1,817 research outputs found
The Lantern Vol. 2, No. 3, June 1934
• Looking Backward and Forward • Hahd on de Nerves • My Lavender Lady • The Perpetual Borrower • Into the Depths • The Best There Is • I Wonder • A Day Out of a German Boy\u27s Life • Book Review: Work of Art • Fear • Early Summer (A Sketch)https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1003/thumbnail.jp
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Performance of PCA3 and TMPRSS2:ERG urinary biomarkers in prediction of biopsy outcome in the Canary Prostate Active Surveillance Study (PASS).
BackgroundFor men on active surveillance for prostate cancer, biomarkers may improve prediction of reclassification to higher grade or volume cancer. This study examined the association of urinary PCA3 and TMPRSS2:ERG (T2:ERG) with biopsy-based reclassification.MethodsUrine was collected at baseline, 6, 12, and 24 months in the multi-institutional Canary Prostate Active Surveillance Study (PASS), and PCA3 and T2:ERG levels were quantitated. Reclassification was an increase in Gleason score or ratio of biopsy cores with cancer to ≥34%. The association of biomarker scores, adjusted for common clinical variables, with short- and long-term reclassification was evaluated. Discriminatory capacity of models with clinical variables alone or with biomarkers was assessed using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves and decision curve analysis (DCA).ResultsSeven hundred and eighty-two men contributed 2069 urine specimens. After adjusting for PSA, prostate size, and ratio of biopsy cores with cancer, PCA3 but not T2:ERG was associated with short-term reclassification at the first surveillance biopsy (OR = 1.3; 95% CI 1.0-1.7, p = 0.02). The addition of PCA3 to a model with clinical variables improved area under the curve from 0.743 to 0.753 and increased net benefit minimally. After adjusting for clinical variables, neither marker nor marker kinetics was associated with time to reclassification in subsequent biopsies.ConclusionsPCA3 but not T2:ERG was associated with cancer reclassification in the first surveillance biopsy but has negligible improvement over clinical variables alone in ROC or DCA analyses. Neither marker was associated with reclassification in subsequent biopsies
The Lantern Vol. 1, No. 1, May 1933
• Remember: Translation of Rappelle-toi by Alfred de Musset • Lighting the Lantern • Footfalls • To a Lovely Lady • The Sons of Martha • Strategy • Lumine Lunae • Poetry in Retrospect • Nirvana • A Domestic Episode • At Night • Haman and Hitler • This is What He Said • Bookocracy • Four Loves • Cities and Personalitieshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1000/thumbnail.jp
The Lantern Vol. 2, No. 2, March 1934
• Fulfillment Through Expression • Ole Man Ennis • Nos Illusions by Philippe Vallee • A Celtic May Day Festival • Dew Drops • Baker Street Fiction • March Winds • Winter Sunset • Book Review: No Second Spring • A Thought • The Cask of Amontillado • Illustrationhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1002/thumbnail.jp
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First direct observation of sea salt aerosol production from blowing snow above sea ice
Two consecutive cruises in the Weddell Sea, Antarctica, in winter 2013 provided the first direct observations of sea salt aerosol (SSA) production from blowing snow above sea ice, thereby validating a model hypothesis to account for winter time SSA maxima in the Antarctic. Blowing or drifting snow often leads to increases in SSA during and after storms. For the first time it is shown that snow on sea ice is depleted in sulfate relative to sodium with respect to seawater. Similar depletion in bulk aerosol sized ∼0.3–6 µm above sea ice provided the evidence that most sea salt originated from snow on sea ice and not the open ocean or leads, e.g. >90 % during the 8 June to 12 August 2013 period. A temporally very close association of snow and aerosol particle dynamics together with the long distance to the nearest open ocean further supports SSA originating from a local source. A mass budget estimate shows that snow on sea ice contains even at low salinity (<0.1 psu) more than enough sea salt to account for observed increases in atmospheric SSA during storms if released by sublimation. Furthermore, snow on sea ice and blowing snow showed no or small depletion of bromide relative to sodium with respect to seawater, whereas aerosol was enriched at 2 m and depleted at 29 m, suggesting that significant bromine loss takes place in the aerosol phase further aloft and that SSA from blowing snow is a source of atmospheric reactive bromine, an important ozone sink, even during winter darkness. The relative increase in aerosol concentrations with wind speed was much larger above sea ice than above the open ocean, highlighting the importance of a sea ice source in winter and early spring for the aerosol burden above sea ice. Comparison of absolute increases in aerosol concentrations during storms suggests that to a first order corresponding aerosol fluxes above sea ice can rival those above the open ocean depending on particle size. Evaluation of the current model for SSA production from blowing snow showed that the parameterizations used can generally be applied to snow on sea ice. Snow salinity, a sensitive model parameter, depends to a first order on snowpack depth and therefore was higher above first-year sea ice (FYI) than above multi-year sea ice (MYI). Shifts in the ratio of FYI and MYI over time are therefore expected to change the seasonal SSA source flux and contribute to the variability of SSA in ice cores, which represents both an opportunity and a challenge for the quantitative interpretation of sea salt in ice cores as a proxy for sea ice.
This research has been supported by the Natural
Environment Research Council (UK) through the BLOWSEA
project (grant nos. NE/J023051/1 and NE/J020303/1
Association between the c.*229C>T polymorphism of the topoisomerase IIb binding protein 1 (TopBP1) gene and breast cancer
Topoisomerase IIb binding protein 1 (TopBP1)
is involved in cell survival, DNA replication, DNA damage
repair and cell cycle checkpoint control. The biological
function of TopBP1 and its close relation with BRCA1
prompted us to investigate whether alterations in the
TopBP1 gene can influence the risk of breast cancer.
The aim of this study was to examine the association
between five polymorphisms (rs185903567, rs116645643,
rs115160714, rs116195487, and rs112843513) located in
the 30UTR region of the TopBP1 gene and breast cancer
risk as well as allele-specific gene expression. Five hundred
thirty-four breast cancer patients and 556 population controls
were genotyped for these SNPs. Allele-specific Top-
BP1 mRNA and protein expressions were determined by
using real time PCR and western blotting methods,
respectively. Only one SNP (rs115160714) showed an
association with breast cancer. Compared to homozygous
common allele carriers, heterozygous and homozygous for
the T variant had significantly increased risk of breast
cancer (adjusted odds ratio = 3.81, 95 % confidence
interval: 1.63–8.34, p = 0.001). Mean TopBP1 mRNA and
protein expression were higher in the individuals with the
CT or TT genotype. There was a significant association
between the rs115160714 and tumor grade and stage. Most
carriers of minor allele had a high grade (G3) tumors
classified as T2-T4N1M0. Our study raises a possibility
that a genetic variation of TopBP1 may be implicated in
the etiology of breast cancer
Case Report: Insulin hypersensitivity in youth with type 1 diabetes
OBJECTIVE: Immediate type I, type III, and delayed type IV hypersensitivity reactions to insulin are rare, but potentially serious complications of exogenous insulin administration required for the treatment of type 1 diabetes (T1D).
METHODS: We present four cases of insulin hypersensitivity reactions occurring in youth with T1D and a literature review of this topic.
RESULTS: Insulin hypersensitivity reactions included types I, III, and IV with presentations ranging from localized urticaria, erythematous nodules, and eczematous plaques to anaphylaxis with respiratory distress. Reactions occurred in youth with newly diagnosed T1D and in those with long-standing T1D who were using both injection and insulin pump therapy. Multidisciplinary care involving pediatric endocrinology and allergy/immunology utilizing trials of many adjunct therapies yielded minimal improvement. Despite the use of various treatments, including antihistamines, topical therapies, immunosuppressant medications, desensitization trials, and intravenous immune globulin, cutaneous reactions, elevated hemoglobin A1c levels, and negative effects on quality of life remain persistent challenges. One patient became one of the youngest pancreas transplant recipients in the world at age 12 years due to uncontrollable symptoms and intolerable adverse effects of attempted therapies.
CONCLUSION: Although rare, insulin hypersensitivity reactions negatively affect glycemic control and quality of life. These cases demonstrate the varying severity and presentation of insulin hypersensitivity reactions along with the limited success of various treatment approaches. Given the life-sustaining nature of insulin therapy, further studies are needed to better understand the underlying pathophysiology of insulin hypersensitivity and to develop targeted treatment approaches
RESEARCH Open Access
Herbal adaptogens combined with protein fractions from bovine colostrum and hen egg yolk reduce liver TNF-α expression and protein carbonylation in Western diet feeding in rat
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