622 research outputs found

    Editorial: Comparative biology of red blood cells

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    Editorial: Insights in red blood cell physiology: 2021

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    <Original Article>The Effects of Heritage Protection Policies on Living Vernacular Heritage: The Case of Ukrainian Wooden Churches

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    Experimental Learning of Foreign Language with the Socio-cultural Skills Development Method by Means of Modern Internet Technologies

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    This paper considers the effectiveness of a methodological system, designed in experimental teaching, of developing the socio-cultural skills of students studying German by means of modern Internet technologies. The authors explore the problem of experimental learning, describe the participants and the stages of experimental learning, and conduct a statistical analysis of the data of the experimental learning of the control and experimental groups

    Hydrogeological condition patterns of Kuznetsk Basin coalbed methane fields for estimating hydrodynamic calculations

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    The paper describes the natural regional conditions and key formation factors of groundwater dynamics. Characteristic hydrogeological structure elements for Kuznetsk Basin coal were identified providing parameter-oriented hydrodynamic calculations and hydrogeological models in predicting coalbed methane mining impact on the regional groundwater

    Editorial: Images from red cell

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    "Oxygen sensing" by Na,K-ATPase: These miraculous thiols

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    Control over the Na,K-ATPase function plays a central role in adaptation of the organisms to hypoxic and anoxic conditions. As the enzyme itself does not possess O2 binding sites its "oxygen-sensitivity" is mediated by a variety of redox-sensitive modifications including S-glutathionylation, S-nitrosylation, and redox-sensitive phosphorylation. This is an overview of the current knowledge on the plethora of molecular mechanisms tuning the activity of the ATP-consuming Na,K-ATPase to the cellular metabolic activity. Recent findings suggest that oxygen-derived free radicals and H2O2, NO, and oxidized glutathione are the signaling messengers that make the Na,K-ATPase "oxygen-sensitive." This very ancient signaling pathway targeting thiols of all three subunits of the Na,K-ATPase as well as redox-sensitive kinases sustains the enzyme activity at the "optimal" level avoiding terminal ATP depletion and maintaining the transmembrane ion gradients in cells of anoxia-tolerant species. We acknowledge the complexity of the underlying processes as we characterize the sources of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species production in hypoxic cells, and identify their targets, the reactive thiol groups which, upon modification, impact the enzyme activity. Structured accordingly, this review presents a summary on (i) the sources of free radical production in hypoxic cells, (ii) localization of regulatory thiols within the Na,K-ATPase and the role reversible thiol modifications play in responses of the enzyme to a variety of stimuli (hypoxia, receptors' activation) (iii) redox-sensitive regulatory phosphorylation, and (iv) the role of fine modulation of the Na,K-ATPase function in survival success under hypoxic conditions. The co-authors attempted to cover all the contradictions and standing hypotheses in the field and propose the possible future developments in this dynamic area of research, the importance of which is hard to overestimate. Better understanding of the processes underlying successful adaptation strategies will make it possible to harness them and use for treatment of patients with stroke and myocardial infarction, sleep apnoea and high altitude pulmonary oedema, and those undergoing surgical interventions associated with the interruption of blood perfusion.The review was funded by the grants of Swiss Nationa lScience Foundation IZK0Z3_157269/1 and 310030_124970/1 to AB and Russian Science Foundation (Grant#14-14-01152) to IP Spanish Government grants (partially funded by the European Union FEDER/EDRF) PI12/00875 and PI15/00107 and a grant from the Fundación Domingo Martínez are supporting AM, PH received a travel grant from the Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria Princesa (to PH),and by COST actions TD0901 (HypoxiaNet) and CM1001. PH is recipient of a pre-doctoral FPU fellowship from the Spanish Government and AM is supported by the I3SNS programme (ISCIII, Spanish Government, partially funded by FEDER/ERDF

    Editorial: Images from red cells, Volume II

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    Corticosteroids in patients with vestibular neuritis: An updated meta‐analysis

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    Vestibular neuritis is a common neuro-otological entity. Therapeutically, corticosteroids are advised, although the evidence is limited. The objective of this review is to update meta-analyses of clinical trials that address the question of whether patients with vestibular neuritis treated with corticosteroids show better recovery than control patients. The electronic databases Medline, Scopus and Cochrane were searched for clinical trials for the years 1970-2020 without language restriction. Data were extracted, and outcome parameters were subjected to conventional and cumulative meta-analysis using a commercially available software program (www.meta-analysis.com). Finally, 15 trials with 363 participants in the treatment and 489 in the control groups were identified and could be included. Eight studies were judged to be at high risk of bias. The odds ratio (OR) for good outcome in the acute phase was 3.1 (95% CI 1.2-7.8; p = .015) in favour of steroid treatment leading to the number needed to treat (NNT) = 6 (95% CI 4-23). The odds ratio (OR) for restoration of vestibular function in the follow-up was 2.4 (95% CI 1.3-4.4; p = .004) for the benefit of steroid treatment resulting in a NNT = 7 (95% CI 5-18). The results of the cumulative statistics did not differ. The risk of adverse effects was higher in patients treated with steroids with an OR of 10.9 (95% CI 1.3-93.8; p = .015) and an estimated number needed to harm (NNH) = 4 (95% CI 3-19). The advantage for corticosteroids remained when differentiating between patients who participated in randomized or non-randomized clinical trials. Steroid treatment in vestibular neuritis resulted in a statistically significant benefit compared to control therapies. However, broad heterogeneity of the studies, mostly low-grade quality of studies, high risk of bias and broad confidence intervals put the findings into perspective allowing only a careful judgement of some benefit of corticosteroids. The findings, however, support the call for an adequately powered and well-designed randomized controlled trial to re-evaluate the effectiveness of corticosteroids
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