text
stringlengths 1
10.9k
| meta
dict |
---|---|
Three-dimensional imaging by ultrahigh-speed axial-lateral parallel time domain optical coherence tomography.
We developed a method for obtaining three-dimensional images of biological tissues using axial-lateral parallel time domain optical coherence tomography (OCT) with an ultrahigh-speed complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) camera. The camera obtains a depth-resolved interference image using diffracted light as the reference beam and a linear illumination beam without axial and vertical scans. We can obtain the OCT images (512 x 512 pixels) at 1,500 frames per second by calculating two sequential images. A sample volume of 5.8 x 2.8 x 2.0 (x x y x z) mm(3) (corresponding to 512 x 250 x 512 pixels) was imaged at six volumes per second in a horizontal mechanical scan. The experimental sensitivity was approximately 76 dB after 2 x 2-pixel binning. The system was successfully used to image the human finger in vivo. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Severe acute inflammatory reaction (SAIR) of the fetlock joint after intraarticular hyaluronate injection in a horse.
Hyaluronate (HA) was administered by intra-articular injection to a 13-year-old Haflinger mare for treatment of metacarpophalangeal osteoarthritis. Ten hours after the injection, a severe inflammatory reaction developed in the treated joint. While awaiting results of synovial fluid analysis, treatment for iatrogenic infectious arthritis was initiated, but the analysis did not confirm sepsis. Clinical signs improved significantly following systemic non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medication and the horse was discharged three days later. Following an intravenous hyaluronate injection, four days after discharge, the synovitis recurred. Synovial fluid analysis did not show any abnormalities, but the clinical signs were severe. The severe acute inflammatory reaction required systemic non-steroidal anti-inflammatory and intra-articular corticosteroid treatment in order to resolve the problem. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Hip Fractures: Therapy, Timing, and Complication Spectrum.
Investigation of the treatment of femur fractures and the type of femur fracture-associated complications regarding timing of surgery and length of hospital stay. In this retrospective cohort study, a total of 358 hip fractures were evaluated retrospectively from 1 January 2008 until 31 December 2010 at a level I trauma center in Germany. Inclusion criteria was age >18 years and a proximal femur fracture. Both sexes were evaluated. Mean age was 75.5 years, most patients were female (63.7%). Intervention was the operative treatment of proximal femur fracture. Outcome parameters were time until surgery, complications, reoperations, mortality, and length of hospital stay. Among the proximal femur fractures (n = 358), 46.6% were pertrochanteric, 11.2% subtrochanteric, and 42.2% femoral neck fractures. Operation upon hip fractures was managed regularly within 24 hours of injury (73%; mean for femoral neck: 28.3 hrs.; mean for pertrochanteric fractures: 21.4 hrs.; mean for subtrochanteric fractures: 19.5 hrs.). Delayed treatment, as well as implantation of hip total endoprosthesis (TEP), increased the overall length of hospital stay (15.4 vs 17.6 days; 18.1 vs 15.8 days). Accordingly, surgical procedures performed within 24 hours of injury resulted in a shorter hospital residence. Longest delay of operation was measured for hip fractures (28.3 hrs.). In 351 patients, secondary injuries were detected in 94 individuals (26%), with fractures being the most common secondary injury (n = 40). We recorded postoperative complications of nonsurgical and surgical origin, and 33.6% of our patient cohort displayed complications. Complications were distributed among 118 patients. There was no significant difference in complications regarding the time of operation, with most nonsurgical and surgical complications appearing within 24 hours after operation (n = 110 vs n = 31). Nonsurgical complications, such as anemia (n = 49) and electrolyte imbalances (n = 30), were observed more frequently than surgical complications (n = 107 vs n = 34); however, these complications were reduced by delay in surgery (82.0% in 6-24 hrs. vs 74.2% in ≥24 hrs.). Anticoagulant therapy and age did not affect postoperative complications. The hospital mortality of patients was 6.2%. Follow-up was restrained to ambulatory visits in the clinic. Surgical management of hip fractures performed within 24 hours of injury minimizes hospital stay. We did not detect significant differences in the spectrum or number of complications regarding delay of surgery. Surgical complications mainly occur with rapid primary care, and medical complications can be reduced by more intensive preparation of patient and operation procedures. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Assessment of the short-term effect of antispastic positioning on spasticity.
This study was performed in order to investigate the effect of antispastic positioning on spasticity by using different assessment methods. A total of 16 patients (11 males [68.75%] and five females [31.25%]), diagnosed as spastic diplegic and referred to the School of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, Paediatric Rehabilitation Unit for treatment, were included in this study. The mean age of patients was 6.43 +/- 1.99 years (range, 4-13 years). Passive dorsi-flexion movement was measured by using goniometer and intensity of spasticity was determined by using Modified Ashworth Scale (MAS) and electromyography. For the objective measurement of severity of spasticity, Hoffman reflex (H) and Hoffman reflex/motor response (H/M) ratios were used. Children were placed in an antispastic position for 20 min. The patient was placed in a sitting position, by a physiotherapist, with hips abducted at a 45 degrees angle and externally rotated, knees extended, and ankles placed in a neutral position. The decrease in H responses, H/M ratios, MAS values and the increase in goniometric measurement values were found statistically significant after antispastic positioning (P < 0.05). Our study supports that antispastic positioning can be used with neurodevelopmental treatment approaches when it is required. Antispastic positioning may help exercises to be performed more easily, and also has importance in a home exercise program to prevent muscle contractures and joint limitation in children with long-term spastic diplegia. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
[Comparison of buprenorphine and fentanyl for postoperative pain relief by continuous epidural infusion].
This study examined analgesic efficacy and adverse effects of buprenorphine and fentanyl for the postoperative pain relief by continuous epidural infusion. Fifty patients after upper or lower abdominal surgeries were assigned to two groups and buprenorphine and fentanyl were epidurally administered postoperatively. Buprenorphine (B) group received bolus injection of B 0.1mg + saline 8 ml and continuous infusion of B 0.8 mg+saline 92 ml (2 ml.h-1). Fentanyl group received bolus injection of F 0.1 mg+saline 6 ml and continuous infusion of F 0.6 mg+saline 84 ml (2 ml.h-1). There was no significant difference between the two groups in the analgesic efficacy, which became lower from 2 to 12 hours postoperatively. However, compared with buprenorphine group, the incidence of nausea or vomiting and dizziness was significantly less in the fentanyl group (11 vs. 4 cases and 7 vs. 1 cases). These results imply that the major site of action of epidurally administered fentanyl is the spinal cord. In contrast, analgesic effect of epidural buprenorphine appears to be enhanced by the supraspinal action. We conclude that fentanyl is superior to buprenorphine for postoperative pain relief by continuous epidural infusion. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Ethics Reporting Practices in Aging Research From the Arab Region.
Objectives: This study aims to assess the extent of ethics reporting practices in aging research from Arab countries. Methods: A systematic scoping review of research on aging in 22 Arab countries from seven databases (1994-2013) identified 637 publications warranting institutional ethical approval and 612 publications warranting informed consent. We used multivariable regression analysis to examine variations by time, place, and study characteristics. Results: Only 36.6% of articles reported approval from a Research Ethics Committee and 38.7% reported informed consent. Reporting of ethical research practices increased significantly over time and as research collaborations and journal impact factor increased, and when sampling frame included institutionalized participants. In contrast, failure to report ethical research practices was significantly more common in non-English articles and those that did not report a funding source. Discussion: Despite gains across time, reporting of ethical research practices remains suboptimal in the Arab region. Further guidelines and capacity building are needed. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Outbreak of Salmonella enteritidis phage type 6 infection associated with food items provided at a buffet meal.
Preliminary enquiries following prompt notification of three cases of suspected food poisoning revealed that they had all attended the same three functions during the preceding weekend. Subsequent investigation identified 49 people with gastrointestinal symptoms, 13 of whom were infected with Salmonella enteritidis phage type 6. Forty-five of those with symptoms, including 11 with confirmed infection, had eaten a buffet meal at a public house. Eating egg sandwiches was strongly associated with infection. Defects in the kitchen structure and the storage and handling of the implicated food items provided the potential for cross contamination. Salmonella was isolated from several environmental sites, including a general purpose cleaning cloth. Two different quiches and pork pies, which were possible vehicles of infection were thought to have been contaminated after being brought into the kitchen. The investigation did not reveal whether or not shell eggs used in the sandwiches were the original source or whether they too had been contaminated during their preparation. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Localization and structure of snRNPs during mitosis. Immunofluorescent and biochemical studies.
The distribution of U snRNAs during mitosis was studied by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy with snRNA cap-specific anti-m3G antibodies. Whereas the snRNAs are strictly nuclear at late prophase, they become distributed in the cell plasm at metaphase and anaphase. They re-enter the newly formed nuclei of the two daughter cells at early telophase, producing speckled nuclear fluorescent patterns typical of interphase cells. While the snRNAs become concentrated at the rim of the condensing chromosomes and at interchromosomal regions at late prophase, essentially no association of the snRNAs was observed with the condensed chromosomes during metaphase and anaphase. Independent immunofluorescent studies with anti-(U1)RNP autoantibodies, which react specifically with proteins unique to the U1 snRNP species, showed the same distribution of snRNP antigens during mitosis as was observed with the snRNA-specific anti-m3G antibody. Immunoprecipitation studies with anti-(U1)RNP and anti-Sm autoantibodies, as well as protein analysis of snRNPs isolated from extracts of mitotic cells, demonstrate that the snRNAs remain associated in a specific manner with the same set of proteins during interphase and mitosis. The concept that the overall structure of the snRNPs is maintained during mitosis also applies to the coexistence of the snRNAs U4 and U6 in a single ribonucleoprotein complex. Particle sedimentation studies in sucrose gradients reveal that most of the snRNPs present in sonicates of mitotic cells do not sediment as free RNP particles, but remain associated with high molecular weight (HMW) structures other than chromatin, most probably with hnRNA/RNP. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Calcium phosphate cement in wrist arthrodesis: three cases.
With degenerative pathologies, arthrodesis of the wrist is a procedure reserved for preservative interventions that have failed. The least invasive procedure is Gill's technique, as modified by Luboshitz. To improve the results, we proposed a study of the advantages of local application of calcium phosphate cement. The procedure consisted of refreshing the remaining articular surfaces, obtaining a dorsal corticocancellous graft from the distal radius, and replacing the bone substance lost when removing the graft with calcium phosphate cement followed by smoothing flat the arthrodesis area to limit tendon conflicts. In our three cases with an average follow-up of 23 months, no complications were noted and radiological consolidation was achieved in 2 months. In view of this short series, we think that the addition of calcium phosphate cement to Gill's technique as modified by Luboshitz should improve the results of arthrodesis of degenerative wrists. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Spline-based high-accuracy piecewise-polynomial phase-to-sinusoid amplitude converters.
We propose a method for direct digital frequency synthesis (DDS) using a cubic spline piecewise-polynomial model for a phase-to-sinusoid amplitude converter (PSAC). This method offers maximum smoothness of the output signal. Closed-form expressions for the cubic polynomial coefficients are derived in the spectral domain and the performance analysis of the model is given in the time and frequency domains. We derive the closed-form performance bounds of such DDS using conventional metrics: rms and maximum absolute errors (MAE) and maximum spurious free dynamic range (SFDR) measured in the discrete time domain. The main advantages of the proposed PSAC are its simplicity, analytical tractability, and inherent numerical stability for high table resolutions. Detailed guidelines for a fixed-point implementation are given, based on the algebraic analysis of all quantization effects. The results are verified on 81 PSAC configurations with the output resolutions from 5 to 41 bits by using a bit-exact simulation. The VHDL implementation of a high-accuracy DDS based on the proposed PSAC with 28-bit input phase word and 32-bit output value achieves SFDR of its digital output signal between 180 and 207 dB, with a signal-to-noise ratio of 192 dB. Its implementation requires only one 18 kB block RAM and three 18-bit embedded multipliers in a typical field-programmable gate array (FPGA) device. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
[Orders of veterinarians of the Ottoman Army].
This article deals with orders for veterinary duty in the Ottoman Army. Although there were various kinds of decorations for the doctor, there was only one for the veterinarian. In addition, there were two kinds of farrier orders. The scarcity of veterinary decorations were probably due to the fact that the duty was considered a manual trade rather than a scientific discipline. Instruction of veterinary medicine in school was started in the second half of the nineteenth century. The pictures of the decorations presented in this article were taken from the album compiled by Bogos Efendi, the chief jeweller of Sultan Abdülmecid and kept in the Topkapi Palace Museum Library. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Density scaling of supercooled simple liquids near the glass transition.
In this work, we show that two competing equations of state, the first one derived from some effective approximation of intermolecular potential suspected to be responsible for so-called "thermodynamic scaling" and the second one following from the definition of isothermal bulk modulus, are able to describe very well experimental volumetric data of supercooled van der Waals liquids in the thermodynamic scaling regime. The values of the exponent gamma(EOS) experimentally established from both these equations of state are numerically very close, and moreover they enable us to achieve a high quality of the specific volume or density linear scaling suggested by these equations. However, the found density scaling requires a distinctly different value of gamma(EOS) than that leading to the scaling of dynamic quantities. The discrepancy can be explained by our modification of the Avramov model which assumes the density scaling of the maximal energy barrier with the scaling exponent gamma(EOS). | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Diving and mental health: the potential benefits and risks from a survey of recreational scuba divers.
Scuba diving is physically and cognitively demanding. Medical guidance regarding physical and mental health (MH) issues and related prescribed medication is often based on limited evidence. There is a paucity of data concerning diving with MH issues. This survey aimed to investigate the prevalence of MH issues and use of prescription medications among United Kingdom (UK) sport divers, and the rate of non-compliance with current guidance among divers suffering depression and anxiety. The positive effects of scuba diving on MH were also considered. An anonymous online survey was publicised through diving exhibitions and social media. Measures included diver and diving demographics; GAD-7 Anxiety and PHQ-9 depression questionnaires; diagnosed current and/or past MH conditions; medication usage; comorbid medical conditions/treatments; disclosure of past/current MH issues; and perceived MH benefits of diving. Data from 729 respondents revealed MH issues at rates comparable with the general population. Current and/or past MH issues were reported by 111/729, with 60 having active diagnoses, and 45/60 taking prescribed psychotropic medications; 21/45 did not declare their medication on diver self-certification medical forms. The activity of diving was thought to be beneficial to MH by 119/729 respondents. Divers experienced expected levels of MH issues, but did not comply with current medical guidelines on modifying or abstaining from diving activity or reporting their MH condition. Changes may be needed to diver training to encourage more accurate reporting and aid development of evidence-based protocols. Guidelines could be reconsidered in light of current diver behaviour, risks and potential MH benefits. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Falls in nonagenarians after 1-year of follow-up: the NonaSantfeliu study.
An increase in the rate of falls may be an indicator of frailty. This study included a 12-month follow-up investigation into the rate of falls, in people over 89 years, living in an urban community and analyzed the differences between inhabitants with falls and those without falls. The study was conducted within the framework of the NonaSantfeliu study and 140 nonagenarians participated. Sociodemograhic data, Barthel index (BI), activities of daily living (ADL), Spanish version (MEC) of the mini mental state examination (MMSE), the mini nutritional assessment (MNA) questionnaire, near visual acuity by Snellen test and auditory acuity with the Whisper test were evaluated. The fall rate was 47.1%. The 1-year incidence of falls was 26.4%. The incidence of recurrent falls (two or more falls per year) was 10% (n=14). The prevalence of previous falls within the year preceding the study was 45.7%, 64 of 140 nonagenarians fell and 17 (26.5%) of them fell again during the follow-up. Seventy-six out of 140 (54.3%) nonagenarians had not fallen during the year prior to the study and during the year of follow-up, 20 (26.3%) of them had a new fall. In conclusion, the rate of falls among nonagenarians is high. These results emphasize the need to increase the awareness, to provide recommendations and to incorporate strategies to prevent falls. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Simultaneous determination of florfenicol and its metabolite florfenicol amine in swine muscle tissue by a heterologous enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
A sensitive and heterologous enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the simultaneous detection of florfenicol (FF) and its metabolite florfenicol amine (FFA) in swine muscle tissue was developed. FFA was conjugated to bovine serum albumin by a formaldehyde coupling method as an immunogen to immunize rabbits. FFA, thiamphenicol glycinate, and modified FF were conjugated to ovalbumin as coating antigens. The effect of different types of hapten heterology on the sensitivity and specificity of the ELISA was evaluated. Using FF glutaric anhydride ester as a coating hapten and antibody raised against modified FFA, an ELISA was developed that showed an IC50 value of 0.48 ng/mL. The antibody showed a cross-reactivity of 100% with FFA, 97% with FF, 6% with thiamphenicol, and a negligible value with chloramphenicol. From fortified swine muscle samples at levels of 4-320 ng/g, the average recoveries of FF and FFA ranged from 58.2 to 96.8%, with coefficients of variation less than 14%. Analysis of incurred samples by the ELISA gave similar results to those by a previously developed liquid chromatographic method. The ELISA could be used as a rapid method for the simultaneous determination of FF and FFA in swine muscle tissue. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Evaluation of imidazole-based compounds as heme oxygenase-1 inhibitors.
Imidazole-based compounds previously synthesized in our laboratory were selected and reconsidered as inhibitors of heme oxygenase-1 obtained from the microsomal fractions of rat spleens. Most of tested compounds were good inhibitors with IC(50) values in the low micromolar range. Compounds were also assayed on membrane-free full-length recombinant human heme oxygenase-1; all tested compounds were unable to interact with human heme oxygenase-1 at 100 μm concentrations with the exception of compounds 11 and 13 that inhibited the enzyme of 54% and 20%, respectively. The binding of the most active compound 11 with heme or heme-conjugated human heme oxygenase-1 was also examined by spectral analyses. When heme was not conjugated to human heme oxygenase-1, compound 11 caused changes in the heme spectrum only at concentration 50-fold (100 μm) higher than that required to inhibit rat heme oxygenase-1; when heme was conjugated to human heme oxygenase-1, compound 11 was able to form a heme-compound 11 complex also at low micromolar concentrations. To obtain information on the binding mode of the tested compounds with enzyme, docking studies and pharmacophore analysis were performed. Template docking results were in agreement with experimental inhibition data and with a structure-based pharmacophoric model. These data may be exploitable to design new OH-1 inhibitors. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Bacterial interactions.
Bacterial interactions are important both in the formation of polymicrobial abscesses and in the control of the balance of the natural human floras. Investigations of the mechanisms controlling normal flora might be based on gnotobiology, but most of the conclusions are at present obtained indirectly by observations of the flora composition. One example is the typical bifid flora observed during breast-feeding. We studied changes in this following the introduction of bottle-feeding. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Evaluation of the concept of "hypoxic fraction" as a descriptor of tumor oxygenation status.
The presence and significance of tumor hypoxia has been recognized since the 1950's. Hypoxic cells in vitro and in animal tumors in vivo are documented to be three times more resistant to radiation-induced killing compared to aerobic cells. There is now evidence that tumor hypoxia is treatment-limiting in many human cancers. One common way to describe the extent of hypoxia in individual and groups of tumors is the "hypoxic fraction." This measurement infers that cells are present in only two radiobiologically significant states: oxygenated and hypoxic. In this paper, we demonstrate the qualitative and quantitative presence of hypoxic tumor cells using the oxygen dependent metabolism of the 2-nitroimidazole, EF5. Two assumptions concerning the calculation and interpretation of the hypoxic fraction are considered. The first is the use of multiple animals to describe the radiation response at a given radiation dose. We hypothesize that the presence of intertumor variability in radiation response due to hypoxia could negatively influenced the characterization of the change in slope required to calculate the hypoxic fraction. The studies presented herein demonstrate heterogeneity of radioresponse due to hypoxic fraction within and between tumor lines. The 9L subcutaneous tumor studied in air-breathing rats demonstrates a 2 log variation in surviving fraction at 17 Gy. The Morris 7777 hepatoma, in contrast, showed little variability of radiation response. Our second question addresses the limitations of using the "hypoxic fraction" to describe the radiation response of a tumor. This calculated value infers that radiobiological hypoxia is a binary measurement: that a tumor contains two cell populations, aerobic cells with maximal radiosensitivity and hypoxic cells with maximal radioresistance. The classic work of Thomlinson and Gray, however, implies the presence of an oxygen gradient from tumors vessel through the tissues. In both the 9L and Q7 tumors, flow cytometric analysis of EF5 binding demonstrates a continuous range of cellular pO2 levels. These studies suggest that: 1) there is extensive intertumor variability of radiation response in certain tumor lines; 2) the variability in radiation response between individual tumors in a group may affect the ability to describe a particular tumor type's "hypoxic fraction" and 3) The oxygen status of tumor cells is a continuum. This realization affects the ability to apply a binary concept such as the "hypoxic fraction" effectively in radiobiology. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Disordered contact process with asymmetric spreading.
An asymmetric variant of the contact process where the activity spreads with different and independent random rates to the left and to the right is introduced. A real space renormalization scheme is formulated for the model by means of which it is shown that the local asymmetry of spreading is irrelevant on large scales if the model is globally (statistically) symmetric. Otherwise, in the presence of a global bias in either direction, the renormalization method predicts two distinct phase transitions, which are related to the spreading of activity in and against the direction of the bias. The latter is found to be described by an infinite randomness fixed point while the former is not. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Indirubin-3'-oxime inhibits c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase: anti-apoptotic effect in cerebellar granule neurons.
Previous studies have demonstrated that c-Jun NH2-terminal protein kinase (JNK) plays a crucial role in neuronal apoptosis. Here, we report that indirubin-3'-oxime, a known effective inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) and glycogen synthase kinase 3-beta (GSK-3beta), has a significant inhibitory effect on JNK. Kinase assay showed that indirubin-3'-oxime directly inhibited the activity of all three isoforms of JNK (JNK1, and JNK3) in vitro, with half inhibition dose (IC50) of 0.8 microM, 1.4 microM, and 1.0 microM, respectively. In cerebellar granule neurons (CGNs), indirubin-3'-oxime blocked c-Jun phosphorylation induced by potassium withdrawal and prevented CGNs from apoptosis in a dose dependent manner. However, inhibitors of CDKs and GSK-3beta were ineffective in reducing c-Jun phosphorylation both in vitro and in vivo, suggesting that indirubin-3'-oxime prevents c-Jun phosphorylation independent of its inhibition on CDKs and GSK-3beta. Our studies give further supports for JNK-targeting strategy in preventing neuronal apoptosis. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
[Oral administration of extracted kallikrein to patients with essential arterial hypertension].
Reduced kallikrein excretion has been demonstrated in essential hypertension, suggesting an impairment of the renal kallikrein-kinin system. Therefore, we evaluated the efficacy and safety of oral kallikrein administration (glandular kallikrein derived form porcine pancreas) in 20 essential hypertensives (14 males and 6 females) aged between 34 and 62 years. Kallikrein was administered (150 U.I. three times daily) over a period of eight days, under normal sodium intake (120 mEq of Na+/day). After the kallikrein administration period, urinary kallikrein resulted increased (from 0.9 +/- 0.4 U/24h, normal value greater than 1.2 U/24h, to 1.6 +/- 1 U/24h; p less than 0.05). Blood pressure decreased (systolic: from 154.6 +/- 13.8 mmHg to 140.3 +/- 12.5 mmHg; p less than 0.01--diastolic: from 92.5 +/- 1.5 mmHg to 86 +/- 3.9 mmHg; p less than 0.025), while urinary excretion of sodium (from 96.7 +/- 16 mEq/24h to 119.1 +/- 32.2 mEq/24h; p less than 0.05) and potassium (from 36.7 +/- 11 mEq/24h to 43.5 +/- 12.8 mEq/24h; p less than 0.05) increased after kallikrein administration. We observed only a transient episode of gastric pain. In conclusion, kallikrein administration has a mild hypotensive effect in hypertensive patients, and is generally well tolerated. The antihypertensive action is probably due to the natriuretic effect of kallikrein. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Lymphomas in dogs. A morphologic, immunologic, and clinical study.
One hundred seventy-six canine lymphomas were classified morphologically using four of the major human lymphoma classification schemes (Rappaport, Lukes-Collins, Kiel, and the Working Formulation). All 176 dogs received the same chemotherapeutic protocol. Sixty-two of these lymphomas had their immunophenotypes established by examination of cell surface markers by automated cytofluorography. Several different morphologic types of canine lymphoma were identified and these were comparable to morphologic categories in human classification schemes. Follicular and low grade lymphomas were rare. The two most common morphologic types were diffuse large cell (centroblastic) and immunoblastic. The Kiel classification appeared to be the most useful human scheme for classifying the canine lymphomas. Cytofluorographic analysis was generally straightforward, and 60 of the 62 lymphomas were placed into one of three immunophenotypic categories: 27 pan-T(LQ1)+SIg+, 21 pan-T(LQ1)-SIg+, and 12 pan-T(LQ1)+SIg-. Two of the lymphomas could not be characterized immunologically because a pre-existing or reactive non-neoplastic population of lymphocytes made interpretation of single cell suspension analysis difficult. The authors identified correlations between morphology and survival and disease-free remission; dogs with high-grade tumors generally survived the longest and had the longest remissions. No correlations were identified between high concentrations of serum lactate dehydrogenase, age, sex, or stage of disease, and morphology, immunophenotype, remission, or survival times. A significant correlation between clinical illness and survival time was documented. The median age of the dogs was nine years, no significant effect of sex on prevalence was observed, and some breeds were significantly overrepresented. Significant morphologic-immunophenotypic correlations included shorter remission and survival times for T-cell tumors than B-cell tumors, and a highly significant correlation between the pan-T(LQ1)+SIg-"T cell" phenotype and hypercalcemia. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
5' transcript replacement in vitro catalyzed by a group I intron-derived ribozyme.
Group I intron-derived ribozymes can perform a variety of catalytic reactions, including the replacement of the 3' end of a mutant RNA transcript with a corrected version of the transcript [Sullenger, B. A., and Cech, T. R. (1994) Nature 371, 619-622]. We now demonstrate in vitro that a ribozyme, derived from a Pneumocystis carinii group I intron, can replace the 5' end of a targeted exogenous RNA with an endogenous RNA. Our model system is a short synthetic mimic of a k-ras transcript, in which substitution mutations at codon 12 are implicated in a host of cancer types. In these experiments, yields of up to 70% were obtained. We analyzed the length dependence of two molecular contacts, P9.0 and P10, that occur between the ribozyme and the exogenous k-ras mimic, and determined that longer, and thus more stable, interactions result in higher product yields. Furthermore, the length of the loop region L1 can substantially influence the yield and the rate of the reaction. These results are a further demonstration that group I intron-derived ribozymes are quite malleable in terms of intermolecular recognition and catalysis, and that these properties can be exploited in developing potentially useful biochemical tools. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Label-free electrochemiluminescent detection of DNA by hybridization with a molecular beacon to form hemin/G-quadruplex architecture for signal inhibition.
A facile label-free electrochemiluminescent (ECL) DNA sensor was designed using a molecular beacon with a guanine-rich stem as a recognition probe. The ECL emission was produced from surface unpassivated CdTe quantum dots (QDs) co-immobilized with colloidal gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) on a chitosan-modified electrode surface. The molecular beacon was adsorbed onto the AuNPs by the thiolated stem. Upon the hybridization of the molecular beacon with target DNA to open the cycle in the presence of hemin, the dissociated guanine-rich sequence could conjugate hemin to form a G-quadruplex architecture. The formed DNAzyme then catalyzed the reduction of dissolved oxygen, the endogenous coreactant for ECL emission of QDs, leading to a decrease in ECL signal. The variations in surface morphology during the fabrication and recognition processes of the ECL sensor were characterized by atomic force microscopy and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. The ECL signal inhibition depended linearly on the logarithmic value of DNA concentration ranging from 5.0 fM to 0.1 nM, with a detection limit of 0.9 fM. This proposed label-free method is a promising application of QDs-based ECL emission for ultrasensitive DNA assay. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Rechargeable Mg batteries based on a Ag2S conversion cathode with fast solid-state Mg2+ diffusion kinetics.
Rechargeable Mg batteries are promising candidates for highly safe, large-scale energy storage batteries due to the low-cost and non-dendritic metallic Mg anode. However, exploring high-performance cathodes remains a great challenge blocking their development. Herein, a rechargeable Mg battery is established with a Ag2S conversion cathode, providing a highly reversible capacity of 120 mA h g-1 at 50 mA g-1, a superior rate capability of 70 mA h g-1 at 500 mA g-1, and an outstanding long-term cyclability over 400 cycles. The mechanism was investigated using XRD, TEM and XPS in addition to electrochemical measurements, and indicated a two-stage magnesiation: first, Mg2+ intercalation into Ag2S and then a conversion reaction to form metallic Ag0 and MgS. The solid-state Mg2+ diffusion coefficients are as high as 3.6 × 10-9 and 3.1 × 10-10 cm2 s-1 for the intercalation and conversion reactions, respectively, which explains the high performance of the Ag2S cathode. This work provides scientific insights for the selection of a promising conversion cathode by the combination of soft anions and soft transition metal cations. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Using the expected survival to explain differences between the results of randomized trials: a case in advanced ovarian cancer.
A meta-analysis of randomized trials in advanced ovarian cancer showed a longer survival with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and cisplatin (CAP) than with cyclophosphamide and cisplatin (CP; P =.009). In contrast, the results of the large International Collaborative Ovarian Neoplasm Study (ICON2) showed no survival difference between CAP and carboplatin (P =.98). In this article, we show how these discrepant results can be reconciled through the estimation of expected survival curves. A proportional hazards model, fitted to the meta-analysis data, was used to construct the expected survival curve for each treatment arm of the ICON2 trial. Expected survival curves were compared with observed survival curves in the ICON2 trial at all time points using a nonparametric test. The prognostic model for survival obtained in the meta-analysis included extent of residual disease, age, histologic grade, and International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage. When this model was applied to the ICON2 data, there was no difference between the expected and observed curves in the CAP arm. In contrast, the observed survival curve for carboplatin was far superior to the expected survival curve for CP (P <.01). These analyses provide indirect evidence that better results are achieved with carboplatin alone at an optimally tolerated dose, compared with the CP combination at a cisplatin dose of 50 to 60 mg/m2. The expected survival may provide valuable insight when direct comparisons between randomized groups yield discrepant results across different studies. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
[Hepatoblastoma cells producing alpha-fetoprotein: morphometric, immunohistochemical and electron microscopic studies].
Morphometric, immunohistochemical, and electron-microscopic studies were undertaken in an attempt to identify the types of hepatoblastoma cellular elements responsible for the synthesis of alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), and to see how they may relate to serum AFP levels and the metastatic spread and prognosis of the hepatoblastoma. Morphometric studies of 21 hepatoblastomas with statistical treatment of the results revealed a moderately strong reliable correlation of the AFP serum titer with the volume ratio of embryonal tumor cells and with that of those tumor elements of endodermal hepatic diverticulum which are similar to the latter cells with regard to degree of differentiation. Also, a consistent, reliable negative correlation was demonstrated between serum AFP titer and the volume of fetal hepatoblastoma cells. The volume ratio of stromal elements was found to be subject to chance variations and not to correlate with serum AFP level. Immunohistochemical and electron-microscopic studies confirmed the morphometric findings and showed AFP synthesis to be effected by poorly differentiated hepatoblastoma cells--by endodermal hepatic diverticulum elements at first and by embryonal and intermediate tumor cells later--and to decrease as the liver tumor cells differentiate further. It is concluded that a high serum AFP level is, generally, an indication that the hepatoblastoma is an extensive one and consists of poorly differentiated cells so that the prognosis is unfavorable. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Processing and mechanical properties of hydroxyapatite reinforced with hydroxyapatite whiskers.
Hydrothermally synthesized HAp fine crystals/HAp whiskers mixtures have been used for the preparation of HAp/0-30% (whiskers) composites. The composites have been fabricated by pressureless sintering and hot-pressing. The best mechanical properties and the highest densities have been achieved for composites hot pressed at 1000 degrees C (2 h, 30 MPa in flowing Ar). Their density was in the range of 90-97% of the theoretical density. Fracture toughness (Klc) of the composites reflected their microstructure and had the value of 1.4 MPa m1/2 (as compared with Klc = 1.0 MPa m1/2 for the non-reinforced HAp matrix). Compressive prestressing of the HAp matrix and crack deflection (both derived from the residual stress field) contributed to the increase of fracture toughness. Other toughening mechanisms have not been observed. HAp/HAp (whiskers) composites exhibited improved toughness without degradation of biocompatibility, because the HAp whiskers acted both as a reinforcement and as a biocompatible phase. Problems related to biocompatibility and mechanical properties of available HAp-based composites were also discussed. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Lung abscess in adults with tetralogy of fallot and pulmonary atresia.
We describe 5 adults with tetralogy of Fallot and pulmonary atresia who developed lung abscesses, including some infected with atypical microbial pathogens, with important morbidity. We hypothesize that patients with such anatomy are at risk for chronic pulmonary infection due to hypo-perfusion of the pulmonary parenchyma. This previously unreported clinical association should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with tetralogy of Fallot and pulmonary atresia who alter their respiratory state. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Coping styles, anxiety, and depression in children.
Associations among scores on scales of anxiety and depression and a coping styles questionnaire were examined for 71 children. In general, correlations were positive, that is, high scores on anxiety and depression were accompanied by more frequent employment of all types of coping strategies. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Selenium protects bone marrow stromal cells against hydrogen peroxide-induced inhibition of osteoblastic differentiation by suppressing oxidative stress and ERK signaling pathway.
Osteoporosis is a bone disease that leads to an increased risk of fracture. Oxidative stress may play a major role in the development of osteoporosis in part by inhibiting osteoblastic differentiation of bone marrow stromal cells (MSCs). Some evidence suggested that antioxidant selenium could prevent osteoporosis, but the underlying mechanism remains unclear. In this work, the effect of sodium selenite on H₂O₂-induced inhibition of osteoblastic differentiation of primary rat bone MSCs and the related mechanisms were examined. Pretreatment with selenite inhibited the adverse effect of H₂O₂ on osteoblastic differentiation of MSCs, based on alkaline phosphatase activity, gene expression of type I collagen and osteocalcin, and matrix mineralization. In addition, selenite pretreatment also suppressed the activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) induced by H₂O₂. The above effects were mediated by the antioxidant effect of selenite. Selenite enhanced the gene expression and activity of glutathione peroxidase, reversed the decreased total antioxidant capacity and reduced glutathione, and suppressed reactive oxygen species production and lipid peroxidation level in H₂O₂-treated MSCs. These results showed that selenite protected MSCs against H₂O₂-induced inhibition of osteoblastic differentiation through inhibiting oxidative stress and ERK activation, which provided, for the first time, the mechanistic explanation for the negative association of selenium status and risk of osteoporosis in terms of bone formation. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Chronic angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition and angiotensin II type 1 receptor blockade: effects on cardiovascular remodeling in rats induced by the long-term blockade of nitric oxide synthesis.
We have shown previously that angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors prevent coronary vascular remodeling (medial thickening and perivascular fibrosis) and myocardial remodeling (fibrosis and hypertrophy) in rats induced by long-term inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis with oral administration of N omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME). ACE inhibitors inhibit both the formation of angiotensin II and the catabolism of bradykinin. In this study, we aimed to determine the relative contribution of the latter two mechanisms to the beneficial effects of an ACE inhibitor on structural remodeling. First, we examined the effects of the ACE inhibitor temocapril and the angiotensin II AT1 subtype receptor antagonist CS-866 on the structural remodeling induced by administering L-NAME for 8 weeks. Temocapril and CS-866 were equally effective in preventing remodeling. Second, we examined whether the effect of temocapril on the remodeling induced by L-NAME was reduced by the bradykinin receptor antagonist HOE140. The latter drug did not alter the beneficial effect of temocapril on remodeling. In conclusion, although species differences must be considered to apply our conclusion to clinical conditions, the present results suggest that the inhibition of angiotensin II activity, mediated via the AT1 receptors, is responsible for the beneficial effects of an ACE inhibitor in our animal model of coronary vascular and myocardial remodeling induced by the long-term inhibition of NO synthesis. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Redox state of cytochrome c in the presence of the 6-hydroxydopamine/oxygen couple: oscillations dependent on the presence of hydrogen peroxide or superoxide.
The reduction of ferricytochrome c in the presence of 6-hydroxydopamine/O2 mixtures was examined under various reaction conditions. As the autoxidation of 6-hydroxydopamine progressed to completion, there were fluctuations in the net redox reactivity between reducing and oxidizing steady states. This was reflected in a sequence of damped oscillations in the redox state of cytochrome c. Corresponding to the time when 6-hydroxydopamine was 75-100% exhausted, reoxidation of the ferrocytochrome c occurred (prevented by catalase or catalase plus superoxide dismutase). After the H2O2, in turn, was mostly consumed, the next phase commenced in which the cytochrome c became reduced for a second time. This reductive phase was 52% inhibited by superoxide dismutase. In the subsequent and final phase of the process, a progressive oxidation of cytochrome c lasting at least 24 h was observed. Of the initial reduction of ferricytochrome c, at most 37% can be attributed to direct reduction by 6-hydroxydopamine or its semiquinone. This initial net reduction of cytochrome c was inhibited 51% by superoxide dismutase and 41% by catalase. However, since either catalase or superoxide dismutase inhibited the autoxidation of 6-hydroxydopamine by at least as much as it slowed the reduction of cytochrome c, their effects in slowing the reduction of cytochrome c resulted largely from the decreased production of those free radicals which reduce ferricytochrome c, and only in part from accelerated removal. Elimination of the actions of transition metal ions (whether by passage of the buffer solutions through Chelex 100 resins or by addition of desferrioxamine to the reaction medium) slowed both the reoxidation and rereduction by up to 96%. Addition of mannitol decreased the rate of the first reoxidation by 25% and increased the rate of the rereduction by 7%. In general, the oscillations are explicable in terms of changes in the steady state levels of O-2 and H2O2, with metal ions playing a major role and hydroxyl radicals a minor role in both the reoxidation and rereduction. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Churg-strauss syndrome: clinical symptoms, complementary investigations, prognosis and outcome, and treatment.
Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS), first described in 1951, is a rare vasculitis of small- and medium-sized vessels. It is characterized by a constant association with asthma and eosinophilia, and by the presence of anti-myeloperoxidase (MPO) anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) in ~40% of the patients. Vasculitis typically develops in a previously asthmatic and eosinophilic middle-aged patient and most frequently involves the peripheral nerves and skin. Other organs, however, may be affected and must be screened for vasculitis, especially those associated with a poorer prognosis, such as the heart, kidney, and gastrointestinal tract, as assessed by the recently revised Five-Factor Score (FFS). Overall survival of CSS patients is excellent, but relapses are not uncommon and require maintenance or steroid-sparing therapies, depending on the original FFS-based prognosis at diagnosis. All patients require corticosteroids, often for prolonged periods, combined with immunosuppressants [e.g., induction (cyclophosphamide) and maintenance therapy (azathioprine)], for those with poorer prognoses. Recent insights, especially concerning clinical differences associated with ANCA status, showed that CSS patients might constitute a heterogeneous group, both clinically and pathogenically. Future therapies might reflect these differences more strongly. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Assessment of the quality of colonoscopy in Romania.
We performed a national prospective multicentric study in order to assess the quality of colonoscopies performed in Romania. Between the 1st and 30th of November 2004, we performed a questionnaire-type study with regard to the practice of colonoscopy, addressed to all the centers in Romania known to perform digestive endoscopy. Thirty centers responded to our questionnaire, resulting in a number of 2,559 colonoscopies that were performed in Romania during the month of November (a mean of 85 colonoscopies/center/month). The percentage of cecal intubations performed nationwide was 70.5%, 74.1% in university hospitals, as compared to nonuniversity ones (64.6%) (p=0.000027). Regarding sedation during colonoscopy, in 46% of the cases the colonoscopy was performed without sedation and in 54% of the cases with sedation (or sedo-analgesia). | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Comparison of adenosine triphosphate and dipyridamole in diagnosis by thallium-201 myocardial scintigraphy.
We examined whether 201Tl myocardial scintigraphy with intravenous infusion of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) can be substituted for dipyridamole (DIP) in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease CAD). The coronary flow reserve (CFR) during intravenous infusion of ATP (0.10-0.20 mg/kg/min) was compared with that during intravenous infusion of DIP (0.56 mg/kg) using a Doppler flow wire in 19 subjects with normal coronary arteries. The highest CFR level was found in the ATP dose range of 0.16-0.20 mg/kg/min. The CFR at the ATP dose of 0.16 mg/kg/min was significantly higher than that during DIP infusion (4.2 versus 3.6) (p < 0.01), for which reason we adopted this dose of ATP. According, 201Tl SPECT in 140 patients with suspected CAD was performed after infusion of 0.16 mg/kg/min of ATP in 70 of them and 0.56 mg/kg of DIP in the 70 others. ATP stress 201Tl SPECT showed no significant difference in sensitivity and accuracy from DIP stress 201Tl SPECT (87.0% versus 82.9, and 87.1% versus 78.6, respectively). Adverse effects occurred at higher frequency when ATP was used, but they were mild and disappeared rapidly after administration was stopped. ATP stress 201Tl SPECT is accurate and safe. The optimal ATP regimen for this purpose is considered to be a 5-min infusion at 0.16 mg/kg/min. However, our data in CAD patients suggest that ATP stress 201Tl SPECT is equivalent to DIP stress 201Tl SPECT in the detection of CAD. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Safety of Administering Furosemide During Nuclear Diuretic Renography in Patients With Sulfonamide Allergies.
We reviewed the safety of nuclear diuretic renography with furosemide in patients with sulfonamide allergies. The electronic health record was used to uncover any drug effects reported within 30 days of diuretic renograms performed between January 2009 and December 2015. Eighty-three of 1103 (7.5%) diuretic renograms were performed on patients with sulfonamide allergies. Two instances of minor rash occurred. No serious reactions occurred. Furosemide is associated with an extremely low risk of minor reactions in patients with sulfonamide allergies. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Involvement of Hydrogen Sulfide in Endothelium-Derived Relaxing Factor-Mediated Responses in Rat Cerebral Arteries.
H2S is a novel vasoactivator. To verify the hypothesis that H2S may act as an endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF) in the rat cerebrovasculature, the role of H2S in endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF)-mediated responses was investigated. Cystathionine-γ-lyase (CSE) was knocked down with an siRNA technique. Artery diameter, hyperpolarization and Ca2+-activated K+ (KCa) current were measured. CSE knockdown was indicated by a decrease in protein and mRNA expression in the rat middle cerebral artery (MCA) and cerebral basilar artery (CBA). Acetylcholine (ACh) induced significant hyperpolarization and vasodilation in endothelium-intact MCA and CBA. Removal of the endothelium abolished these responses. The nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor L-NAME, but not the PGI2 production inhibitor indomethacin, significantly inhibited ACh-induced hyperpolarization and vasodilation in the CBA. In the presence of L-NAME and indomethacin, ACh-induced hyperpolarization and vasodilation in the MCA and CBA were attenuated. The non-NO/PGI2-mediated responses were abolished by the KCa channel blockers charybdotoxin and apamin. In the cerebral arteries from the CSE knockdown rat, non-NO/PGI2-mediated responses were significantly attenuated, and the remaining responses were abolished by charybdotoxin and apamin or the CSE inhibitor propargylglycine. CSE knockdown did not affect L-NAME-sensitive responses in the CBA. Sodium hydrosulfide (NaHS) augmented the KCa current in CBA vascular smooth muscle cells. EDHF-mediated responses in rat cerebral arteries were due to H2S activating the KCa channel. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Uridine derivatives from the seeds of Lepidium apetalum Willd. and their estrogenic effects.
Ten uridine derivatives (lepidiumuridine B-K) were isolated from the seeds of Lepidium apetalum Willd. Lepidiumuridine B-J were previously undescribed compounds, and were structurally characterized using analysis of their NMR and MS data. Lepidiumuridine C, D, I, and J increased cell proliferation and expression of ERα in the MCF-7 cell line. In addition, blockage of ERα completely abolished cell proliferation and expression of ERα in MCF-7 cells, suggesting that the proliferation effects of lepidiumuridine C, D, I, and J were ERα-mediated. The uridine derivatives might belong to undescribed phytoestrogens. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Trial-to-trial fluctuations in H-reflexes and motor evoked potentials in human wrist flexor.
The H-reflexes and the motor potentials (MEPs) evoked by electromagnetic brain stimulation in the human wrist flexor were recorded over many trials. The responses from each stimulus at two steady levels of muscle activation were sorted into three groups, based on their amplitudes. The electromyogram (EMG) in each of these groups was rectified and averaged. The level of pre-response muscle activity was found to correlate with the amplitude of both the averaged H-reflexes and the averaged MEPs. This suggests that much of the amplitude fluctuations of both H-reflexes and MEPs can be attributed to moment-to-moment changes in the level of activity of the motoneurone pool. Overall, however, the amplitude of MEPs increased more rapidly than the amplitude of H-reflexes as the pre-stimulus EMG activity increased. This is probably because, while the amplitude of H-reflexes depends primarily on the level of motoneurone pool excitability, the amplitude of an MEP depends not only on this, but also on the excitability of the motor cortex, and the former is to some extent also dependent on the latter. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
The intravenous ketamine test: a predictive response tool for oral dextromethorphan treatment in neuropathic pain.
IV infusion tests performed to predict subsequent response to oral analgesics are an increasingly popular method used to enhance medical care and conserve resources. Because no infusion test is completely accurate, the potential benefits of these tests must be weighed against the frustration and waste in resources encountered with false-positive results, and the failure to use a potentially beneficial treatment with false-negative results. In recent years, drugs that act antagonistically at N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors have been shown to be valuable adjuncts in the treatment of pain. To determine the predictive value of small-dose (0.1 mg/kg) IV ketamine on an oral dextromethorphan (DX) treatment regimen, we analyzed the analgesic response to these drugs in 25 patients at 2 tertiary care military treatment facilities, institutions at which DX is not readily accessible. When >/=50% response for both drugs was used as the outcome measure for success, the positive predictive value of the ketamine test was 64%, the negative predictive value 73%, and the observed agreement 68%. However, when >/=67% relief with ketamine was used as an outcome measure (as determined by a receiver operating characteristic curve), the positive predictive value was 90%, the negative predictive value 80%, and the observed agreement increased to 84%. Based on these results, we conclude that an IV ketamine test may be useful in predicting response to oral DX. More research is needed to determine the ideal candidates for such a test, and the optimal dose and cutoff value for the response to ketamine. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Resilience and challenges among staff of gulf coast nursing homes sheltering frail evacuees following Hurricane Katrina, 2005: implications for planning and training.
The purpose of this study was to: (1) explore experiences and responses of staff in caring for sheltered, frail, Hurricane Katrina evacuees; and (2) identify how planning and training can be enhanced for staff who may care for frail older populations during and after disasters. Individual, in-person, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 38 staff members in four nursing homes in Mississippi, sheltering 109 evacuees in November 2005, nine weeks after Hurricane Katrina. Twenty-four were direct care staff, including certified nursing assistants, licensed nurses, dietary aides, and social workers; 14 were support staff, including maintenance and business managers. The number interviewed in each nursing home averaged 9.5 (range 6-15). Using a discussion guide and focusing on their experiences caring for nursing home evacuees, staff were asked to describe: (1) experiences; (2) problems; (3) what helped; and (4) what was learned. Data were processed using grounded theory and thematic analysis. Responses of direct care staff differed in emphasis from those of support staff in several areas; responses from these groups were analyzed separately and together. Three of the researchers identified recurring themes; two organized themes conceptually. Staff emphasized providing emotional reassurance to evacuees as well as physical care. Many described caring for evacuees as "a blessing," saying the experience helped them bond with residents, evacuees, and other staff. However, caring for evacuees was difficult because staff members were extremely anxious and in poor physical condition after an arduous evacuation. Challenges included communicating with evacuees' families, preventing dehydration, lack of personal hygiene supplies, staff exhaustion, and emotional needs of residents, evacuees, and staff. Teamwork, community help, and having a well-organized disaster plan, extra supplies, and dependable staff helped personnel cope with the situation. Staff of nursing homes that sheltered Katrina evacuees demonstrated resilience in the disaster's aftermath. Many placed the well-being of residents as their first priority. Results underscore the importance of planning, teamwork, and adequate supplies and staffing. Training for long-term care staff should emphasize providing emotional support as well as physical care for residents and evacuees during and following disasters. Nurses, social workers, and other staff members responsible for promoting emotional well-being for nursing home residents should be prepared to respond to disasters. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Radiotherapy of cholangiocarcinoma: the roles for primary and adjuvant therapies.
A total of 22 patients with cholangiocarcinoma who had been treated with external radiotherapy between 1978 and 1989 were analyzed. Of the 22 patients, 18 had cancer of the hepatic hilus (Klatskin) and 4 had intrahepatic biliary cancer; all but 2 of the subjects had advanced disease. In all, 16 patients underwent primary irradiation for unresectable tumors, 4 were subjected to adjuvant irradiation after gross tumor resection, and 2 received preoperative irradiation followed by gross tumor resection. The mean initial irradiation dose was 52.0 Gy (range, 26-78 Gy). The TDF (time-dose-fractionation) for the entire course of radiotherapy ranged from 49 to 154 (mean, 100). The median survival of all patients was 10 months, and the cumulative 1-year survival value was 37.7%. The external radiotherapy proved to be effective in the treatment of cholangiocarcinoma in terms of palliation and survival. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Modulation of multidrug resistance in cancer cells by the E3 ubiquitin ligase seven-in-absentia homologue 1.
Seven-in-absentia homologue 1 (Siah1) is an E3 ubiquitin ligase that regulates the ubiquitination and proteasome-dependent degradation of a number of proteins. Here we report that Siah1 modulates multidrug resistance 1 (MDR1)/P-glycoprotein-mediated drug resistance in the cancer cell lines examined. Siah1, but not its ligase-dead mutant, down-regulates MDR1/P-glycoprotein and sensitizes the multidrug-resistant cells to chemotherapeutic agents. Mechanistically, Siah1 does not promote P-glycoprotein degradation but decreases its expression transcriptionally by promoting c-Jun transcription factor binding to the activator protein 1 (AP1) site in the MDR1 promoter. Moreover, Siah1 triggers c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) activation, leading to enhanced phosphorylation of c-Jun, and the JNK/c-Jun signalling axis is critical for Siah1 to down-regulate MDR1/P-glycoprotein expression. These findings demonstrate a previously unidentified role for Siah1 in regulating MDR1/P-glycoprotein expression through the JNK/c-Jun pathway. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Evaluating the psychosocial adjustment of 2- and 3-year-old pediatric burn survivors.
Very little information has been published about 2- and 3-year-old children who have experienced major burns. This study used a standardized instrument to measure the behavioral adjustment of these young burn survivors, and the results were compared with those of a nonclinical normative sample. Thirty-three pediatric burn survivors with 50%+/-28% total body surface area burns were evaluated 1.2+/-0.7 years postburn. Parental observations were assessed with the use of the Child Behavior Checklist for 2- and 3-Year-Olds, a 99-item standardized checklist designed to identify behavior problems. Forty of the questions are specific to 2- and 3-year-olds, and the scores of male and female children are not differentiated. The raw scores of the children with burns were statistically compared with the reported normative sample for this version of the Child Behavior Checklist. Pediatric burn survivors in this sample exhibited significantly more internalizing behaviors than the children in the normative group. Parents reported children who had been burned to be more depressed and to have more somatic complaints and sleep problems. Determining the relationship of behavior problems to posttrauma sequelae and preburn environmental factors would assist with the establishment of appropriate psychosocial interventions. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Completeness of cancer registration in Denmark 1943-1966 and efficacy of record linkage procedures.
The completeness of registration in the national, population based cancer registry in Denmark was evaluated for the first 23 years (1943-1966) of operation. The registry was linked to a complementary data file on 5674 Danish invasive cervical cancer patients enrolled in an international, clinical follow-up study on the basis of identifying information including name, month and year of birth and date of cervical cancer diagnosis. The cancer register had a deficit of 2.2% (95% confidence interval, 1.8-2.6) cervical cancer patients; this figure is low compared to those of other cancer registers. Some 80% of the identified cases were retrieved by computerized matching alone, and an additional 15% were identified by combining computerized and visual matching procedures. Scrutiny of non-retrieved case records revealed that major errors in the identifiers of the cohort used for linkage were responsible for inability to identify an additional 1.7%. The presents study underlines the importance of meticulously recorded, high quality key identifiers in registers, and linkage of cohorts to establish the presence or absence of disease. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
CYP-independent inhibition of platelet aggregation in rabbits by a mixed disulfide conjugate of clopidogrel.
Dual antiplatelet therapy with clopidogrel and aspirin has been the standard of care in the United States for patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS) and/or undergoing percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI). However, the effectiveness of clopidogrel varies significantly among different sub-populations due to inter-individual variability. In this study we examined the antiplatelet potential of a novel mixed disulfide conjugate of clopidogrel with the aim to overcome the inter-individual variability. In the metabolic studies using human liver microsomes and cDNA-expressed P450s, we confirmed that multiple P450s are involved in the bioactivation of 2-oxoclopidogrel to H4, one of the diastereomers of the pharmacologically active metabolite (AM) possessing antiplatelet activity. Results from kinetic studies demonstrated that 2C19 is the most active in converting 2-oxoclopidogrel to H4 with a catalytic efficiency of 0.027 µM⁻¹min⁻¹ in the reconstituted system. On the basis of this finding, we were able to biosynthesise the conjugate of clopidogrel with 3-nitropyridine-2-thiol, referred to as clopNPT, and examined its antiplatelet activity in male New Zealand white rabbits. After administration as intravenous bolus at 2 mg/kg, the clopNPT conjugate was rapidly converted to the AM leading to the inhibition of platelet aggregation (IPA). Analyses of the blood samples drawn at various time points showed that intravenous administration of clopNPT led to ~70% IPA within 1 hour and the IPA persisted for more than 3 hours. Since the antiplatelet activity of clopNPT does not require bioactivation by P450s, the mixed disulfide conjugate of clopidogrel has the potential to overcome the inter-individual variability in clopidogrel therapy. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Teaching problem solving and decision making in undergraduate medical education: an instructional strategy.
Actual changes in the context of real care along with their impact on current practice modes prompted the authors to develop a new instructional strategy, which aims to improve the diagnostic reasoning competence of medical undergraduates. In this strategy the use of visual representations is promoted. A diagnostic panorama represents differential diagnosis. A diagnostic diagram exposes the diagnostic reasoning process. This paper outlines the strategy and its assumptions. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Types of impairment among dentists.
The most common causes of impairment among dentists are cognitive impairment, physical disability, chemical dependency, other addictions, and mental illness. The most frequently cited cause of impairment for dentists is chemical dependence. From 70% to 90% of the individuals reported to state rehabilitation committees are reported for chemical dependence. This paper reviews the nature of these types of impairments, describes treatment issues in each case, and suggests preventive measures. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
[Nyctometry and flicker discrimination in diabetic retinopathy].
98 diabetics and 34 healthy probands were recruited for ophthalmoscopic evaluation of the retina with a fundus camera, and for functional tests of the retina using a flicker frequency analyzer and a nyctometer. One year later, funduscopic evaluation of the ocular fundal state was carried out, and the results compared with the original baseline set of functional parameters. In the control group of healthy probands, a result only partially duplicated in the group of diabetics. An age-corrected comparison of the two groups revealed no difference between the diabetics and the healthy probands. Attempts were made to identify groups displaying significant differences in retinal performance as evaluated by the procedures mentioned above, but neither taking duration of diabetes as a criterion, nor selecting for differences in the course of diabetic retinopathy enabled the identification of such groups. A decrease in retinal performance was seen in very severe stages of diabetic retinopathy. These functional tests are not suitable in the early stages of diabetic retinopathy for defining that group of high-risk patients in which rapid progression of diabetic retinopathy is to be expected. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Diagnostic markers of sepsis in the emergency department.
Sepsis is defined as the systemic inflammatory response to infection. However, changes in body temperature, heart and respiratory rate and white cell count (the "SIRS" criteria) are not specific enough to identify infected patients in the emergency department. Among many biological parameters, measurement of lactate, central venous oxygen saturation (ScvO2), C-reactive protein (CRP) and procalcitonin (PCT) are of particular interest. Early (within 6h) and goal-directed (ScvO2 > 70%) resuscitation increases survival in severe sepsis and septic shock, particularly in patients with high lactate clearances. CRP and PCT are both useful markers of sepsis but PCT increases earlier, better differentiates infective from non-infective causes of inflammation, more closely correlates with sepsis severity in terms of shock and organ dysfunction and better predicts outcome when followed in time. However, PCT measurement is more costly, time-consuming, and not widespread available. New markers for rapid diagnosis of sepsis (e.g. TREM-1) are under investigation. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Development and evaluation of an E-health system to care for patients with bladder pain syndrome/interstitial cystitis.
Bladder pain syndrome/interstitial cystitis (BPS/IC) is a chronic disease that highly degrades the quality of life for patients. In the present study, Internet intervention was used to care for bladder pain syndrome/interstitial cystitis patients to alleviate their pain and bothering symptoms. Healthcare education was carried out through the Internet by asking the patients, who were randomly divided into study (40 patients) and control (40 patients) groups, to check possible sensitive foods, habits, and behaviors weekly to remind and consolidate important rules for promoting quality of life. The symptom flares consultation through short message service with the Internet used to elevate healthcare efficiency was undertaken. Questionnaires, including Short Form 36 health survey, O'Leary-Sant symptom and problem indices, as well as visual analog scales pain and urgency scales, were used to evaluate quality of life and disease severity improvements before and after information and communication technology intervention. The outcome was evaluated at week 8. The quality of life of both the control and study groups was significantly improved. The quality of life and visual analog scales for the patients in the study group with information and communication technology intervention showed a much greater improvement compared with the patients in the control group (P < 0.05). The E-health system was shown to be effective in improving quality of life of bladder pain syndrome/interstitial cystitis patients through intervention of Internet healthcare education and short message service for the consolidation of healthy behavior and lifestyle in the 8-week follow up. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
syris: a flexible and efficient framework for X-ray imaging experiments simulation.
An open-source framework for conducting a broad range of virtual X-ray imaging experiments, syris, is presented. The simulated wavefield created by a source propagates through an arbitrary number of objects until it reaches a detector. The objects in the light path and the source are time-dependent, which enables simulations of dynamic experiments, e.g. four-dimensional time-resolved tomography and laminography. The high-level interface of syris is written in Python and its modularity makes the framework very flexible. The computationally demanding parts behind this interface are implemented in OpenCL, which enables fast calculations on modern graphics processing units. The combination of flexibility and speed opens new possibilities for studying novel imaging methods and systematic search of optimal combinations of measurement conditions and data processing parameters. This can help to increase the success rates and efficiency of valuable synchrotron beam time. To demonstrate the capabilities of the framework, various experiments have been simulated and compared with real data. To show the use case of measurement and data processing parameter optimization based on simulation, a virtual counterpart of a high-speed radiography experiment was created and the simulated data were used to select a suitable motion estimation algorithm; one of its parameters was optimized in order to achieve the best motion estimation accuracy when applied on the real data. syris was also used to simulate tomographic data sets under various imaging conditions which impact the tomographic reconstruction accuracy, and it is shown how the accuracy may guide the selection of imaging conditions for particular use cases. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
[Factors affecting the interventions of the Family Health Strategy team towards individuals with mental disorders].
This qualitative study was performed with Family Health Strategy teams in Maringá - PR. The objective of the study was to identify the factors that affect interventions provided to individuals with mental disorders. Data were collected through focal groups and were subjected to content analysis. Participants reported personal and professional issues related to the structure of the service, such as negative feelings, lack of professional skills, and a prioritization towards curative interventions. The mental healthcare network establishes criteria for assistance, deficient reference and counter-reference and the matrix activity. Factors affecting the interventions included attachment, lack of family involvement, lack of team participation and poor patient adherence. It was found that few factors contributed to the interventions while many were viewed as hindrances; however, by identifying these factors, the teams can work to improve mental health care. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
AdVance male sling in irradiated patients with stress urinary incontinence.
Evaluate the complication rate and efficacy of the AdVance sling (American Medical Systems, Minnetonka, MN, USA) in patients with stress urinary incontinence (SUI) and a history of pelvic radiation. A retrospective chart review of all men at our institution with a history of prostate cancer and subsequent radiation therapy treated with an AdVance sling for SUI. Between 2007 and 2009 an AdVance sling was performed in 27 patients with prior pelvic radiation therapy. The mean patient age was 73.2 years. At an average follow up of 15.8 months 19 patients (70%) were claiming benefit from the operation. Average pre and postoperative pad use per day was 4.2 and 1.1, respectively. One patient had worsening symptoms, and two had no change. Intraoperative complications occurred in two patients (7.4%), both of which were urethral injuries during needle passage and both were repaired primarily and the procedure completed. Early complications included a urinary tract infection in one and urinary retention requiring intermittent catheterization in another. Two late complications occurred, including continued retention in the previously mentioned patient and hematuria (negative cystoscopy) in one of the patients with an intraoperative urethral injury. There were no mesh erosions or infections. Nine patients (38%) had some decreased efficacy over time and four patients underwent subsequent incontinence procedures. The AdVance male sling can be safely and effectively performed in men who have had previous radiation therapy. Our results are encouraging but long term follow up is needed especially in light of the decrease efficacy in 38% of our patients. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Gaseous contaminant emissions as affected by burning scrap tires in cement manufacturing.
We studied the environmental impact (gaseous emissions) of using scrap tires as a fuel substitute at a cement plant that produces one million tons of cement per year. Using a combination of tires and coal as opposed to only coal caused variations in the pollutant emission rate. The study recorded a 37% increase in the rate of emission for CO, a 24% increase for SO2, an 11% decrease for NOx, and a 48% increase for HCl when tires were included. The rate of emission for metals increased 61% for Fe, 33% for Al, 487% for Zn, 127% for Pb, 339% for Cr, 100% for Mn, and 74% for Cu, and decreased 22% for Hg. On the other hand, the emission rate of organic compounds dropped by 14% for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, 8% in naphthalene, 37% in chlorobenzene, and 45% in dioxins and furans. We used a Gaussian model of atmospheric dispersion to calculate the average pollutant concentration (1-h, 24-h, and annual concentrations) in the ambient air at ground level with the help of the ISC-ST2 software program developed by the USEPA. When tires were used, we observed (i) a 12 to 24% increase in particulate matter, this range considering the concentration variation depending on the average used (1-h, 24-h, and annual basis), 31 to 52% in CO, 22 to 34% in SO2, 39 to 52% in HCl, 12 to 27% in Fe, -3 to 8% in Al, 30 to 37% in Zn, and 270 to 885% in Pb; (ii) a decrease of 8 to 13% in NOx, 9 to 13% in polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, 6 to 7% in naphthalene, 32 to 39% in chlorobenzene, and 32 to 45% in dioxins and furans. The results obtained showed that the maximum ground-level concentrations were well within the environmental standards (for operation with only coal as well as for operation with a combination of coal and tires). | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Guidelines of the International Headache Society for controlled trials of preventive treatment of migraine in children and adolescents, 1st edition.
Because the results of clinical trials of investigational treatments influence regulatory policy, prescribing patterns, and use in clinical practice, high quality trials are an essential component of the evidence base for migraine. The International Headache Society has published guidelines for clinical trials in adults with migraine since 1991. With multiple issues specific to children and adolescents with migraine, as well as the emergence of novel trial designs and advances in pharmaceuticals, biologics, devices, and behavioural interventions, there is a need for guidance focusing on issues specific to the conduct of clinical trials in children and adolescents with migraine. The objective of these guidelines is to provide a contemporary, standardized, and evidence-based approach to the design, conduct, and reporting of well-controlled clinical trials of preventive treatment of migraine in children and adolescents. The development of these guidelines was based on guidelines previously published by the International Headache Society and regulatory bodies. The recommendations are evidence-based, where available. The process included consultations among various committees, roundtable discussions among stakeholders (lay people and the pharmaceutical industry), and open consultation with the IHS membership on the final draft. A series of recommendations addressing the major issues in clinical trials in children and adolescents with migraine is provided. Recommendations are supported by evidence-based practice and validated methodologies, where available. Supporting comments are provided to clarify ambiguities. These guidelines should be consulted and used in designing and conducting clinical trials of preventive treatments in children and adolescents with migraine. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Effect of lymphokine-activated killer cells on head and neck tumours in nude mouse model.
The present study was designed to investigate the in vivo effect of local application of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells on the growth of tumours implanted under the renal capsule in nude mice, and especially to test whether large granular lymphocytes (LGL), regarded as natural killer (NK) cells, are the main precursor of LAK cells in vivo. Our results showed that the local application of LAK cells inhibited the growth of tumours in the head and neck region. The growth of tumours implanted under the renal capsule was inhibited by local application of 1 x 10(7) recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) activated non-adherent lymphocytes, but the inhibitory effect was almost the same as produced by 3 x 10(6) rIL-2-activated LGL application. The findings indicate that the rIL-2-activated LGL are the main effectors in inhibiting tumour growth. In addition, rIL-2-activated non-adherent lymphocytes as well as LGL significantly prolonged the number of days of 50% survival and mean survival time of nude mice, in which HLaC78 cells, from a laryngeal tumour cell line, were injected into the subrenal capsule space with effector cells at various effector: target (E:T) ratios. The results indicate that the application of LAK cells may be useful in the treatment of patients with head and neck tumours. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Effects of prosthesis surface roughness on the failure process of cemented hip implants after stem-cement debonding.
Retrieval studies suggest that the loosening process of the cemented femoral components of total hip arthroplasties is initiated by failure of the bond between the prosthesis and the cement mantle. Finite element (FE) analyses have demonstrated that stem-cement debonding has stress-producing effects in the cement mantle. High interface friction, which corresponds to a degree of surface roughness, reduces these stresses. In experiments, however, debonded rough stems produced more cement damage than polished ones; in the Swedish Hip Register polished stems were clinically superior with respect to stems with a mat surface finish. The purpose of the present study was to investigate this contradiction. For this purpose, global and local FE models with debonded stem-cement interfaces were used to study the effects of prosthesis surface roughness on the cement stresses on a global scale and microscale, respectively. Similar to earlier numerical studies, the global FE model predicted that an increased surface roughness of the stem reduced the stresses in the cement mantle. The local model provided insight in the load-transfer mechanism on a microscale and could explain the experimental and clinical findings. The local cement peak stresses around the asperities of the surface roughness profile increased with increasing surface roughness and decreased again beyond a particular roughness value. Cement abrasion is caused by localized stresses in combination with micromotion. From this study it can be concluded that to minimize cement abrasion, debonded stems should either have a polished microstructure to minimize the local cement stresses or have a profiled macrostructure to minimize micromotions at the stem-cement interface. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Cholinergic neurons in the brain of a teleost fish (Porichthys notatus) located with a monoclonal antibody to choline acetyltransferase.
A monoclonal antibody (Ab8) to choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) was used to locate structures showing ChAT-like immunoreactivity (ChAT-IR) in the brain of a teleost fish, the midshipman (Porichthys notatus). ChAT is the synthetic enzyme for acetylcholine found in neurons using that neurotransmitter; thus ChAT-IR may be interpreted as indicating putative cholinergic activity. Robust staining is seen in all cranial nerve motor nuclei. In addition, the brainstem of Porichthys is distinguished by two other expansive ChAT-IR zones: a sonic motor nucleus, which innervates swimbladder "drum" muscles, and an octavolateralis efferent nucleus, which innervates acoustic, vestibular, and lateral line end organs. Scattered labeled cells are found in several cranial sensory nuclei--the vagal lobe, and the main and descending trigeminal nuclei. ChAT-IR cells form restricted subpopulations in other noncranial nerve nuclei, including the granule cell layer of the cerebellum; superior, medial, and inferior divisions of the reticular formation; the stratum periventriculare of the midbrain's optic tectum; and the nucleus isthmi in the midbrain tegmentum. In the telencephalon, a dense population of ChAT-IR cells is found in the ventral nucleus of area ventralis; terminals and fine fibers are found in the dorsal, medial, and central nuclei of area dorsalis. Together, the data represent the first complete report of ChAT-IR cell bodies in the brain of any nonmammal with the monoclonal antibody Ab8, which has already been extensively used on a variety of vertebrate brains. The results are thus discussed from a comparative viewpoint, considering reports of ChAT-IR in different taxa. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Physiological evidence for the occurrence of pathways shunting blood away from the secondary lamellae of eel gills.
1. Several cardiovascular and respiratory measurements have been performed in eels before and after intravenous injections of adrenaline. These experiments have allowed a comparison to be made of values for the cardiac output determined directly (Q) and using the Fick principle (QF) on individual fish under these two conditions. 2. Under control conditions it was shown that QF/Q = 0.72, indicating that about 30% of the mixed venous blood afferent to the gills is returned directly to the heart and bypasses the lamellar circulation via veno-venous anastomoses between the afferent filament arteries and the central venous space of the gill filaments. 3. Adrenaline, which during winter only has its action due to stimulation of alpha-adrenoreceptors, induced a hypoventilation but no changes in cardiac output in spite of a bradycardia. The oxygen content of the mixed venous blood was markedly increased whereas Ca,O2 remained unchanged as did the percentage utilization of oxygen from the water as it passed over the gills. The efferent blood flow from the gills after injection of adrenaline was almost equal to the total cardiac output. It is suggested that such a circulatory change was due to adrenaline-mediated constriction of veno-venous anastomoses in the gills of the eel. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Apoptotic cell removal.
Ingestion by professional or amateur phagocytes is the fate of most cells that undergo apoptosis. Studies in both Caenorhabditis elegans and mammals are now converging to reveal some of the key mechanisms and consequences of this removal process. At least seven corpse removal genes in nematodes have mammalian equivalents, and represent elements of signaling pathways involved in uptake. In mammals, a wide variety of apoptotic cell recognition receptors has been implicated and appears to be divided into two categories, involved in tethering the apoptotic cell or triggering an uptake mechanism related to macropinocytosis. Apoptotic cell removal is normally efficient and non-inflammatory. By contrast, the process may become subverted by parasites to yield a more favorable growth environment, or in other cases lead to fibrosis. Removal may also clinch the apoptotic process itself in cells not yet completely committed to death. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Importance of DNA damage in the induction of apoptosis by ionizing radiation: effect of the scid mutation and DNA ploidy on the radiosensitivity of murine lymphoid cell lines.
To study the effects of the murine scid mutation and DNA ploidy on the susceptibility of lymphoid cell lines to induction of apoptosis by ionizing radiation and thereby to determine whether DNA lesions are critical initiators of apoptosis. Sensitivity to killing and rapidity of induction of apoptosis following y-irradiation or DNA-associated 125I decays were compared in pre-B and pre-T cell lines derived from wild-type mice and from mice homozygous or heterozygous for the scid mutation. Effects of differences in DNA ploidy on the same endpoints were studied using pseudo-diploid and -tetraploid clones of a murine pre-T cell line. Pairs of pre-B- and pre-T cell-derived lines that expressed wild-type p53 and underwent rapid interphase apoptosis after irradiation were identified. In both cases, the scid homozygous cell lines were more sensitive to killing, suggesting that DNA repair capability influences susceptibility to induction of apoptosis. Increasing DNA ploidy in a cell line that undergoes rapid interphase apoptosis produced a corresponding increase in the number of DNA lesions required to produce a lethal event; again consistent with DNA being the target for radiation action. DNA damage is an important, if not the sole, initiator of external beam ionizing radiation-induced apoptosis. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Surgical treatment of active infective mitral valve endocarditis.
Although infective endocarditis is primarily treated conservatively with antimicrobial therapy, early surgical intervention is often mandatory when various complications arise. These include intractable heart failure, persistent uncontrollable infection, large mobile vegetations, peripheral embolism and prosthetic valve endocarditis. Optimal timing of surgical intervention in patients with infected heart valves results in reduced early and late mortality. In the context of healed infective endocarditis, mitral regurgitation is treated with mitral valve repair, which produces long-term results similar to those seen for treatment of degenerative mitral regurgitation. Mitral valve repair should also be considered for patients with mitral regurgitation due to active infective endocarditis. Superficial infection without valve destruction is the best candidate for valve repair. Discrete vegetations on the valve leaflets are excised along with underlying leaflet tissue (vegetectomy). Although valve lesions can be repaired by standard techniques, particular care (e.g., reinforcement with a pericardial patch) should be taken to avoid excess tension on the suture line. The feasibility of valve repair depends on the extent of tissue destruction. Large defects of the anterior leaflet, due to transmural infection or lesions that encompass greater than one-third of the entire posterior leaflet with annular abscess, are not amenable to repair. Also, the involvement of the aortic valve frequently necessitates valve replacement. Further, unstable preoperative hemodynamics leads to the decision to perform valve replacement immediately rather than complicate valve repair in an attempt to avoid prolonged operation time for life salvage. In the context of the feasibility of valve repair, timely surgical intervention and precise repair technique are essential. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
A novel thermostable polymerase for DNA sequencing.
Using recent findings by Tabor and Richardson, a novel thermostable DNA polymerase that generates sequence data comparable with T7 Sequenase DNA polymerase has been developed for improved base calling and longer reads. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Analysis of the role of pglI in pilin glycosylation of Neisseria meningitidis.
Pilin is the major subunit of the essential virulence factor pili and is glycosylated at Ser63. In this study we investigated the gene pglI to determine whether it is involved in the biosynthesis of the pilin-linked glycan of Neisseria meningitidis strain C311#3. A N. meningitidis C311#3pglI mutant resulted in a change of apparent molecular weight in SDS-PAGE and altered binding of antisera, consistent with a role in the biosynthesis of the pilin-linked glycan. These data, in conjunction with homology with well-characterised acyltransferases suggests a specific role for pglI in the biosynthesis of the basal 2,4-diacetamido-2,4,6-trideoxyhexose residue of the pilin-linked glycan. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Sunitinib--CLIO conjugate: a VEGFR/PDGFR-targeting active MR probe.
This study was conducted to evaluate feasibility of sunitinib-CLIO conjugate as a vascular endothelial growth factor receptor/platelet-derived growth factor receptor (VEGFR/PDGFR)-specific magnetic resonance (MR) probe. VEGFR/PDGFR-targeting MR probe was synthesized by conjugating cross-linked iron-oxide (CLIO) with tyrosine-kinase inhibitor (sunitinib). In VEGFR/PDGFR-positive (U118MG) and VEGFR/PDGFR-negative (HT29) cells and tumor models, conjugate-driven ΔR 2 was estimated, while CLIO was used as control. Prussian-blue staining was performed for quantifying the amount of tumor-binding conjugates. ΔR 2 between sunitinib-CLIO-treated and non-treated cells was greater in U118MG (mean, 2.1/s) than in HT29 cells (1.0/s). In in vivo study, conjugate induced a greater ΔR 2 in U118MG (11.2/s) than HT29 tumors (5.9/s). Conjugate-induced R 2 changes were not correlated with degree of Gd-DTPA enhancement, demonstrating that tumor binding of sunitinib-CLIO was independent of enhanced permeability and retention effect. % area of Prussian-blue staining was greater in U118MG (8.5 %) than in HT29 (1.4 %). Sunitinib-CLIO conjugate can be used as an active MR probe for quantifying VEGFR/PDGFR. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Inhibitory effects of calmodulin antagonists on plasma membrane cyclases in Tetrahymena: calmodulin-dependent guanylate cyclase and calmodulin-independent adenylate cyclase.
Trifluoperazine was shown previously to inhibit the activation of Tetrahymena guanylate cyclase activity by calmodulin [S. Nagao, S. Kudo and Y Nozawa, Biochem. Pharmac. 19, 2709 (1981)]. The present paper reports that N-(6-aminohexyl)-5-chloro-1-naphthalenesulfonamide (W-7), another representative calmodulin inhibitor, inhibited the calmodulin-induced activation of the guanylate cyclase, and that trifluoperazine and W-7 also inhibited Tetrahymena adenylate cyclase. The adenylate cyclase activity was found to be present in a membrane-bound form and not to be influenced by calmodulin. The inhibitions of the adenylate cyclase activity by these agents were dose-dependent and not Ca2+-dependent. These findings suggest that the inhibitory actions of these drugs may not necessarily be specific for calmodulin-dependent enzymes in T. pyriformis. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
[Hemangiopericytoma of the thyroid gland].
Hemangiopericytoma is an uncommon tumour of the thyroid gland. We report the fourth case of thyroid hemangiopericytoma in a 77 year-old woman who presented a goiter known for 23 years. The tumour, 11.5 X 7 X 7 cm in diameter, was located in the left lobe. Its histological features were those of a benign hemangiopericytoma as in two cases previously reported. Light microscopy discovered capillaries surrounded by sheets of plump cells and a reticulin network encircling each cell. A few tumour cells showed slight immunoreactivity with antibody against actin. There was no immunoreactivity with antibodies against desmin, vimentin and myosin intermediate filaments. Today, the electron microscopic analysis which revealed that tumour cells looked like pericytes, remains the best investigation for hemangiopericytoma diagnosis. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Dexamethasone Versus Ketamine in the Interscalene Block in Patients Undergoing Arthroscopic Shoulder Surgery: A Randomized Double-Blinded Study.
Arthroscopic shoulder surgery (ASS) is often followed by severe pain. Interscalene brachial plexus block (ISB) was used to relieve such pain. The aim of the study was to compare the effect of adding either dexamethasone or ketamine to ISB on time to the fi rst request for analgesia. Sixty patients scheduled for ASS were enrolled in this study. Before induction of general anaesthesia, patients were randomly allocated to two groups; in Group D, patients received ISB with bupivacaine 0.3%, 5 mL lidocaine 2% plus 8 mg dexamethasone. Whereas in Group K, patients received ISB with bupivacaine 0.3%, 5 mL lidocaine 2% plus 50 mg ketamine. Time to the fi rst administration of supplemental analgesic postoperative was our primary concern. Secondary outcomes included pain score, patient satisfaction, and side effects of either block or drugs. Student's t-test was utilized for comparison between the two groups. Chi-square test was used to test the association between categorical variables. Time to the first request of analgesia was statistically significantly longer in Group D when compared to Group K. The onset of sensory and motor blocks, number of patients requiring rescue analgesia and patient satisfaction showed no difference between the two groups. Pain score in Group K, compared to Group D, was statistically signifi cant less early postoperatively. We conclude that addition of dexamethasone to local anesthetic in ISB for patients undergoing ASS resulted in longer time elapsed to the first request of analgesia when compared with ketamine. Pain score in the early postoperative period was statistically improved in ketamine group, but this might be of no clinical signifi cance, when compared with dexamethasone. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Clinical significance of the highly sensitive fucosylated fraction of α-fetoprotein in patients with chronic liver disease.
The purpose of the present study was to investigate the clinical significance of the highly sensitive fucosylated fraction of α-fetoprotein (hs-AFP-L3) in patients with chronic liver disease (CLD) and low serum α-fetoprotein (AFP) concentration. A total of 241 patients being treated at our institute with CLD and low serum AFP concentration (3-10 ng/mL) were investigated retrospectively. We measured total AFP and the percentage of AFP-L3 using a µTAS Wako i30 device. The possible presence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) was thoroughly investigated by various examinations carried out from 1 month before to 1 month after measurements. In addition, hs-AFP-L3 elevated and non-elevated groups, divided by the cut-off value based on a receiver-operator characteristic (ROC) curve, were followed for possible future development of HCC. hs-AFP-L3 was above the detectable range in 60 patients (24.9%). Among those AFP-L3 positive cases, 20 (33.3%) were found to be HCC prevalent, whereas HCC was found in just 16 patients (8.8%) with undetectable hs-AFP-L3 levels. We determined the cut-off value of hs-AFP-L3%, which shows the proportion of AFP L3 in total AFP, to be 5.75%. During the follow-up period, HCC was newly detected in six patients (22.2%) in the hs-AFP-L3% elevated group and in 10 (5.6%) in the non-elevated group. Analysis using the Kaplan-Meier method showed the HCC-free rate of the hs-AFP-L3% elevated group was significantly lower than that of the non-elevated group (P=0.0038). Independent predicting variants were female sex (P=0.0024) and hs-AFP-L3% elevation (P=0.0036). Our results suggest hs-AFP-L3 level is a useful tumor marker for HCC in patients with CLD and low serum AFP concentration. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Membrane insertion and lateral mobility of synthetic amphiphilic signal peptides in lipid model membranes.
Amphiphilic signal sequences with the potential to form alpha-helices with a polar, charged face and an apolar face are common in proteins which are imported into mitochondria, in the PTS permeases of bacteria, and in bacterial rhodopsins. Synthetic peptides of such sequences partition into the surface region of lipid membranes where they can adopt different secondary structures. A finely controlled balance of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions determines the 'affinity' of amphiphilic signal peptides for lipid membranes, as well as the structure, orientation and depth of penetration of these peptides in lipid bilayer membranes. The ability of an individual peptide to associate with lipid bilayer membranes in several different modes is, most likely, a general feature of amphiphilic signal peptides and is reflected in several common physical properties of their amino acid sequences. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
[MicroRNAs in microglia polarization and CNS diseases: mechanism and functions].
Microglia are resident macrophages of central nervous system (CNS), and thus act as the crucial stuff of immune response and play very important roles in the progress of various CNS diseases. There are two different polarization statuses of activated microglia, M1 and M2 phenotypes. M1 polarized microglia are important for eradicating bacterial and promoting inflammation, whereas M2 cells are characterized by anti-inflammation and tissue remodeling. Recently, more and more evidence indicated that different polarized microglia showed diverse microRNA (miRNA) expression profiles. MiRNAs regulate microglia polarization, and thus affect the progress of CNS diseases. Fully exploring the polarization status of microglia during CNS diseases and the role of miRNAs in microglia polarization will be very helpful for a deep understanding of the roles of microglia in immunopathologic mechanism of different CNS diseases and offer the theoretical foundation of searching more effective therapies for these disorders. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
[Effects of pulse-therapy on natural anticoagulant system of the endothelium in nonspecific aortoarteritis].
To investigate the influence of pulse-therapy on anticoagulant system of the endothelium in patients with nonspecific aortoarteritis. Eleven patients (9 females and 2 males, mean age 33.4 +/- 8.8 years, the disease duration 5.8 +/- 5.7 years) with nonspecific aortoarteritis were examined. 9 patients had the third anatomic type of the disease with affection of the aortic arch and abdominal aorta vessels, 2 patients had the first anatomic type with isolated affection of the aortic arch. The patients received a standard three day course of pulse-therapy (PT) with glucocorticosteroids (GCS) (metipred in a dose 1000 mg/day or dexametasone in a dose 2 mg/kg/day) with a single dose of cytostatic (CS) (cyclophosphamide in a dose 10 mg/kg b.w.) during the first infusion. Further PT consisted of monthly single infusion of GCS and CS in the above doses for 9 to 12 months. Examination of the patients was carried out before the treatment and on the treatment day 4 and 20 and follow-up month 3, 6 and 12. Estimation of clinical activity was carried out according to BVAS. Levels of protein C, S, antithrombin III were measured by ELISA in plasma. Activities of protein C, antithrombin III and plasminogen were determined by the optical assay with chromogenic substrates. Before the start of the treatment BVAS was 6.8 +/- 4.3. During the follow-up mean scores of BVAS were significantly lower than before the pulse-therapy (2.7 +/- 2.2; 2.5 +/- 3.9; 3.1 +/- 5.1; 1.8 +/- 2.6 and 1.7 +/- 1.7, respectively; p < 0.05). Prior to the treatment, a mean level of protein C was 86.6 +/- 37.5% and range of its activity 175.2 +/- 112.9%. On the fourth day after pulse-therapy a mean concentration of protein C increased (128.8 +/- 29.0%; p < 0.05) while activity of protein C tended to a decrease on the 20th day (99.2 +/- 17.6; p > 0.05). There were no significant differences in the levels of protein S, antithrombin III and its activity, activity of plasminogen in the course of PT. PT has a good anti-inflammatory effect in the absence of unfavorable influence on anticoagulant system of the endothelium in patients with nonspecific aortoarteritis. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
[A hemerythrin-like protein MSMEG_3312 influences erythromycin resistance in mycobacteria].
Reactive oxygen species are natural products of metabolism in aerobic organisms, which lead to oxidative damage, such as DNA mutation, protein inactivation and drug resistance. MSMEG_3312 was predicted as a hemerythrin-like protein, which can carry oxygen and reversibly bind to oxygen, thus it might play important roles in the process of oxygen metabolism. In this study, we explored the role of MSMEG_3312 in drug resistance. On the basis of bioinformatics, we identified the conserved sequence of HHE domain in MSMEG_3312 and it was predicted to have typical α-helix at secondary structure. To explore potential functions of MSMEG_3312, we constructed the msmeg_3312 knockout strain and compare the susceptibility to various drugs to its parent strain, mc2155. In addition, we also measured the promoter response when treatment of erythromycin. Genetic results showed that MSMEG_3312 is not necessary for M. smegmatis growth at 7H9 rich medium. The msmeg_3312 knockout strain showed increased erythromycin resistance. Moreover, the drug resistance is only limited to erythromycin which its mechanism of action is by binding to the 50S subunit of the bacteria ribosomal complex and then inhibit protein synthesis. However, there were no different MICs of other antibiotics, targets for protein synthesis inhibition, but not 50S subunit, such as tetracyclines, aminoglycosides and chloramphenicol. Moreover, we also showed that the promoter of msmeg_3312 responses to erythromycin. Hemerythin-like protein MSMEG_3312 is involved in erythromycin resistance. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Curcumin by down-regulating NF-kB and elevating Nrf2, reduces brain edema and neurological dysfunction after cerebral I/R.
Oxidation, inflammation, and apoptosis are three critical factors for the pathogenic mechanism of cerebral ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. Curcumin exhibits substantial biological properties via anti-oxidation, anti-inflammation and anti-apoptotic effects; however, the molecular mechanism underlying the effects of curcumin against cerebral I/R injury remains unclear. To investigate the effects of curcumin on cerebral I/R injury associated with water content, infarction volume, and the expression of nuclear factor-kappa-B (NF-κB) and nuclear factor-erythroid-related factor-2 (Nrf2). Middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO, 1-hour occlusion and 24-hour reperfusion) was performed in male Wistar rats (n=64) as a cerebral I/R injury model. In the MCAO+CUR group, the rats were administered curcumin (300mg/kg BW, i.p.) at 30min after occlusion. The same surgical procedures were performed in SHAM rats without MCAO occlusion. At 24h post-operation, the parameters, including neurological deficit scores, blood brain barrier (BBB) disruption, water content, and infarction volume, were determined. Brain tissue NF-κB and Nrf2 expression levels were assayed through immunohistochemistry. Compared with the SHAM group, BBB disruption, neurological deficit, and increased brain water content and infarction volume were markedly demonstrated in the MCAO group. NF-κB expression was enhanced in the MCAO group. However, in the MCAO+CUR group, the upregulation of Nrf2, an anti-oxidation related protein, was consistent with a significant decline in the water content, infarction volume, and NF-κB expression. The protective effects of curcumin against cerebral I/R injury reflect anti-oxidation, anti-inflammation and anti-apoptotic activities, resulting in the elevation of Nrf2 and down-regulation of NF-κB. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Among Medicare Patients With Hepatocellular Carcinoma, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease is the Most Common Etiology and Cause of Mortality.
The main purpose of this study was to assess the recent trends in mortality and health care utilization of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) among Medicare population in the United States. The incidence of HCC is increasing in the United States. Data were obtained for a sample of Medicare beneficiary from 2005 to 2014. Diagnosis of HCC and etiology of liver disease were based on ICD-9 codes. Temporal trends in HCC rates, clinical, demographical and utilization parameters were analyzed by joinpoint regression model. Study cohort included 13,648 Medicare recipients with HCC (mean age: 70.0 y, 62.8% male and 76.0% white). Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) was the most common cause of HCC in the inpatient (32.07%) and outpatient (20.22%) followed by hepatitis C virus (HCV) (19.2% and 9.75%, respectively). Between 2005 and 2014, HCC rate per 100,000 Medicare recipients increased from 46.3 to 62.8 [average annual percentage change (AAPC) =3.4%, P<0.001]. Rate of HCV-HCC increased from 6.18 to 16.54 (AAPC=11.8%, P<0.001) while the NAFLD-HCC increased from 9.32 to 13.61, P<0.001). Overall 1-year mortality decreased from 46.2% to 42.1% (AAPC=-1.7%, P=0.004). Total charges increased from $67,679 to $99,420 (AAPC=5.1%, P<0.001) for inpatients and from $11,933 to $32,084 (P<0.001) for outpatients. On comparison of patients with hepatitis B virus-HCC, those with NAFLD-HCC (odds ratio: 1.87, P<0.001) had higher risk of mortality. On comparison of patients with hepatitis B virus-HCC, those with HCV-HCC had higher charges (percent change: 24.33%, 95% confidence interval: 1.02%-53.02%, P=0.040). Although HCC rates are increasing, the overall mortality is decreasing. NAFLD is the most important cause of HCC and an independent predictor of HCC in the outpatient setting for Medicare patients with HCC. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Evidence for charged B meson decays to a1+/-(1260)pi0 and a1(0)(1260)pi+/-.
We present measurements of the branching fractions for the decays B;{+/-}-->a_{1};{+/-}(1260)pi;{0} and B;{+/-}-->a_{1};{0}(1260)pi;{+/-} from a data sample of 232x10;{6} BB[over ] pairs produced in e;{+}e;{-} annihilation through the Upsilon(4S) resonance. We measure the branching fraction B(B;{+/-}-->a_{1};{+/-}(1260)pi;{0})xB(a_{1};{+/-}(1260)-->pi;{-}pi;{+}pi;{+/-})=(13.2+/-2.7+/-2.1)x10;{-6} with a significance of 4.2sigma, and the branching fraction B(B;{+/-}-->a_{1};{0}(1260)pi;{+/-})xB(a_{1};{0}(1260)-->pi;{-}pi;{+}pi;{0})=(20.4+/-4.7+/-3.4)x10;{-6} with a significance of 3.8sigma, where the first error quoted is statistical and the second is systematic. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
The influence of health on school outcomes. A multivariate approach.
This study investigates the relationship between chronic poor health and school outcomes among children. A simultaneous three-stage least squares model is estimated in which achievement and attendance are endogenous variables. The hypothesis that particular health characteristics are associated with differences in individual school outcomes is confirmed. For example, attendance is affected most by illnesses likely to interfere with school or peer interactions or difficulty doing only strenuous activity. Achievement is lowered by moderate to severe psychologic problems. Including attendance as an endogenous variable increases its significance. Other socioeconomic and school variables, such as mother working, marital status and special schooling, are included in the model. Policy implications are suggested. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Psychological aspects of obesity and very-low-calorie diets.
This paper selectively reviews available evidence concerning psychological characteristics associated with obesity, psychological changes accompanying very-low-calorie diets (VLCDs), and the influence of certain psychological factors on response to VLCD treatment. The obese population as a whole does not show an elevated incidence of psychopathology. Treatment-seeking obese do show more psychiatric disturbance, at a level comparable to other medical/surgical patients. There appear to be no global personality traits or profiles that are associated with obesity. However, obese people differ from non-obese groups on psychological and behavioral variables related to weight and eating and more frequently display perceptual and emotional body image anomalies. Binge eating appears rather common among obese groups. VLCDs have generally neutral to positive effects on hunger, depression, and anxiety. New data on body image suggest that VLCDs are associated with post-treatment underestimation of body size. Finally, recent data on possible psychological and behavioral correlates of VLCDs outcome are presented. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
An empirical comparison of diagnoses and reliabilities in ICD-10 and DSM-III-R.
The psychiatric classification systems ICD-10 and DSM-III-R were compared by applying both sets of diagnostic criteria to the same sample of patients suffering from affective and psychotic disorders. Four independent raters assessed diagnoses according to both systems to 100 written case records which had been prepared in a traditional, standard format. The International Diagnostic Checklists (IDCL) were employed to rate relevant psychopathological signs and symptoms and to apply diagnostic decision rules. The results showed that ICD-10 yielded a generally higher reliability for all main disorders except for bipolar disorder. Overall reliability was kappa = 0.53 for diagnoses according to DSM-III-R and 0.59 for diagnoses according to ICD-10. Agreement was best for affective disorders, moderate for schizophrenia and inacceptable for schizoaffective disorder. Insufficient boundaries were found in both systems between schizoaffective disorder on one side and schizophrenia and bipolar disorder on the other side. The different duration criteria for schizophrenia of six months in DSM-III-R and one month in ICD-10 tend to have considerable consequences for frequency rates of schizophrenia in a typical clinical setting. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Lack of relation of survivin gene expression with survival and surgical prognostic factors in endometrial carcinoma patients.
The relation of survivin gene expression to survival and surgical prognostic factors in the patients with endometrial carcinoma is unclear. In this study, 62 cases who were operated due to endometrial carcinoma were investigated between 2003 and 2011 in the the gynecological oncology clinic of Female Disease Training and Investigation Hospital of Etlik Zubeyde, Hanim, Turkey. Clinical and surgical prognostic factors were investigated by screening the records of these cases. With the standard streptavidin-biotin immune peroxidase method, cytoplasmic and nuclear expression of survivin was investigated in sections with specific antibodies (1:100, diagnostic Bio Systems, USA) primer. The aim was to elucidate any relation between survivin expression and defined prognostic factors and survival. There was no statistically significant relationship between cytoplasmic and nuclear indexes identified for survivin and age, body mass index, the levels of preoperative hemoglobin, platelet and Ca 125, stage, grade, lymph node meastasis, the number of metastatical lymph nodes (total, paraaortic and pelvic), myometrial invasion, serosal invasion, adnexal involvement, the presence of acid in the first diagnosis, the involvement of omentum, the adjuvant treatment application of the cases, the presence of recurrence and rate of mortality (p>0.05). Statistical significance was noted for the presence of advanced stage lymph node metastasis (pelvic, paraaortic, pelvic and paraaortic), serosal involvement, positive cytology, lymph vascular space invasion, intra abdominal metastasis, and omentum involvement. When investigated the relation between cytoplasmic and nuclear survivin indexes and total survival, the result was not statistically significant (p>0.05). In our study, there was no statistically significant relationship between the rates of cytoplasmic and nuclear survivin expression with identified prognostic factors and total or non-disease survival. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Spontaneous cutaneous papillomatosis in yaks and detection and quantification of bovine papillomavirus-1 and -2.
Seven clinical cases of cutaneous papillomatosis in yaks were studied in Arunachal Pradesh, India. Sporadic, single or a chain of multiple varying size warts appeared around the eyes or on the body. Predominant site of warts was around eyes. Histopathologically, these cases were diagnosed as fibropapilloma. It was confirmed by the detection of BPV-1 and BPV-2 or their mixed infection by PCR and sequencing. Quantitative SYBR Green real-time PCR detected comparatively lower viral DNA copy number in cutaneous warts (CWs). Cases of CWs and its causative agent as bovine papillomavirus (BPVs) are reported for the first time in yaks. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
IL-6 produced by macrophages infected with Mycobacterium species suppresses T cell responses.
The ability of Mycobacterium bovis Calmette-Guérin bacillus-infected bone marrow-derived macrophages to process and present exogenously added Ags to T cells and stimulate their growth and production of IL-2 was examined. The infected macrophages were inhibited in their ability to activate T cells, and this inhibition could be transferred to uninfected macrophages with filtered supernatants from mycobacteria-infected macrophages. The inhibition was not due to decreases in macrophage viability, Ag uptake, or cell surface expression of MHC class II or other accessory molecules necessary for Ag presentation. Other intracellular pathogens such as Listeria monocytogenes and Leishmania mexicana did not induce the soluble inhibitory factor, while Mycobacterium avium strain 101 did, suggesting the factor is specific to infection with mycobacteria. The inhibitory effect was reversed completely by preincubation with neutralizing Abs against IL-6, and rIL-6 partially restored the effect. Approximately 10,000-fold more IL-6 was produced by mycobacteria-infected macrophages compared with uninfected controls. Such sustained levels of IL-6 may account for the immune unresponsiveness apparent in both human and murine mycobacterial disease. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Further consideration of phenobarbital effects on cytochrome P-450 activity in the killifish, Fundulus heteroclitus.
1. Ethoxyresorufin O-deethylase (EROD) activity, aldrin epoxidase (AE) activity, cytochrome P-450 content, and levels of cytochrome P-450E (the major BNF-inducible P-450 form and primary EROD catalyst in scup) or its homologues were measured in hepatic microsomes isolated from Fundulus heteroclitus, scup (Stenotomus chrysops) and brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) treated with beta-naphthoflavone (BNF) or phenobarbital (PB). 2. In all three teleost species, BNF treatment caused expected increases in P-450 content, EROD activity and P-450E level; but either no change or a slight decrease in AE turnover rate (nmol/min/nmol P-450). 3. Polyclonal antibodies to P-450E did not inhibit AE activity in microsomes from BNF-treated scup, confirming that this major BNF-inducible P-450 form does not catalyze AE activity in fish. 4. In contrast, PB treatment did not affect hepatic AE activity, P-450 content or levels of "P-450E" in F. heteroclitus, but did variably affect EROD activity which was suppressed in one experiment and elevated in another. 5. The results indicate that (i) contrary to previous reports, neither PB nor MC-type inducers increase AE activity in F. heteroclitus, (ii) MC-type inducers do not affect AE activity in the other teleost species examined, and (iii) AE activity is not a reliable indicator of P-450 induction by environmental chemicals. 6. We emphasize the need to establish the mechanism of PB action, and the nature of any fish P-450 forms analogous to PB-inducible forms in mammals in order to conclusively evaluate PB-responses in fish. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Designing salvage antiretroviral regimens. Some basic guidelines and use of resistance testing.
Treatment of HIV infection is rapidly changing from a hit-or-miss hodgepodge of unknowns, in which nearly anything beneficial was acceptable, to a true science based on reproducible principles. With this growth in complexity, HIV therapy has become a valid field of medicine. The potency of available agents, their success in suppressing the destructive nature of HIV infection, and the increasingly rapid pace of technology development in this area require that HIV-seropositive patients be treated by physicians specializing in the field. The growing but finite number of antiretroviral therapeutic agents demands that a thoughtful, strategic, long-term approach be formulated. The evolving science of antiretroviral resistance testing offers great promise for better shaping this approach, which is still less than straightforward. Potential interactions, some good and some bad, between mutations within HIV genes will profoundly affect therapy and are still to be defined. Declaring that a regimen has failed and choosing a new one to replace it is a complex task, particularly when all the factors involved are considered (e.g., rising viral load, declining CD4 count, patient adherence, patient preferences, drug interactions, adverse effects). Care of HIV-positive patients has always been an art, and now at last it is becoming a science. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Evaluation of two insulin assays in insulin resistance syndrome (syndrome X).
Recent data suggest that proinsulin is associated with cardiovascular risk factors in nondiabetic and diabetic subjects. Since most conventional insulin assays cross-react with proinsulin, it has been suggested that the associations of insulin concentrations with dyslipidemia and hypertension could actually reflect associations with proinsulin. We examined these associations by using both a conventional immunoreactive insulin assay and a specific Linco insulin assay that does not cross-react with proinsulin in 623 nondiabetic and in 180 non-insulin-dependent diabetic subjects who participated in the San Antonio Heart Study, a population-based study of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Both the immunoreactive insulin assay and the specific Linco insulin assay were equally correlated with cardiovascular risk factors in nondiabetic subjects. Insulin concentrations were moderately correlated with high triglyceride and low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels and were weakly correlated with increased blood pressure. In diabetic subjects there were only weak associations between insulin and cardiovascular risk factors using either assay. We conclude that the association of insulin concentrations with cardiovascular risk factors is not a function of using insulin assays that cross-react with proinsulin and that for epidemiological studies of cardiovascular risk factors, conventional immunoreactive insulin assays are as good as the newer specific insulin assays. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
[Occurrence of acanthocephalans in Perca fluviatilis L. from the Długa river (Mazowiecka Lowland, Poland)].
Material was collected from fish caught in the Długa river near Halinów (Mazowiecka Lowland). One hundred forty eight perches Perca fluviatilis L., 1875 were examined during the study period (January 2003-March 2004). Seventy one (47.97%) out of all caught fishes were infected with three species of the acanthocephalans: Acanthocephalus lucii (Müller, 1776), Acanthocephalus anguillae (Müller, 1780) and Metechinorhynchus salmonis Müller, 1780. Most fishes (40.54%) were infected by Acanthocephalus lucii, much less infection was noted with Acanthocephalus anguillae--4.73% and with Metechinorhynchus salmonis--3.38%. The highest prevalence and intensity of infection with the three species of acanthocephalans were recorded in spring and summer, the lowest--in autumn and winter. The collected data allowed to analyse the occurrence of acanthocephalans in particular parts of alimentary tract of fish. Two species: A. anguillae, M. salmonis were found only in the middle part of the intestine, while A. lucii were noted in each part of the alimentary tract. The highest number of individuals of A. lucii was noted in middle intestine, the lowest number was found in pyloric appendices and stomach. At the high intensity of infection the parasites were found in all parts of the alimentary tract, nevertheless with clear preference to the middle intestine. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
AP-1/c-Jun transcription factors: regulation and function in malignant melanoma.
Malignant melanoma is an aggressive form of skin cancer with an increasing incidence worldwide. One way to address the pathology of the disease is through molecular research. In addition to the analysis of melanoma-relevant signaling pathways, the investigation of important transcription factors is a fundamental objective. The AP-1 transcription factor family is known to play an important role in melanoma progression and development. The AP-1 family member c-Jun is highly expressed and active in melanoma cells, and the mechanisms and signaling pathways regulating c-Jun protein are diverse. In addition to the common regulation and activation of c-Jun by mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), there are several other signaling pathways and interactions leading to c-Jun protein expression and thus AP-1 activation. In malignant melanoma, and many other cancer types, c-Jun has mainly oncogenic functions; however, other AP-1 proteins also have anti-oncogenic roles. Interestingly, several studies have revealed that a strong AP-1 activity in melanoma mainly depends on c-Jun. Recently, it has also been shown that the c-Jun protein is regulated and activated by several other mechanisms, including miRNAs and the cytoskeleton. In summary, there are a variety of mechanisms underlying the induction of c-Jun protein expression and activity leading to tumor progression and development, and this diverse regulatory machinery is due to the heterogeneity of different tumor types, particularly in malignant melanoma. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Calcitonin gene-related peptide in morphologically well-defined type II neurons of the enteric nervous system in the porcine small intestine.
The morphological classification of the different neuronal cell types is generally accepted and expanded by us; nevertheless, immunohistochemically and electrophysiologically the existence of clear-cut categories of enteric neurons is frequently questioned. The immunohistochemical results demonstrated in this study, however, provide the first direct link between a morphological type of enteric neuron and an immunohistochemical staining for a distinct peptide. Evidence demonstrates that calcitonin gene-related peptide occurs in only one morphologically defined type of neuron, viz., in type II neurons, and can therefore be regarded as a 'marker peptide' for type II neurons. Hence, the present immunohistochemical findings illustrate the validity of the morphological classification of the enteric neurons. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
A multi-criterion approach for prioritizing areas in urban ecosystems for active restoration following invasive plant control.
Resources for biodiversity conservation and invasive plant management are limited, and restoring invaded vegetation is labour-intensive and expensive. Managers must prioritize their actions to achieve their goals efficiently and effectively. They must distinguish between areas that require only the removal of invasive alien plants ("passive restoration") from those that require additional restoration measures ("active restoration"). This study used a multi-criterion approach (Analytical Hierarchical Process) to develop a framework for identifying areas that require active restoration, and then to prioritize these areas for active restoration. The South African city of Cape Town is used as a test case to illustrate the utility of the framework. Framework criteria selected in determining the need for active restoration included: dominant alien species invading the area, density of invasion, duration of invasion, indigenous vegetation cover, adjacent land use, level of disturbance, size of the area, aspect, soil texture, soil depth and erodibility, slope and vegetation type. In deciding which areas to prioritize for active restoration, factors such as vegetation conservation status, selection in a regional conservation plan and connectivity function were assessed. Importance in ecosystem functioning (by providing a diversity of habitats and soil conservation) and the delivery of ecosystem service benefits were also considered. The resulting framework provides an objective tool for prioritizing sites for active restoration. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Non-adiabatic ab initio molecular dynamics of supersonic beam epitaxy of silicon carbide at room temperature.
In this work, we investigate the processes leading to the room-temperature growth of silicon carbide thin films by supersonic molecular beam epitaxy technique. We present experimental data showing that the collision of fullerene on a silicon surface induces strong chemical-physical perturbations and, for sufficient velocity, disruption of molecular bonds, and cage breaking with formation of nanostructures with different stoichiometric character. We show that in these out-of-equilibrium conditions, it is necessary to go beyond the standard implementations of density functional theory, as ab initio methods based on the Born-Oppenheimer approximation fail to capture the excited-state dynamics. In particular, we analyse the Si-C(60) collision within the non-adiabatic nuclear dynamics framework, where stochastic hops occur between adiabatic surfaces calculated with time-dependent density functional theory. This theoretical description of the C(60) impact on the Si surface is in good agreement with our experimental findings. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Capturing Social Health Data in Electronic Systems: A Systematic Review.
This systematic review explored the current state of social determinants of health data in electronic systems in the literature, specifically (1) how the data are currently collected, captured, and coded; (2) the modes employed to capture these data; and (3) the electronic systems used to acquire data. This assessment serves as a precursor to an actual survey of healthcare organizations, which will be a national-level effort for evaluating a real-time collection of social health data. By evaluating published information on electronic social determinants of health, we get baseline evidence on the state of these data in the literature as used by nurses, physicians, administrators, researchers, and educators. Two reviewers systematically evaluated articles on social determinants of health and electronic systems. Five data elements were abstracted and analyzed, including the type of social determinants of health data, data capture method, data structure, data standard, and source of data. Forty-two articles were included in the final review. The most common social health data domains were neighborhood and community compositional characteristics. Social health data were rarely found in electronic health records. When these data were captured, they were often manually captured in a structured format. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Seasonal nutrient dynamics in white pine and white spruce in response to environmental manipulation.
Seasonal retranslocation in white pine (Pinus strobus L.) and white spruce (Picea glauca (Moench) Voss) was examined in response to silvicultural treatments (scarification, annual fertilization application, and annual control of competing vegetation with herbicide) that changed both environmental conditions and the growth rate of the trees. Four years after plantation establishment and initial treatment, nutrient accumulation in current-year needles of white pine and retranslocation from 1-year-old needles were increased following the vegetation control treatment, which increased resource availability (nutrients, water and light) and, hence, growth rate. Nutrient accumulation also increased in current-year white spruce needles following the same treatment, whereas retranslocation decreased in 1-year-old white spruce needles. Correlations of retranslocation (N, P and K) with growth rate (shoot biomass increment) showed a strong positive relationship for white pine and a negative relationship for white spruce. Retranslocation of K was correlated with foliar and soil K concentrations; the availability of this nutrient was also significantly reduced by vegetation control. A general theory for the control of nutrient retranslocation in conifers, which is not based exclusively on either sink strength or soil nutrient availability, is proposed. We conclude that retranslocation response is species specific and related to the potential phenotypic growth response to changing environmental conditions and to short-term imbalance in the supply versus the demand for nutrients. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Socs3 deficiency in the brain elevates leptin sensitivity and confers resistance to diet-induced obesity.
Leptin is an adipocyte-derived hormone that plays a key role in energy homeostasis, yet resistance to leptin is a feature of most cases of obesity in humans and rodents. In vitro analysis suggested that the suppressor of cytokine signaling-3 (Socs3) is a negative-feedback regulator of leptin signaling involved in leptin resistance. To determine the functional significance of Socs3 in vivo, we generated neural cell-specific SOCS3 conditional knockout mice using the Cre-loxP system. Compared to their wild-type littermates, Socs3-deficient mice showed enhanced leptin-induced hypothalamic Stat3 tyrosine phosphorylation as well as pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) induction, and this resulted in a greater body weight loss and suppression of food intake. Moreover, the Socs3-deficient mice were resistant to high fat diet-induced weight gain and hyperleptinemia, and insulin-sensitivity was retained. These data indicate that Socs3 is a key regulator of diet-induced leptin as well as insulin resistance. Our study demonstrates the negative regulatory role of Socs3 in leptin signaling in vivo, and thus suppression of Socs3 in the brain is a potential therapy for leptin-resistance in obesity. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Histamine releasing peptide (HRP) has proinflammatory effects and is present at sites of inflammation.
Albumin, the most abundant plasma protein, readily enters sites of inflammation during the period of increased vascular permeability. There it encounters proteases released from mast cells and invading leukocytes which earlier work has shown can act on albumin to liberate the peptide, histamine releasing peptide (HRP), first identified and named by its ability to stimulate histamine release from isolated mast cells. In this report we show that HRP releases histamine from cutaneous mast cells in vivo resulting in increased vascular permeability and persistent edema while in vitro, HRP promotes chemotaxis of leukocytes and enhances macrophage phagocytosis. Moreover, we show that the level of HRP is increased with the induction of an acute cutaneous inflammatory response in rats, that HRP is present at sites of acute and chronic inflammation in humans and that HRP is rapidly degraded by proteases thereby limiting its action to the area of its generation. We suggest that HRP is a pro-inflammatory peptide that helps amplify and perpetuate the inflammatory response. Inhibitors of inflammatory proteases or antagonists that block the action of peptides like HRP may, therefore, be useful in breaking the cycle of inflammation. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Pharmacokinetic interaction study of ticagrelor and cyclosporine in healthy volunteers.
Patients with acute coronary syndrome and certain co-morbidities may receive ticagrelor, a reversibly binding P2Y(12) receptor antagonist, and cyclosporine, a commonly used immunosuppressant drug. This study assessed the potential pharmacokinetic drug-drug interaction between ticagrelor and cyclosporine. In this single-centre, open-label, three-treatment, three-period crossover study (NCT01504906), healthy volunteers (n = 26) randomly received each of three treatments: cyclosporine (600 mg single oral dose) plus ticagrelor (180 mg single oral dose); cyclosporine alone; ticagrelor alone. Treatments were separated by a washout period of ≥14 days. Plasma concentrations of ticagrelor and its active metabolite (AR-C124910XX) and blood concentrations of cyclosporine were analyzed, and pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated. Safety and tolerability were assessed. Compared with ticagrelor alone, the geometric least squares mean (LSM) ratio (90 % confidence interval [CI]) for the ticagrelor area under the plasma concentration-time curve from time zero to infinity (AUC(∞)) was 2.83 (2.63-3.06), and the maximum plasma concentration (C(max)) was 2.30 (2.06-2.58), in the presence of cyclosporine. Co-administration of cyclosporine with ticagrelor significantly increased AR-C124910XX AUC(∞) (1.33 [1.23-1.42]) and decreased C(max) (0.85 [0.76-0.94]). Ticagrelor had no effect on cyclosporine pharmacokinetic parameters, as the 90 % CIs of the LSM ratios were all within the 0.80-1.25 no-effect range. Co-administration of ticagrelor and cyclosporine was generally well tolerated. Co-administration of cyclosporine with ticagrelor increased exposure to ticagrelor and its active metabolite and had no effect on cyclosporine pharmacokinetic parameters. The magnitude of cyclosporine's effect on ticagrelor pharmacokinetics does not warrant dose adjustment of ticagrelor. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Poor retention in care one-year after viral suppression: a significant predictor of viral rebound.
Optimal retention in care should be continuously monitored even after suppression to prevent the risk of viral rebound. The purpose of this study is to assess the association between retention in care and viral rebound 12 months after viral suppression. A retrospective medical chart review study was conducted at an academic clinic in Lexington, KY, to determine an association between retention in care and viral rebound. A total of 658 patients, who were virally suppressed at any time between 2003 and 2009, were followed for 12 months after viral suppression. Retention in care was defined as having at least one clinic visit every three months (visit constancy) and viral rebound was defined as a viral load >400 copies/ml. Of the 658 patients included in the study, 43% were less than optimally retained in care and 26% had a viral rebound 12 months after suppression. In the multivariable logistic regression model, the odds of a viral rebound were much greater for suboptimal (odds ratio [OR]: 2.28; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.44-3.63) and poor (OR: 15.1; 95% CI: 6.82-33.41) retainers compared to optimal retainers. The results of the study suggest that retention in HIV care plays a central role in maintaining optimal outcomes such as viral suppression. Interventions that target improvement in retention in care among those who are poorly retained must be set in place in order to reduce the risk of a viral rebound. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
A UK Perspective.
Making decisions on lipid-lowering treatment varies across Europe. Legislation differs from country to country, so it is difficult to generalize about European policy. From the perspective of the United Kingdom, this paper addresses the impact of rationing, cost containment, information feedback, fund-holding and drug expenses. Primary versus secondary prevention for cardiovascular disease is also discussed, including current recommendations for prescribing statins and other interventions. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
The management of malignant pleural mesothelioma; single centre experience in 10 years.
Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is an asbestos-related disease of the pleura with a survival time without treatment ranging from 4 to 12 months. The objective of this study is to review our experience in selection of MPM patients for various modalities of treatment. Between 1989 and 1998, 302 patients with MPM have been referred to our Centre for assessment. Majority (191 patients, 61%) of them received no specific treatment. Forty-seven patients were treated by decortication/pleurectomy and 64 had a radical extra-pleural pneumonectomy (EPP). Intrapleural chemotherapy and systemic post-operative chemotherapy was employed only in the last 51 patients following radical surgery. The average survival was 8.9 months for those treated by palliative care only. The average survival was 13 and 14 months for patients treated by radical surgery only or by decortication/pleurectomy, respectively. However, survival has improved to a mean of 35 months for patients treated by radical surgery followed by systemic post-operative chemotherapy. In this group, the survival prevalence was 90 and 70% for T1 patients and 85 and 36% for T2 patients at 1 and 3 years, respectively (P=0.002). Survival was surprisingly, not affected by lymph node involvement (P=0.08) or pathological type of MPM (P=0.07). The operative mortality was 9% for EPP and 0% for decortication/pleurectomy. In selected patients with MPM, complete surgical resection by EPP represents an important initial step in their management. Systemic chemotherapy improves survival in surgically treated patients. Further trials are needed to improve on the adjuvant treatment regimes. | {
"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"
} |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.