605 research outputs found

    A Very Bad Day

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    Treatment with an anti-CD11d integrin antibody reduces neuroinflammation and improves outcome in a rat model of repeated concussion

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    Background: Concussions account for the majority of traumatic brain injuries (TBI) and can result in cumulative damage, neurodegeneration, and chronic neurological abnormalities. The underlying mechanisms of these detrimental effects remain poorly understood and there are presently no specific treatments for concussions. Neuroinflammation is a major contributor to secondary damage following more severe TBI, and recent findings from our laboratory suggest it may be involved in the cumulative properties of repeated concussion. We previously found that an anti-CD11d monoclonal antibody that blocks the CD11d/CD18 integrin and adhesion molecule interaction following severe experimental TBI reduces neuroinflammation, oxidative activity, and tissue damage, and improves functional recovery. As similar processes may be involved in repeated concussion, here we studied the effects of the anti-CD11d treatment in a rat model of repeated concussion.Methods: Rats were treated 2 h and 24 h after each of three repeated mild lateral fluid percussion injuries with either the CD11d antibody or an isotype-matched control antibody, 1B7. Injuries were separated by a five-day inter-injury interval. After the final treatment and either an acute (24 to 72 h post-injury) or chronic (8 weeks post-injury) recovery period had elapsed, behavioral and pathological outcomes were examined.Results: The anti-CD11d treatment reduced neutrophil and macrophage levels in the injured brain with concomitant reductions in lipid peroxidation, astrocyte activation, amyloid precursor protein accumulation, and neuronal loss. The anti-CD11d treatment also improved outcome on tasks of cognition, sensorimotor ability, and anxiety.Conclusions: These findings demonstrate that reducing inflammation after repeated mild brain injury in rats leads to improved behavioral outcomes and that the anti-CD11d treatment may be a viable therapy to improve post-concussion outcomes. © 2013 Shultz et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd

    Ursinus College Bulletin, Summer 1984

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    Business at Ursinus • California, here they come! • Ursinus who\u27s who of Olympic field hockey • Hopeful • Helpful • Marketing of Ursinus • What you can do to help • Commencement: Leaving the garden of Eden • Faculty: Of cowboys and cactuses • Upperclass confidence: It comes with age • Staying out of the kitchen: West Indies style • Like father, like son, for better profit • Sweet & Sour poems: The farm family; Safely home • Two professors retire • Social spring for five groups • Alumna leaves $370,000 • Parents\u27 Committee meets • Richter head of CICU • Press holds third contest • Penn program accepts student • Alumnus finds hope, survives in Beirut • Four named to positions on college staff • Meistersingers tour the east • Two elected to Board of Directors • Special games at Ursinus • Society taps thirteen from Ursinus • Cogger named • Parsons elected • Lacrosse team tops • Softball team wins • Basketball coach appointed • News notes • Marriages • Births • Deaths • The tree goes onhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/new_bulletin/1038/thumbnail.jp

    What Resilience (Strength) Means for Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Professionals and Practitioners: An Exploratory Study

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    This article explores the concept of resilience from the perspective of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health professionals and practitioners, with the aim of describing what it is and how it is practiced in the workplace. Interviews in the form of Yarns were conducted with ten Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health professionals in regional North Queensland. We found that for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health professionals and practitioners, resilience encompasses cultural identity and an ability to manage both Indigenous and western cultures and structures. Resilience, understood as ‘Strength’, draws on strong relationships to family and Country, often nurtured through strong women, who have overcome intergenerational trauma. For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health professionals and practitioners, resilience is practiced through challenging the existing structural barriers experienced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander clients who must deal with racism and a system not organised to meet their needs. Further research on the relationship between culture and resilience/strength is required

    Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS Observations of T Dwarfs: Brown Dwarf Multiplicity and New Probes of the L/T Transition

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    We present the results of a Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS imaging survey of 22 T-type field brown dwarfs. Five are resolved as binary systems with angular separations of 0"05-0"35, and companionship is established on the basis of component F110W-F170M colors (indicative of CH4 absorption) and low probabilities of background contamination. Prior ground-based observations show 2MASS 1553+1532AB to be a common proper motion binary. The properties of these systems - low multiplicity fraction (11[+7][-3]% resolved, as corrected for sample selection baises), close projected separations (a = 1.8-5.0 AU) and near-unity mass ratios - are consistent with previous results for field brown dwarf binaries. Three of the binaries have components that span the poorly-understood transition between L dwarfs and T dwarfs. Spectral decomposition analysis of one of these, SDSS 1021-0304AB, reveals a peculiar flux reversal between its components, as its T5 secondary is ~30% brighter at 1.05 and 1.27 micron than its T1 primary. This system, 2MASS 0518-2828AB and SDSS 1534+1615AB all demonstrate that the J-band brightening observed between late-type L to mid-type T dwarfs is an intrinsic feature of this spectral transition, albeit less pronounced than previously surmised. We also find that the resolved binary fraction of L7 to T3.5 dwarfs is twice that of other L and T dwarfs, an anomaly that can be explained by a relatively rapid evolution of brown dwarfs through the L/T transition, perhaps driven by dynamic (nonequilibrium) depletion of photospheric condensates.Comment: ~40 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication to ApJ. Note that emulateapj style file cuts off part of Table
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