,maximum 3 mm), averaging 5.16 mm (SD 1.76, minimum +2,maximum + 10). The posterior offset averaged 1.85 mm(SD 1.85, minimum −1, maximum + 6 mm).
CONCLUSIONS
In summary, variability of the combined medial and dorsal offset of the humeral-head rotational centre determined in patients with typical underlying diagnoses in shoulder replacement was not greater than that recorded in the literature for healthy deceased patients.The range of deviation is substantial and shows the need for an adjustable prosthetic system. | 10.1007/s00264-011-1365-9 |
pubmed_35_24136 | BACKGROUND
Whether volatile anesthetics produce a second window of preconditioning is unclear. The authors tested the hypothesis that isoflurane causes delayed preconditioning against infarction and, further, that cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 mediates this beneficial effect.
METHODS
Rabbits (n = 43) were randomly assigned to receive 0.9% intravenous saline, the selective COX-2 inhibitor celecoxib (3 mg/kg intraperitoneal) five times over 2 days before coronary artery occlusion and reperfusion, or isoflurane (1.0 minimum alveolar concentration) 24 h before acute experimentation in the absence or presence of celecoxib pretreatment. Two additional groups of rabbits received a single dose of celecoxib either 30 min before or 21.5 h after administration of isoflurane. Rabbits were then instrumented for measurement of hemodynamics and underwent 30 min of coronary occlusion followed by 3 h of reperfusion. Myocardial infarct size was measured using triphenyltetrazolium staining. Western immunoblotting to examine COX-1 and COX-2 protein expression was performed in rabbit hearts that had or had not been exposed to isoflurane.
RESULTS
Isoflurane significantly (P < 0.05) reduced infarct size (22 +/- 3% of the left ventricular area at risk) as compared with control (39 +/- 2%). Celecoxib alone had no effect on infarct size (36 +/- 4%) but abolished isoflurane-induced cardioprotection (36 +/- 4%). A single dose of celecoxib administered 2.5 h before coronary occlusion and reperfusion also abolished the delayed protective effects of isoflurane (36 +/- 4%), but celecoxib given 30 min before exposure to isoflurane had no effect (22 +/- 4%). Isoflurane did not alter COX-1 and COX-2 protein expression.
CONCLUSIONS
The results indicate that the volatile anesthetic isoflurane produces a second window of preconditioning against myocardial ischemia and reperfusion injury. Furthermore, COX-2 is an important mediator of isoflurane-induced delayed preconditioning. | 10.1097/00000542-200403000-00010 |
pubmed_601_17160 | It has been suggested that alterations in cell membrane proteins may play a role in changes of erythrocyte membrane structure and function in hypertension. In order to characterize the structure of membrane proteins of erythrocytes from spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) the spin-label technique with a maleimide spin-label was used. A significant difference was observed in the characteristic electron-spin resonance (e.s.r.) spectrum of the label between samples from normotensive rats and SHR. The difference was eliminated and the spectrum significantly changed after treatment of the labelled membrane with EDTA followed by washing out the EDTA extracts, whereas the same treatment with EDTA without the following washing had no effect on the e.s.r. spectrum. It is concluded that the EDTA extracts different substances in the different rat groups. The spin-label technique is a useful method for distinguishing cell membrane properties in SHR and normotensive rats. | 10.1097/00004872-198606000-00009 |
pubmed_117_25295 | BACKGROUND
Stillbirth remains a major concern across the globe and in some high-resource countries, such as the UK; efforts to reduce the rate have achieved only modest reductions. One third of stillborn babies are small for gestational age (SGA), and these pregnancies are also at risk of neonatal adverse outcomes and lifelong health problems, especially when delivered preterm. Current UK clinical guidance advocates regular monitoring and early term delivery of the SGA fetus; however, the most appropriate regimen for surveillance of these babies remains unclear and often leads to increased intervention for a large number of these women. This pilot trial will determine the feasibility of a large-scale trial refining the risk of adverse pregnancy outcome in SGA pregnancies using biomarkers of placental function sFlt-1/PlGF, identifying and intervening in only those deemed at highest risk of stillbirth.
METHODS
PLANES is a randomised controlled feasibility study of women with an SGA fetus that will be conducted at two tertiary care hospitals in the UK. Once identified on ultrasound, women will be randomised into two groups in a 3:1 ratio in favour of sFlt-1/PlGF ratio led management vs standard care. Women with an SGA fetus and a normal sFlt-1/PlGF ratio will have a repeat ultrasound and sFlt-1/PlGF ratio every 2 weeks with planned birth delayed until 40 weeks. In those women with an SGA fetus and an abnormal sFlt-1/PlGF ratio, we will offer birth from 37 weeks or sooner if there are other concerning features on ultrasound. Women assigned to standard care will have an sFlt-1/PlGF ratio taken, but the results will be concealed from the clinical team, and the woman's pregnancy will be managed as per the local NHS hospital policy. This integrated mixed method study will also involve a health economic analysis and a perspective work package exploring trial feasibility through interviews and questionnaires with participants, their partners, and clinicians.
DISCUSSION
Our aim is to determine feasibility through the assessment of our ability to recruit and retain participants to the study. Results from this pilot study will inform the design of a future large randomised controlled trial that will be adequately powered for adverse pregnancy outcome. Such a study would provide the evidence needed to guide future management of the SGA fetus.
TRIAL REGISTRATION
ISRCTN58254381 . Registered on 4 July 2019. | 10.1186/s40814-020-00722-x |
pubmed_531_13615 | Mammalian spermatozoa and seminal plasma both contain high levels of arylsulfatases (AS), enzymes that remove sulfate from sulfated glycoconjugates. In ejaculated semen of boars, 85% of AS was found in seminal plasma whereas only 13% was found in spermatozoa. A comparable distribution of AS between spermatozoa and seminal plasma was observed in other domestic mammals. The presence of AS in seminal plasma was not due to leakage from spermatozoa because sperm cells had intact acrosomes and plasma membranes after their separation from seminal plasma, and because 84% of the acrosomal marker enzyme hyaluronidase was retained in washed spermatozoa. Spermatozoa in boar semen diluted with Beltsville Thawing Solution (BTS) deteriorated faster during storage at 17 degrees C than spermatozoa stored in BTS without seminal plasma. This suggests that seminal plasma has a deleterious effect on mammalian spermatozoa. We propose that (1) sulfated glycoconjugates stabilize sperm plasma membranes; (2) AS present in seminal plasma contribute to the deterioration of spermatozoa by desulfating these glycoconjugates; and (3) AS present in seminal plasma could well play a role in sperm capacitation. | 10.1095/biolreprod45.3.381 |
pubmed_504_9628 | BACKGROUND
The evidence has shown that children are more susceptible to the emotional effects of traumatic events such as outbreaks with the possible disruption in their daily lives.
AIM
In this paper, we discussed the psychological wellbeing of children during the COVID-19 outbreak through the art-based qualitative study using the drawing method among children in Iraqi Kurdistan.
METHODS
In this qualitative arts-based research study, 15 children aged 6 to 13 years old who were confined at home during the COVID-19 outbreak for at least 1 month were included following obtaining the consent from their parents. The children were asked to draw his/her feelings, reflections, and responses during the COVID-19 on a paper. The children were guided to paint their reflections during the COVID-19 based on the following criteria: if they experienced loneliness, tiredness, insomnia, depression, worry or anxiety, or have behavior changes and their relationship with their parents and other siblings.
RESULTS
This study showed that children have a high level of stress at home during the COVID-19 outbreak. The children had great fear about the coronavirus. They experienced loneliness and stress, and felt sad, depressed due to home confinement and social distancing. The possibility of infection by coronavirus has occupied their entire mind. Mental health care providers must take the experiences of children who are caught in this global pandemic seriously and ensure that appropriate care is offered to the children and their parents.
CONCLUSIONS
The children exhibited a strong feeling of distress, loneliness, and fear during the COVID-19 outbreak. This has implications for mental health care. | 10.1177/0020764020972439 |
pubmed_511_2740 | In this study, the wound healing properties of the gelatin-based hydrogel (GBH) wound dressing combined with adipose-derived stem cells (ADSCs) were investigated using the mouse and porcine models. The analytical results showed that the ADSCs harvested from the porcine significantly increased cell growth and promoted cell differentiation (adipogenesis and osteogenesis) in comparison to the ADSCs harvested from the mouse in vitro. Moreover, the in vivo results also indicated that the GBH wound dressing combined with ADSCs and its culture medium could potentially accelerate wound healing in the mouse and porcine models. The ADSCs presented a possibility of recovery from wounds and injuries through skin regeneration. Therefore, both in vitro and in vivo results demonstrated that the ADSCs can potentially be an effective clinical treatment through the GBH wound dressing, which is a promising evidence-based complementary and alternative medicine for skin regeneration. © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater, 107B: 278-285, 2019. | 10.1002/jbm.b.34118 |
pubmed_507_13924 | Visual perceptual learning (VPL) is defined as a long-term improvement in performance on a visual task. In recent years, the idea that conscious effort is necessary for VPL to occur has been challenged by research suggesting the involvement of more implicit processing mechanisms, such as reinforcement-driven processing and consolidation. In addition, we have learnt much about the neural substrates of VPL and it has become evident that changes in visual areas and regions beyond the visual cortex can take place during VPL. | 10.1038/nrn2737 |
pubmed_492_2442 | Emerging evidence has shown that human thought can be embodied within physical sensations and actions. Indeed, abstract concepts such as morality, time, and interpersonal warmth can be based on metaphors that are grounded in bodily experiences (e.g., physical temperature can signal interpersonal warmth). We hypothesized that social-category knowledge is similarly embodied, and we tested this hypothesis by examining a sensory metaphor related to categorical judgments of gender. We chose the dimension of "toughness" (ranging from tough to tender), which is often used to characterize differences between males and females. Across two studies, the proprioceptive experience of toughness (vs. tenderness) was manipulated as participants categorized sex-ambiguous faces as male or female. Two different manipulations of proprioceptive toughness predictably biased the categorization of faces toward "male." These findings suggest that social-category knowledge is at least partially embodied. | 10.1177/0956797610390388 |
pubmed_121_13637 | BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE
Pre-operative surgical planning using computer simulation is increasingly standard practice before Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA), in order to determine the optimal implant positions, and thereby minimise post-operative complications such as dislocation, wear and leg length discrepancy. One of the limitations of current methods, however, is the lack of information on the subject-specific reference range of motion (ROM) that could be used as targets for surgical planning. Only a limited number of hip motions are considered, which are neither subject-specific, nor representative of all the hip motions associated with all the activities of daily livings (ADLs). In this paper, therefore, a method was developed to calculate subject-specific representative bony range of motion (B-ROM) that would cover all the possible joint motions and presented in terms of pure joint motions.
METHODS
Only 3D bone geometries of femur and pelvis, constructed from personalised CT scan, were used as inputs for healthy hip joint whereas implant geometries and their positions on native bone geometries were required for planned treatment side or replaced side. Hip joint motion simulation was carried out using six different Tait-Bryan intrinsic rotation sequences of three pure joint motions - flexion-extension, abduction-adduction and internal-external rotation, and B-ROM was then identified for any of these six different sequences which caused earliest feasible impingement. The B-ROM could be used as a list of ROM data points or visualised as multiple 2D surface plots or a 3D envelop. Using the developed method, the B-ROM of a contralateral healthy hip joint of a patient can be used to define the subject-specific target ROM values to inform the surgical planning of the arthritic hip side so that the patient's natural ROM could be restored as closely as possible by the planned implant placements. This was demonstrated with a clinical verification study using 'non-dislocating' and 'dislocating' THA patients.
RESULTS
The results supported the study hypothesis that the percentage of intersected volume of the healthy and replaced side B-ROM was higher for the 'Non-Dislocator' patient (95%) compared to 'Dislocator' (78%). Also, the results showed that the only one sequence (first flexion-extension, then abduction-adduction and finally internal-external rotation) was not adequate to identify all the possible limiting B-ROM, and therefore, all the six rotation sequences should be considered.
CONCLUSIONS
The method encompasses every potential ADL, and as a result, more comprehensive surgical planning is possible, as the implant positions can be optimised in order to maximise impingement-free ROM, and consequently minimise clinical complications. | 10.1016/j.cmpb.2022.106937 |
pubmed_470_2865 | While most agree that vaccination is one of the most important public health practices, vaccines continue to be underused and undervalued, and vaccine-preventable diseases remain a threat to world health. Perhaps one reason this gap remains is that decision-making generally is made on a vaccine-by-vaccine basis. There has been less attention to the value of vaccination in general. To more clearly identify this value, this paper reviews the cost-effectiveness literature and calculates the annual benefits of vaccination on a global scale. | 10.1016/s0264-410x(02)00623-0 |
pubmed_1132_10620 | AIM
To evaluate efficacy and safety of CERA (continuous erythropoietin receptor activator) administration for correcting anemia in the patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), not on dialysis.
METHODS
We performed observational study on 27 CKD patients in stage 4 or 5 with renal anemia requiring use of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESA). All patients received CERA (Mircera; Roche, Basel, Switzerland) subcutaneously in dose of 0.6 microg per kg every two weeks during the correction phase of anemia treatment or once monthly during the maintenance treatment. Dose of CERA was modified according to manufacturer instructions. Iron supplementation was administrated orally or intravenously in order to achieve serum ferritin 200-500 microg/L. Patients were followed up to 1 year (from 3-12 months). Response criteria for CERA were Hb increase >10 g/L above baseline or Hb > or = 110 g/L.
RESULTS
Hb statistically significant (p < 0.05), increased during the observation period. The median at baseline was 94 g/L and after 6 months and one year were 108 g/L and 114.5 g/L respectively. Furthermore, the range of the lowest and highest values of Hb gradually decreased indicating less Hb fluctuation. After one year, all patients had Hb range 100 g/L to 120 g/L. There were no statistically significant differences between Hb between groups of patients stratified according to the primary kidney disease and age. During the study period two patients died due to myocardial infarction, probably not associated with CERA administration according to observed Hb levels (103 and 110 g/L). Only registered side effect was slight increase in arterial pressure, controlled with antihypertensive drugs. The majority of patients had reported better exercise tolerance and sleep and less irritability.
CONCLUSION
The results of this observational study suggest that the use of CERA is effective and safe and leads to a successful correction of anemia in CKD patients who have not yet started renal replacement therapy. | pubmed_1132_10620 |
pubmed_762_2697 | The hypothesis of a magnocellular channel deficit in dyslexia was tested. Subjects were 10-year-old dyslexics and normal readers. Psychophysical thresholds for luminance and chromatic contrasts were estimated using black and white and red and green sinusoidal gratings of various spatial frequencies, presented in static and dynamic conditions (drift and reversal). Significant group differences were found for luminance contrast, with a higher sensitivity in dyslexics. No group differences were obtained for chromatic contrast. High luminance contrast sensitivity correlated with low reading and writing skills. The typical finding of an increase contrast sensitivity to low spatial frequency gratings, due to their dynamic presentations, was absent in dyslexics. The results provide support for the magnocellular deficit hypothesis. The pattern of this deficit, however, is much more complex than that emerging from previous research. | 10.1097/00001756-200212200-00028 |
pubmed_721_16841 | A synthetic peptide corresponding to amino acids 1-19 of thyroglobulin was used to test the possibility of generating protein-reactive monoclonal antibodies by immunization in vitro with a synthetic peptide as antigen. Splenocytes from non-immunized Balb/c mice were cultured in serum-free medium for 3 days in the presence of thymocyte-conditioned medium and the synthetic peptide prior to fusion with SP2/0 murine myeloma cells. The synthetic peptide was used in its free form, i.e. not coupled to a protein carrier. Hybridomas secreting monoclonal antibodies reactive with the synthetic peptide were obtained after immunization in vitro with as little as 10 ng/ml of the synthetic peptide. Between 50 and 70% of the primary clones obtained in different experiments produced monoclonal antibodies also reactive with the intact protein. Six stable hybridomas were isolated; all produced antibodies of the IgM class. We conclude that immunization in vitro with a free synthetic peptide is an efficient method for the generation of monoclonal antibodies reactive with the intact protein. | 10.1016/0161-5890(87)90076-9 |
pubmed_975_21148 | To establish the pathogenic role of duodenogastric reflux in dyspeptic symptoms we have compared the clinical features, gastrointestinal motility, and rates of duodenogastric bile reflux in 12 cholecistectomized dyspeptic patients, 12 dyspeptic patients with intact gallbladder, and 12 healthy controls. Specific symptoms were scored for severity and frequency. Gastrointestinal manometry was performed during 3 hr of fasting and 2 hr postprandially. Simultaneously, samples of duodenal and gastric contents were obtained sequentially for quantification of bile acids. Results show that symptom global severity (9.6 +/- 0.4 vs 8.8 +/- 0.7) and frequency (9.9 +/- 0.8 vs 9.0 +/- 0.5) were similar in both dyspeptic groups; only abdominal pain was milder in cholecystectomized patients (1.9 +/- 0.1 vs 2.6 +/- 0.2; P < 0.05). Fasting gastric bile acid concentrations were higher in cholecystectomized patients (P < 0.05) and antral postcibal motility lower (P < 0.05) than in the groups. No relation among gastric hypomotility, duodenogastric bile reflux, and symptom scores was detected. We concluded that patients with functional dyspepsia and a prior cholecystectomy have clinical features similar to those with gallbladders, but some physiological features are dissimilar: antral motility is decreased and duodenogastric bile reflux is increased. Thus, a uniform clinical expression of various pathophysiological disturbances constitutes the basis of functional dyspepsia. | 10.1007/BF02212691 |
pubmed_135_26523 | Animal-assisted interventions (AAI) have been found to benefit human emotional state and cognitive performance. Recent applications of AAI have extended to classrooms with a range of intentions including to improve literacy. This Canadian study sought to examine differences in reading performance and behaviour in early readers identified as requiring extra supports following exposure to a canine-assisted and adult-assisted reading support. Twenty-four 7- to 8-year-olds experienced both supports in random order. At the start of the study and after completion of either support learners' oral reading, reading comprehension, social functioning, and reading affect were assessed. Parents, teachers, and children were also asked a range of closed- and open-ended questions. Findings showed evidence of improvement in reading performance, particularly after reading to a dog. There was also evidence of improved social competence overall and decreased problematic behaviour, although this was dependent on order of exposure. Teacher and parent reports showed they believed both supports to improve learner skills and affect for reading, and that teachers made more distinctions here. Implications for the practical application and relevance of methodological detail for future work are discussed. | 10.1007/s10643-022-01392-5 |
pubmed_326_7554 | Cardiac failure is a common lethal outcome of coronary heart disease and left ventricular hypertrophy. The efficacy of forced vital capacity (FVC), measured biennially, in predicting the onset of cardiac failure was explored in 818 Framingham Study subjects with those predisposing conditions, among 324 developed cardiac failure. Among the men and women who had coronary disease or left ventricular hypertrophy, those with FVCs in the lower quartile were at substantially increased risk of developing cardiac failure. For men, comparing the lowest quartile with men whose FVCs were in the highest quartile (<2.7 L vs >5.6 L), the risk ratio was 1.8; for women with FVCs <1.7 L, the risk was 2.3 times those with FVCs of > or = 3.5L. The excess risk of cardiac failure imposed by a low FVC was similar in those with coronary disease and left ventricular hypertrophy. The simple FVC is an inexpensive and robust predictor of cardiac failure in persons predisposed by coronary disease or left ventricular hypertrophy. FVC determination should help identify candidates for cardiac failure needing echocardiographic examination for ventricular dysfunction. | 10.1016/s0002-9149(96)00154-3 |
pubmed_541_13002 | The protein kinase Akt is involved in embryonic vascular development and neoangiogenesis as well as in several endothelial cell functions, including activation of endothelial NO-synthase (eNOS) and promotion of endothelial cell survival. We have examined the effects of G-protein activators thrombin and histamine as well as lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) on Akt phosphorylation in cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). Akt phosphorylation was analyzed with the phosphospecific Akt (Ser473) antibody by Western blotting. While epidermal growth factor (EGF) was a potent stimulator of Akt phosphorylation histamine, thrombin and LPC blocked its activation when used in cotreatment with EGF. Following inhibition or downregulation of protein kinase C (PKC), the inhibitory effect of both histamine and thrombin on the endothelial response to EGF was prevented. Furthermore, stimulation of PKC, using short-term 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) treatment, markedly inhibited the stimulatory effects of EGF on Akt phosphorylation. Rottlerin, an inhibitor of the PKCdelta, but not Gö6976, which is an inhibitor of alpha, beta, gamma and isoforms, reversed the inhibitory effects of histamine. Conversely, inhibition or downregulation of PKC did not prevent the inhibitory effect of LPC. Akt phosphorylation was also increased by sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) treatment and this activity was influenced by the various cotreatments in the same way as the activation by EGF. Overall, this study demonstrated that the G-protein activators thrombin and histamine inhibited both EGF- and S1P-mediated Akt phosphorylation in HUVEC by activation of PKCdelta, while the inhibitory effects of LPC were independent of PKCdelta. | 10.1016/s0021-9150(03)00127-8 |
pubmed_651_14237 | LEW rat recipients of (LEW X BN)F1 strain heterotopic cardiac transplants treated with cyclosporine A (CsA) (15 mg/kg/day intramuscularly, 7 days) retain grafts indefinitely despite drug withdrawal. Donor-specific suppressor T cells that are active in passive transfer experiments have been harvested from long-term CsA-treated hosts. Although CsA is known to inhibit in vitro cytokine release, the in vivo effects of the CsA on the lymphokine cascade are not known. We investigated the action of the drug upon spontaneous and mitogen-induced interleukin 1 (IL 1), interleukin 2 (IL 2), and interleukin 3 (IL 3) release by spleen cells obtained from the following groups of rats: 1) normal, i.e., untreated and ungrafted; 2) grafted, acutely rejecting; 3) grafted, actively treated; and 4) under CsA-induced state of "tolerance." The results demonstrate that in vivo CsA therapy inhibits monocyte (IL 1 release) as well as lymphocyte function (IL 2 and IL 3 release) only during the inductive phase (the 7 days of treatment). During the "tolerant" phase, mitogen (Con A and LPS)-induced release of interleukins was quantitatively similar to that noted in normal animals. In contrast, a remarkable increase in the spontaneous production of IL 3 was observed in the "tolerant" group. Because cytokine release is not inhibited in the "tolerant" state, our data strongly support the concept that maintenance of the state of unresponsiveness is governed by the emergence of suppressor cells. The correlation of increased spontaneous production of IL 3 during this period leads us to postulate that this interleukin may be implicated in the activation or clonal expansion of suppressor cells, and hence may play a role in graft tolerance. | pubmed_651_14237 |
pubmed_845_13837 | Satellite geodetic networks are commonly used in surveying tasks, but they can also be used in mobile surveys. Mobile satellite surveys can be used for trackage inventory, diagnostics and design. The combination of modern technological solutions with the adaptation of research methods known in other fields of science offers an opportunity to acquire highly accurate solutions for railway track inventory. This article presents the effects of work carried out using a mobile surveying platform on which Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) receivers were mounted. The satellite observations (surveys) obtained were aligned using one of the methods known from classical land surveying. The records obtained during the surveying campaign on a 246th km railway track section were subjected to alignment. This article provides a description of the surveying campaign necessary to obtain measurement data and a theoretical description of the method employed to align observation results as well as their visualisation. | 10.3390/s20174948 |
pubmed_1019_755 | Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is a tumor suppressor syndrome characterized by benign tumors in multiple organs, including the brain and kidney. TSC-associated tumors exhibit hyperactivation of mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1), a direct inhibitor of autophagy. Autophagy can either promote or inhibit tumorigenesis, depending on the cellular context. The role of autophagy in the pathogenesis and treatment of the multisystem manifestations of TSC is unknown. We found that the combination of mTORC1 and autophagy inhibition was more effective than either treatment alone in inhibiting the survival of tuberin (TSC2)-null cells, growth of TSC2-null xenograft tumors, and development of spontaneous renal tumors in Tsc2(+/-) mice. Down-regulation of Atg5 induced extensive central necrosis in TSC2-null xenograft tumors, and loss of one allele of Beclin1 almost completely blocked macroscopic renal tumor formation in Tsc2(+/-) mice. Surprisingly, given the finding that lowering autophagy blocks TSC tumorigenesis, genetic down-regulation of p62/sequestosome 1 (SQSTM1), the autophagy substrate that accumulates in TSC tumors as a consequence of low autophagy levels, strongly inhibited the growth of TSC2-null xenograft tumors. These data demonstrate that autophagy is a critical component of TSC tumorigenesis, suggest that mTORC1 inhibitors may have autophagy-dependent prosurvival effects in TSC, and reveal two distinct therapeutic targets for TSC: autophagy and the autophagy target p62/SQSTM1. | 10.1073/pnas.1104361108 |
pubmed_486_10572 | Phospholipase C (PLC) can participate in cell proliferation, differentiation and aging. However, whether it has a function in apoptosis in porcine primary granulosa cells is largely uncertain. The objective of this study was to examine the effects of PLC on apoptosis of porcine primary granulosa cells cultured in vitro. The mRNA expression of BAK, BAX and CASP3, were upregulated in the cells treated with U73122 (the PLC inhibitor). The abundance of BCL2 mRNA, was upregulated, while BAX and CASP3 mRNA expression was decreased after treatment with m-3M3FBS (the PLC activator). Both the early and late apoptosis rate were maximized with 0.5 μM U73122 for 4 h. The rate of early apoptosis was the highest at 4 h and the rate of late apoptosis was the highest at 12 h in the m-3M3FBS group. The protein abundance of PLCβ1, protein kinase C β (PKCβ), calmodulin-dependent protein kinaseII α (CAMKIIα) and calcineurinA (CalnA) were decreased by U73122, and CAMKIIα protein abundance was increased by m-3M3FBS. The mRNA expression of several downstream genes (CDC42, NFATc1, and NFκB) was upregulated by PLC. Our results demonstrated that apoptosis can be inhibited by altering PLC signaling in porcine primary granulosa cells cultured in vitro, and several calcium-sensitive targets and several downstream genes might take part in the processes. | 10.1186/s13048-019-0567-4 |
pubmed_1007_17167 | Vaginal microbicides, substances that may substantially decrease transmission of sexually transmitted infections (STI) including human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), are currently in clinical trials. They are being presented as woman-initiated prevention methods that have the potential to be used without partners' knowledge. However, it is recognised that covert use may be challenging, due to the accompanying increase in vaginal lubrication. This study explored factors that may influence acceptability and utilisation of vaginal microbicides in Ghana, a sub-Saharan West African country with relatively low rates of HIV. Qualitative research methods were employed in Accra, Ghana in 2005. Individual interviews were conducted with 10 staff working in reproductive health settings, and two focus groups were conducted with young women aged 24-28. Three main topics emerged during the interviews and focus groups, including issues related to available contraceptive and prevention methods, perceptions of microbicide interest and acceptability, and cultural influences on microbicide acceptability and use. Participants discussed issues associated with available contraceptive options that may influence microbicide uptake. All respondents suggested that Ghanaian women would have a high level of interest in microbicides, with varying interest in formulas with different contraceptive and disease prevention properties. Cultural factors that may impact on microbicide use, often related to gender and power issues, were also discussed. Thus, as microbicides are being developed, cultural issues and behavioral correlates will need to be assessed to help ensure acceptability and use. In addition, gendered negotiation power and the implications of covert use need to be addressed in microbicide education and social marketing. | 10.1080/17290376.2008.9724897 |
pubmed_738_22451 | OBJECTIVE
This work presents a device for non-invasive wound parameters assessment, designed to overcome the drawbacks of traditional methods, which are mostly rough, inaccurate, and painful for the patient. The device estimates the morphological parameters of the wound and provides augmented reality (AR) visual feedback on the wound healing status by projecting the wound border acquired during the last examination, thus improving doctor-patient communication.
METHODS
An accurate 3D model of the wound is created by stereophotogrammetry and refined through self-organizing maps. The 3D model is used to estimate physical parameters for wound healing assessment and integrates AR functionalities based on a miniaturized projector. The physical parameter estimation functionalities are evaluated in terms of precision, accuracy, inter-operator variability, and repeatability, whereas AR wound border projection is evaluated in terms of accuracy on the same phantom.
RESULTS
The accuracy and precision of the device are respectively 2% and 1.2% for linear parameters, and 1.7% and 1.3% for area and volume. The AR projection shows an error distance <1 mm. No statistical difference was found between the measurements of different operators.
CONCLUSION
The device has proven to be an objective and non-operator-dependent tool for assessing the morphological parameters of the wound. Comparison with non-contact devices shows improved accuracy, offering reliable and rigorous measurements. Clinical Impact: Chronic wounds represent a significant health problem with high recurrence rates due to the ageing of the population and diseases such as diabetes and obesity. The device presented in this work provides an easy-to-use non-invasive tool to obtain useful information for treatment. | 10.1109/JTEHM.2020.2983156 |
pubmed_637_3539 | INTRODUCTION
Health care delivery involves multiple health professions, and increasingly, diagnostic and therapeutic decisions are made through interprofessional teamwork. We define collaborative clinical reasoning (CCR) as the process in which two or more health care team members negotiate diagnostic, therapeutic, or prognostic issues of an individual patient resulting in an illness or treatment plan (and to reduce uncertainty). In a systematic review, we aimed to answer the following research question: Which empirically observable factors are considered crucial influences on performance in CCR in current empirical research?
METHODS
A systematic literature review was conducted. We included empirical studies taking place in a hospital setting, with a clear focus on CCR and published between January 1990 and September 2014. The studies were only included when at least one physician was part of the team. Nine articles were included in the review.
RESULTS
The factors crucially influencing the CCR performance (ie, diagnosis or treatment plan of patients) are (1) the initial distribution of information over team members, (2) clinical experience of physicians within a team, (3) information exchange within a team, and (4) individual retrieval of information from the team or information representation.
DISCUSSION
Despite the sparse empirical evidence on CCR, four factors influencing performance were extracted from the literature. Overall, there is little evidence though how each of these factors actually influences CCR performance. Thus, we need more empirical studies to better understand and foster CCR performance. | 10.1097/CEH.0000000000000158 |
pubmed_770_1674 | We have identified specific binding sites for pancreatic polypeptide (PP) on the mucosal lining of canine small intestine. The present study was undertaken to further characterize these binding sites (receptors) on purified intestinal membranes and to establish their location on the brush border or basolateral surface of the intestinal enterocyte. Basolateral and brush border membranes were prepared by sorbitol density centrifugation. PP receptors were localized predominantly to the vascular surface, and thus binding of PP 125I-labeled on Tyr-27 to the basolateral preparation was used to evaluate receptor characteristics. Binding of PP was calcium, time, temperature, and pH dependent. Maximum specific binding of labeled PP occurred after an 8-hr incubation at 4 degrees C with 5 mM calcium at pH 6.8. Data analysis by Scatchard plot showed high- and low-affinity binding sites with relative affinities of 1.5 x 10(-9) M and 2.6 x 10(-8) M and with corresponding binding capacities of 0.23 pmol/mg and 0.84 pmol/mg of protein, respectively. This receptor was specific for PP since peptide YY and neuropeptide Y, peptides of the PP family, cross-reacted by less than 3%, as judged from comparisons of half-maximal displacement of label. Structurally dissimilar peptides, insulin and glucagon, did not compete for binding. Specific 125I-labeled PP binding was localized primarily to basolateral membranes (9.8 +/- 0.8%) with little binding by brush border membranes (0.8 +/- 0.2%). Thus, we have identified highly specific receptors for PP, located predominantly on the vascular surface of the small intestinal mucosa. These data suggest that the mucosal lining of the small intestine is a target tissue for PP and that PP participates in the hormonal regulation of fuel metabolism and substrate transport in the small intestinal mucosa. | 10.1073/pnas.85.13.4745 |
pubmed_379_1951 | Following an analysis of the literature, the review concludes that the recent huge increase in our theoretical knowledge of the molecular biology of the CEA family has been accompanied by an adequate practical immunohistological implementation. However, a broader use of CEA as a diagnostic tool has been hampered by variable and conflicting results using polyclonal anti-CEA antibodies and by lack of standardization of immunohistochemical methods and tissue preparation. CEA immunoreactivity has been demonstrated in a variety of normal and neoplastic tissues, but in all sites with positive staining, at least one other author has failed to identify CEA reactivity. CEA can be used as a marker to identify epithelial differentiation; however, this will be helpful in only 1% of cases. The introduction of well-defined monoclonal antibodies against clearly defined epitopes of the CEA family will make the differential diagnosis of tumors easier. | 10.1159/000217927 |
pubmed_262_16211 | BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE
The Artelon CMC spacer is designed for surgical treatment of osteoarthritis (OA) in the carpometacarpal joint of the thumb (CMC-I). Good results using this degradable device were previously presented in a pilot study. We now present results from a larger randomized, controlled, multicenter study.
PATIENTS AND METHODS
109 patients (94 females) with a mean age of 60 (42-83) years, suffering from painful CMC OA, were included in the study at 7 centers in Sweden. The patients were randomized to Artelon CMC spacer (test, n = 72) or tendon arthroplasty (control, n = 37) at a ratio of 2:1. Perceived pain was recorded on a visual analog scale (VAS) before treatment and after 3, 6, and 12 months, when measuring maximal tripod pinch strength (primary outcome measure). In addition, range of motion, radiographic findings, and functional testing were recorded pre- and postoperatively.
RESULTS
Swelling and pain were more common in the test group and 6 implants were removed because of such symptoms. 5 of these patients did not receive antibiotics preoperatively according to the study protocol. In a per-protocol analysis, i.e. patients without signs of concomitant OA in the scaphoid-trapezium-trapezoid (STT) joint and those in the test group who received antibiotics, the mean difference in tripod pinch strength increase, adjusted for baseline, was 1.4 kg in favor of the test group (not statistically significant). Statistically significant pain relief was achieved in both groups, with perceived pain gradually decreasing during the follow-up period. In the intention-to-treat analysis but not in the per-protocol analysis, significantly better pain relief (VAS) was obtained in the control group. Patient-perceived disability evaluated by the DASH questionnaire improved in both groups.
INTERPRETATION
The Artelon CMC spacer did not show superior results compared to tendon interposition arthroplasty. Proper use of preoperative antibiotics and a thorough patient selection appear to be important for the results. | 10.3109/17453671003635835 |
pubmed_745_1608 | The paper is devoted to an experimental study of the hormonal properties of two new derivatives of 17 alpha-oxyprogesterone--mepregenol monoacetate and mepregenol diacetate--for their possible use as minipills. Both compounds showed a high progestational activity which was much higher than that of progesterone and the activity of alpha-norgestrel in peroral administration. The above compounds made no inhibitory effect on hypophyseal gonadotropic function; on the contrary, they stimulated follitropine secretion. Besides, different dose-related influence of the steroids on a progesterone level was revealed: the use of small doses resulted in enhanced secretion and larger doses brought about the suppression of secretion. Thus, the new compounds of the progesterone series--mepregenol monoacetate and mepregenol diacetate--appear promising compounds for monohormonal contraception and for the management of conditions with lowered function of the corpus luteum. | pubmed_745_1608 |
pubmed_74_21015 | Compared with a single nanowire (NW) or NW array, the simpler preparation process of an NW network (NWN) enables it to be fabricated in large-scale, flexible, and wearable applications of photodetectors (PDs). However, the NWN behaves many microinterfaces (MIs) between NWs, seriously limiting the device performance and stability. Here, we demonstrate a welding strategy for an MAPbI3 NWN, which enhances the crystallinity of the NWN and enhances the radial transmission of photogenerated carriers, leading to a better device performance with ultrahigh stability. Our NWN PDs fabricated by using the welding strategy showed ultrahigh performance with an on/off ratio and detectivity of 2.8 × 104 and 4.16 × 1012 Jones, respectively, which are the best performance for reported metal-semiconductor-metal (MSM) perovskite NWN PDs and are comparable to those of single-NW or NW array PDs. More importantly, our unpackaged NWN PDs show ultrahigh storage stability in air with a humidity of 55-65%, and the flexible NWN PDs can enable 250 bending cycles at different bending radii and 1000 bending cycles at fixed bending radii with no performance degradation being observed. These results indicate our welding strategy is very powerful for improving the performance of the NW device with applications in the wearable field. | 10.1021/acsnano.9b09315 |
pubmed_177_7604 | Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is a common and often inconspicuous wound that is frequently associated with chronic low-grade symptoms and cognitive dysfunction. Previous evidence suggests that daily blue wavelength light therapy may be effective at reducing fatigue and improving sleep in patients recovering from mTBI. However, the effects of light therapy on recovering brain structure remain unexplored. In this study, we analyzed white matter diffusion properties, including generalized fractional anisotropy, and the quantity of water diffusion in isotropic (i.e., isotropic diffusion) and anisotropic fashion (i.e., quantitative anisotropy, QA) for fibers crossing 11 brain areas known to be significantly affected following mTBI. Specifically, we investigated how 6 weeks of daily morning blue light exposure therapy (compared to an amber-light placebo condition) impacted changes in white matter diffusion in individuals with mTBI. We observed a significant impact of the blue light treatment (relative to the placebo) on the amount of water diffusion (QA) for multiple brain areas, including the corpus callosum, anterior corona radiata, and thalamus. Moreover, many of these changes were associated with improvements in sleep latency and delayed memory. These findings suggest that blue wavelength light exposure may serve as one of the potential non-pharmacological treatments for facilitating structural and functional recovery following mTBI; they also support the use of QA as a reliable neuro-biomarker for mTBI therapies. | 10.3389/fneur.2017.00616 |
pubmed_305_24959 | The aim of our study is to investigate the protective effect of Spirulina fusiformis against streptozotocin-induced diabetes in Wistar albino rats. Rats were divided into five groups: group I was normal control, group II was diabetic control (50 mg/kg b.w. of streptozotocin, i.p.), group III was Spirulina fusiformis (400 mg/kg b.w., p.o.) treated diabetic rats; group IV was Glibenclamide (0. 6 mg/kg b.w., p.o.) treated diabetic rats and group V was treated with Spirulina fusiformis (400 mg/kg b.w., p.o.) alone. There was significant elevation in the levels of blood glucose, serum lipid profile and serum renal markers (total protein, urea, creatinine and uric acid) in the diabetic rats. Also, diabetic rats showed significantly (P < 0.05) reduced antioxidant status (reduced levels of superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase, glutathione-S-transferase and reduced glutathione; increased levels of TBARS), impaired oral glucose tolerance and elevated HbA1C. Spirulina fusiformis was able to normalize the above mentioned parameters. Significant histopathological changes were found in the pancreas, liver and kidney sections of the diabetic control group while treatment with Spirulina fusiformis was able to minimize the extent of tissue damage. Current study shows that Spirulina fusiformis possesses significant antidiabetic and antihyperlipidemic effects in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats by effectively reducing the rise in blood glucose levels and lipid profile. | 10.1007/s13205-018-1156-8 |
pubmed_785_14517 | Survival of insects on a substrate containing toxic substances such as plant secondary metabolites or insecticides is dependent on the metabolism or excretion of those xenobiotics. The primary sites of xenobiotic metabolism are the midgut, Malpighian tubules, and fat body. In general, gene expression in these organs is reported for the entire tissue by online databases, but several studies have shown that gene expression within the midgut is compartmentalized. Here, RNA sequencing is used to investigate whole-genome expression in subsections of third instar larval midguts of Drosophila melanogaster. The data support functional diversification in subsections of the midgut. Analysis of the expression of gene families that are implicated in the metabolism of xenobiotics suggests that metabolism may not be uniform along the midgut. These data provide a starting point for investigating gene expression and xenobiotic metabolism and other functions of the larval midgut. | 10.1534/g3.114.013870 |
pubmed_1135_509 | BACKGROUND
Functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) studies results in case of an adult patient with low grade glioma (LGG) in dominant hemisphere suggest brain plasticity process with acquisition of language functions by the non-dominant hemisphere speech regions.
CASE REPORT
A 36-years old right-handed woman was admitted to the Department of Neurosurgery for surgical treatment of brain tumor. An MRI examination revealed a pathological mass in the left frontal lobe, in close topographical relationship to the Broca's area. A left fronto-parietal craniotomy was performed, with an intraoperative awake language mapping procedure. A total resection of the pathological mass was achieved. The tumor was examined histologically as LGG. In the follow-up MRI exam 32 months after the operation a tumor recurrence was suggested. The fMRI exams performed preoperative and 3, 32 and 41 months after the operation showed changes in language regions activation patterns, with a progressive right-sided activation of Broca's and Wernicke's areas. Pre- and postoperative cognitive evaluation by a neuropsychologist did not detect any language impairment. We present a running process of reorganization of language areas in a patient after brain tumor resection, from strong left-sided to symmetrical lateralization.
CONCLUSIONS
1. FMRI results in comparison with the psychological status of the patient proved contribution of functional reorganization to the preservation of language performance. 2. A slow growing LGG as well as the recurrence of the tumor near the left Broca's area might be the factors leading to reorganization of language-related areas by recruiting the right hemisphe. | 10.12659/PJR.893897 |
pubmed_739_6698 | The Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM), an instrument comprising five dimensions devised by Russell and co-workers (7) to measure gross motor function in children with cerebral palsy (CP) or brain damage, enables changes in performance status to be evaluated after therapy or when monitored over time. We analysed its inter-rater and intra-rater reliability on the three most difficult dimensions. A video-recording of three children with CP performing test tasks was assessed on two occasions at an interval of six months by each of the 15 physiotherapists using the GMFM manual but without previous experience or training in the use of the instrument. Mean percentage scores were similar at the first and second assessments. Both inter- and intra-rater reliabilities were good, inter-rater reliability being 0.77 and 0.88 at the first and second assessments, respectively, and intra-rater reliability 0.68 at the second assessment. The findings suggest the GMFM to be a useful and reliable instrument for assessing motor function and treatment outcome in CP. | pubmed_739_6698 |
pubmed_340_451 | BACKGROUND
Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) is involved in key steps of immune response. The aim of the present study was to evaluate genotype distribution and genotype-phenotype association in periodontal disease regarding Glu298Asp polymorphism of the eNOS gene.
METHODS
A total of 272 subjects were included into the study. Genomic DNA was obtained from the peripheral blood of 51 chronic periodontitis (CP) patients, 48 generalized aggressive periodontitis (GAgP), and 173 reference controls. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification and subsequent BanII restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis were used to detect eNOS Glu298Asp polymorphism. Probing depth, clinical attachment loss, plaque accumulation, and bleeding on probing (BOP) were recorded. The data were analyzed by the chi2 test, logistic regression, and Mann-Whitney U test.
RESULTS
The distributions of eNOS Glu298Asp genotypes and alleles were similar among study groups. Subjects with the Asp allele (Asp+) were statistically higher in the CP group compared to the control group (odds ratio [OR] = 1.957; 95% confidence interval [95% CI] = 1.038 to 3.689). In the GAgP group, BOP (%) was significantly higher in patients with the 298Asp allele (Asp+) compared to patients without the Asp allele (Asp-) (P = 0.015).
CONCLUSIONS
The present study showed that eNOS Glu298Asp polymorphism is associated with BOP in GAgP patients. Moreover, the 298Asp allele of the eNOS gene might be related to CP in the Turkish population. | 10.1902/jop.2006.050320 |
pubmed_963_9249 | Colorectal cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer death. The mainstay of chemotherapy in colorectal cancer patients for the past 40 years has been fluorouracil (5-FU). Oxaliplatin (Eloxatin) is a novel platinum compound with promising activity in colorectal cancer. As a single agent, oxaliplatin has produced response rates of 12% to 24% in patients with previously untreated advanced colorectal cancer, and 10% to 11% in patients with relapsed or refractory advanced colorectal cancer. In phase II trials, oxaliplatin combined with 5-FU, with or without leucovorin, was associated with response rates of 60% and higher when used as front-line therapy, and when used in patients with relapsed or refractory advanced colorectal cancer, response rates ranged from 25% to 50%. In the front-line setting, two randomized trials of 5-FU and leucovorin, with or without oxaliplatin, demonstrated that the addition of oxaliplatin significantly increases response rate and time to tumor progression, but not survival, over 5-FU plus leucovorin alone. The reasons for this discrepancy are unclear, and several possibilities are being considered. Additional phase III trials are underway to clarify the contribution of oxaliplatin in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and metastatic colorectal cancer. | pubmed_963_9249 |
pubmed_748_20152 | INTRODUCTION
Using the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical/Defined Daily Dose (ATC/DDD) methodology, we analyzed utilization of prescription-only drugs in Banja Luka region in 2000-2001.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
A retrospective study on drug utilization, according to ATC classification, was conducted on the basis of data received from Central City Pharmacy Banja Luka, and results were presented in terms of DDD/1000 inhabitants/day.
RESULTS
Pharmaco-epidemiological analysis showed that the list of 20 most frequently prescribed drugs in 2000 included 8 cardiovascular drugs and 6 anti-infective drugs. In 2001, 20 most frequently prescribed drugs, included 9 cardiovascular drugs, and 4 anti-infective drugs. Regarding anti-infective agents, the most frequently prescribed antibiotics were amoxicillin, doxycyline, co-trimoxazole and gentamicin. The most frequently prescribed drug in 2000 was diazepam (5.33 DDD/1000 inhabitants/day). The use of this drug significantly increased in 2001 (7.95 DDD/1000 inhabitants/day).
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
Based on total analysis, it can be concluded that the positive drug list, defined by the Health Insurance Fund, significantly affected the drug utilization profile, but some drugs are considered to be irrationally prescribed. | 10.2298/mpns0402072s |
others_406_4007 | Impaired hematopoiesis and dysregulated cytokine expression have important implications for cancer in the elderly. In aged people, hematopoiesis is dysregulated and becomes paradoxically down-modulated under periods of increased hematopoietic demand. This down-modulation may explain, at least in part, the increased incidence of anemia in the elderly, although the cause of anemia can usually be identified in these patients and frequently reversed with targeted therapy. An age-associated decrease in the expression of interleukin-2 may contribute to impaired cellular immunity. Additionally, the increased interleukin-6 production frequently found in the elderly may participate in promoting the survival and proliferation of malignant myeloma and in inducing resistance by myeloma cells to therapies that act through apoptosis. Dysregulation of the expression of these and other cytokines may be a mechanism contributing to age-related impairment of the hematopoietic response, the genesis and therapeutic resistance of specific malignancies, and cancer cachex | 10.1016/S0889-8588(05)70277-X |
pubmed_611_16728 | Reduction mammaplasty techniques using the inferior pedicle have been recommended to preserve the nipple and areolar sensation after surgery. The vertical scar mammaplasty with a superior pedicle has often been criticised because of the potential for damage to the sensory supply of the nipple-areola complex. The aim of this study was to assess the breast sensation in two prospective series of patients operated upon using superior pedicle and inferior pedicle mammaplasties. Between November 1996 and February 1997, 20 consecutive patients (39 breasts) underwent breast reduction using the inferior pedicle technique with inverted T scar (Robbin's technique). This series of patients was matched with another series of 18 patients (36 breasts) who had breast reduction using a vertical scar mammaplasty with superior pedicle (Lejour's technique) in another centre. Cutaneous pressure thresholds were recorded using Semmes-Weinstein monofilaments. The values were obtained on the quadrants of the skin of the breast, the areola and the nipple. The sensitivity test was performed preoperatively, then at 3 and 6 months postoperatively. Patients' characteristics (age, weight, breast ptosis, breast mass resected and risk factors) were statistically similar between the two groups. The preoperative values of pressure sensation on the different areas tested were statistically similar between the two groups. The sensitivity decreased on almost all the tested areas of the breast at 3 months postoperatively. No patient had an insensitive area on the breast at 6 months after surgery. Some areas of the breast showed a significant difference in pressure sensitivity after one technique compared to the other: better sensation on the skin of the superior and lateral quadrants after the superior pedicle technique at 3 months (P< 0.001), poorer areolar sensation on the inferior quadrant after the superior pedicle technique at 3 and 6 months (P< 0.05) and on the superior quadrant after the inferior pedicle technique at 3 months only (P< 0.05). However, the mean value of the areolar quadrants was statistically similar after both techniques. The nipple sensation was significantly decreased in both groups at 3 months but remained comparable between the two groups. Breast innervation was damaged by breast reduction using both the inferior and the superior pedicle techniques. The breast skin had better sensation after the superior pedicle technique while the areola had slightly better sensation after the inferior pedicle technique. At 6 months, the mean value of nipple-areola complex pressure sensation was comparable in the two series of patients. | 10.1054/bjps.2000.3456 |
pubmed_288_9395 | To establish and maintain a successful infection, microbial pathogens have evolved various strategies to infect the host in the face of a functional immune system. In this context, the alpha-proteobacteria Wolbachia capacities to infect new host species have been greatly evidenced. Indeed, in terrestrial isopods, experimentally transferred Wolbachia invade all host tissues, including immune cells such as hemocytes. To investigate mechanisms that have to be avoided by bacteria to maintain themselves in hemocytes, we characterized the hemocyte proteome of Armadillidium vulgare by a 2D gel electrophoresis approach. Fifty-six proteins were identified and classified into functional groups (stress and immunity, glucose metabolisms, cytoskeleton, others). We focused on immune response and cytoskeleton proteins often exploited by bacteria to invade their host. From the microsequences obtained by mass spectrometry, PCR primers were designed to amplify seven partial cDNAs encoding masquerade, alpha2-macroglobulin, transglutaminase, MnSOD, calreticulin, cyclophilin, and vinculin, confirming their expression in hemocytes. | 10.1016/j.dci.2008.01.007 |
pubmed_1004_24572 | BACKGROUND
Several candidate genes on the short arm of chromosome 6 including the HLA locus, TNF, LTA and AGER could be associated with late diabetic complications. The aim of our study was therefore to explore whether polymorphisms (TNF -308 G-->A, LTA T60N C-->A and AGER -374 T-->A) in these genes alone or together (as haplotypes) increased the risk for diabetic complications.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS
The studied polymorphisms were genotyped in 742 type 1 and 2957 type 2 diabetic patients as well as in 206 non-diabetic control subjects. The Haploview program was used to analyze putative linkage disequilibrium between studied polymorphisms. The TNF, LTA and AGER polymorphisms were associated with the HLA-DQB1 risk genotypes. The AGER -374 A allele was more common in type 1 diabetic patients with than without diabetic nephropathy (31.2 vs. 28.4%, p = 0.007). In a logistic regression analysis, the LTA but not the AGER polymorphism was associated with diabetic nephropathy (OR 2.55[1.11-5.86], p = 0.03). The AGER -374 A allele was associated with increased risk of sight threatening retinopathy in type 2 diabetic patients (1.65[1.11-2.45], p = 0.01) and also with increased risk for macrovascular disease in type 1 diabetic patients (OR 2.05[1.19-3.54], p = 0.01), but with decreased risk for macrovascular disease in type 2 diabetic patients (OR 0.66[0.49-0.90], p = 0.009). The TNF A allele was associated with increased risk for macrovascular complications in type 2 (OR 1.53 [1.04-2.25], p = 0.03, but not in type 1 diabetic patients.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE
The association between diabetic complications and LTA, TNF and AGER polymorphisms is complex, with partly different alleles conferring susceptibility in type 1 and type 2 diabetic patients. We can not exclude the possibility that the genes are part of a large haplotype block that also includes HLA-DQB1 risk genotypes. | 10.1371/journal.pone.0002546 |
pubmed_1088_7309 | Flooding an extreme alkaline-saline soil decreased alkalinity and salinity, which will change the bacterial populations. Bacterial 16S rDNA libraries were generated of three soils with different electrolytic conductivity (EC), i.e. soil with EC 1.7 dS m(-1) and pH 7.80 (LOW soil), with EC 56 dS m(-1) and pH 10.11 (MEDIUM soil) and with EC 159 dS m(-1) and pH 10.02 (HIGH soil), using universal bacterial oligonucleotide primers, and 463 clone 16S rDNA sequences were analyzed phylogenetically. Library proportions and clone identification of the phyla Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Acidobacteria, Cyanobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes and Cloroflexi showed that the bacterial communities were different. Species and genera of the Rhizobiales, Rhodobacterales and Xanthomonadales orders of the alpha- and gamma-subdivision of Proteobacteria were found at the three sites. Species and genera of the Rhodospirillales, Sphingobacteriales, Clostridiales, Oscillatoriales and Caldilineales were found only in the HIGH soil, Sphingomonadales, Burkholderiales and Pseudomonadales in the MEDIUM soil, Myxococcales in the LOW soil, and Actinomycetales in the MEDIUM and LOW soils. It was found that the largest diversity at the order and species level was found in the MEDIUM soil as bacteria of both the HIGH and LOW soils were found in it. | 10.1007/s00792-009-0244-4 |
pubmed_1020_5439 | BACKGROUND
Different indications and treatment options for combined injuries to the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and medial collateral ligament complex (MCL) are not clearly defined.
PURPOSE
To perform a modified Delphi process with the Committee for Ligament Injuries of the German Knee Society (DKG) in order to structure and optimize the process of treating a combined injury to the ACL and MCL.
STUDY DESIGN
Consensus statement.
METHODS
Scientific questions and answers were created based on a comprehensive literature review using the central registers for controlled studies of Medline, Scopus, and Cochrane including the terms medial collateral ligament, anterior cruciate ligament, MCL, ACL, and outcome used in various combinations. The obtained statements passed 3 cycles of a modified Delphi process during which each was readjusted and rated according to the available evidence (grades A-E) by the members of the DKG Ligament Injuries Committee and its registered guests.
RESULTS
The majority of answers, including several questions with >1 graded answer, were evaluated as grade E (n = 16) or C (n = 10), indicating that a low level of scientific evidence was available for most of the answers. Only 5 answers were graded better than C: 3 answers with a grade of A and 2 answers with a grade of B. Only 1 answer was evaluated as grade D. An agreement of >80% (range, 83%-100%) among committee members was achieved for all statements.
CONCLUSION
The results of this modified Delphi process offer a guideline for standardized patient care in cases of combined injuries to the ACL and MCL. | 10.1177/23259671211050929 |
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