78 research outputs found

    <i>Inocybe aeruginascens</i> Babos dans les dunes entre Dunkerque et Nieuwpoort

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    From 1979 onwards, Inocybe aeruginascens Babos was observed in the coastal sand dunes of Belgium and adjacent France. The occurrence of the species seems to be related to a subtile and unstable balance between several contrasting ecological parameters

    Flora en vegetatie van het Zwinbosjescomplex

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    Sur les pelouses à Thérophytes des dunes de la côte ouest de la Belgique, en particulier le <i>Tortulo-Phleetum arenarii</i>

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    The study deals with the dry grassland plant communities of the sanddunes of the western Belgian coast, in particular the Tortulo-Phleetum arenari . A description of the structure of vegetation correlated with synecology and syndynamics is given, using the Braun-Blanquet approach. The synsystematic position of the recognized entities in discussed

    Ebv-driven lymphoproliferative disorders and lymphomas of the gastrointestinal tract: A spectrum of entities with a common denominator (part 3)

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    EBV is the first known oncogenic virus involved in the development of several tumors. The majority of the global population are infected with the virus early in life and the virus persists throughout life, in a latent stage, and usually within B lymphocytes. Despite the worldwide diffusion of EBV infection, EBV-associated diseases develop in only in a small subset of individuals often when conditions of immunosuppression disrupt the balance between the infection and host immune system. EBV-driven lymphoid proliferations are either of B-cell or T/NK-cell origin, and range from disorders with an indolent behavior to aggressive lymphomas. In this review, which is divided in three parts, we provide an update of EBV-associated lymphoid disorders developing in the gastrointestinal tract, often representing a challenging diagnostic and therapeutic issue. Our aim is to provide a practical diagnostic approach to clinicians and pathologists who face this complex spectrum of disorders in their daily practice. In this part of the review, the chronic active EBV infection of T-cell and NK-cell type, its systemic form; extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma, nasal type and post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders are discussed

    Marrow angiogenesis-associated factors as prognostic biomarkers in patients with acute myelogenous leukaemia

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    Bone marrow (BM) neoangiogenesis plays an important role in acute myelogenous leukaemia (AML), and depends on the interplay of members of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and angiopoietin (Ang) families. We determined the marrow levels of seven molecules associated with angiogenesis in 52 AML patients before chemotherapy and 20 healthy controls: VEGF-A, VEGF/PlGF, VEGF-C, VEGF-D, Ang-1, Ang-2, and Tie-2. All the molecules were quantified using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Comparing to normal controls, the marrow levels of VEGF/PlGF, Ang-2, and Tie-2 were significantly higher, and those of VEGF-C and Ang-1 were significantly lower in the AML patients (P<0.001). A total of 31 patients were further subjected to survival analysis. Patients with lower Tie-2 (<26 ng ml−1) and Ang-2 levels (<4500 pg ml−1) displayed a survival advantage (P=0.037 and 0.042, respectively), same as patients with higher VEGF/PlGF (⩾1 pg ml−1) and VEGF-D levels (⩾350 pg ml−1) (P=0.020 and 0.016, respectively). An angio-index ((Ang-2 × Tie-2)/(VEGF/PlGF × VEGF-D)) was established and multivariate Cox regression analysis revealed that patients with higher angio-index values (⩾50) displayed poor prognosis (hazard ratio 5.91, 95% confidence interval 1.99–17.56; P=0.001). The angio-index is closely associated with the clinical outcome of AML patients and may be valuable in disease prognosis

    Functional Interactions between KCNE1 C-Terminus and the KCNQ1 Channel

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    The KCNE1 gene product (minK protein) associates with the cardiac KvLQT1 potassium channel (encoded by KCNQ1) to create the cardiac slowly activating delayed rectifier, IKs. Mutations throughout both genes are linked to the hereditary cardiac arrhythmias in the Long QT Syndrome (LQTS). KCNE1 exerts its specific regulation of KCNQ1 activation via interactions between membrane-spanning segments of the two proteins. Less detailed attention has been focused on the role of the KCNE1 C-terminus in regulating channel behavior. We analyzed the effects of an LQT5 point mutation (D76N) and the truncation of the entire C-terminus (Δ70) on channel regulation, assembly and interaction. Both mutations significantly shifted voltage dependence of activation in the depolarizing direction and decreased IKs current density. They also accelerated rates of channel deactivation but notably, did not affect activation kinetics. Truncation of the C-terminus reduced the apparent affinity of KCNE1 for KCNQ1, resulting in impaired channel formation and presentation of KCNQ1/KCNE1 complexes to the surface. Complete saturation of KCNQ1 channels with KCNE1-Δ70 could be achieved by relative over-expression of the KCNE subunit. Rate-dependent facilitation of K+ conductance, a key property of IKs that enables action potential shortening at higher heart rates, was defective for both KCNE1 C-terminal mutations, and may contribute to the clinical phenotype of arrhythmias triggered by heart rate elevations during exercise in LQTS mutations. These results support several roles for KCNE1 C-terminus interaction with KCNQ1: regulation of channel assembly, open-state destabilization, and kinetics of channel deactivation

    The SMILE study: a study of medical information and lifestyles in Eindhoven, the rationale and contents of a large prospective dynamic cohort study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Health problems, health behavior, and the consequences of bad health are often intertwined. There is a growing need among physicians, researchers and policy makers to obtain a comprehensive insight into the mutual influences of different health related, institutional and environmental concepts and their collective developmental processes over time.</p> <p>Methods/Design</p> <p>SMILE is a large prospective cohort study, focusing on a broad range of aspects of disease, health and lifestyles of people living in Eindhoven, the Netherlands. This study is unique in its kind, because two data collection strategies are combined: first data on morbidity, mortality, medication prescriptions, and use of care facilities are continuously registered using electronic medical records in nine primary health care centers. Data are extracted regularly on an anonymous basis. Secondly, information about lifestyles and the determinants of (ill) health, sociodemographic, psychological and sociological characteristics and consequences of chronic disease are gathered on a regular basis by means of extensive patient questionnaires. The target population consisted of over 30,000 patients aged 12 years and older enrolled in the participating primary health care centers.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>Despite our relatively low response rates, we trust that, because of the longitudinal character of the study and the high absolute number of participants, our database contains a valuable set of information.</p> <p>SMILE is a longitudinal cohort with a long follow-up period (15 years). The long follow-up and the unique combination of the two data collection strategies will enable us to disentangle causal relationships. Furthermore, patient-reported characteristics can be related to self-reported health, as well as to more validated physician registered morbidity. Finally, this population can be used as a sampling frame for intervention studies. Sampling can either be based on the presence of certain diseases, or on specific lifestyles or other patient characteristics.</p
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