14 research outputs found
Hereditary tyrosinaemia. Clinical, enzymatic, and pathological study of an infant with the acute form of the disease.
A clinical, enzymatic, and pathological study of an infant with the acute form of hereditary tyrosinaemia is presented. Treatment with a diet low in methionine, tyrosine, and phenylalanine was unsuccessful. A selection of specific and nonspecific hepatic enzymes, obtained at necropsy within one hour of the infant's death at 9 1/2 weeks, were studied to try to throw light on the basic defect. The major pathological findings were those of a peculiar hepatic fibrosis associated with bile retention and an abnormal grouping of hepatocytes, islet-cell hyperplasia of the pancreas, and dilatation of the proximal renal tubules. Death was precipitated by bronchopneumonia and liver failure. The difficulty in diagnosing the acute form of tyrosinaemia is pointed out, especially in differentiating it from hereditary galactosaemia (transferase deficiency) and hereditary fructosaemia. All three may present with the same clinical symptoms and liver lesions, and the distinction must be made by enzyme studies and by therapeutic trial
Additional file 2 of Total serum N-glycans associate with response to immune checkpoint inhibition therapy and survival in patients with advanced melanoma
Additional file 2: Table 1. Description of total serum N-glycan UHPLC measured peaks. Table 2. Description of total serum derived traits. Table 3. Summary statistics for the associations between N-glycan traits and response to ICI treatment. Table 4. Summary statistics for the associations between N-glycan traits and progression-free survival. Table 5. Summary statistics for the associations between N-glycan traits and overall survival. Table 6. Summary statistics for the N-glycans shift at follow up with respect to the pre-treatment relative abundances
Predicting police behavior: Ecology, class, and autonomy
Social ecological theories of crime have recently been extended to explain spatial variation in police behavior. Although these theories successfully identify community characteristics affecting local policing, they fail to acknowledge the class-based origins of formal social control and the relative autonomy of the police. This paper addresses the neglected class issue by integrating social ecological and critical theories in a model of police behavior. Cross-sectional data was obtained from twenty-five police agencies\u27 vice divisions and their corresponding jurisdictions to test the integrated hypothesis. Four social ecological variables and a fiscal measure of relative autonomy are examined as police behavior predictors. Findings reveal that both the autonomy measure and three of the social ecological variables explain significant variance in police behavior, thus supporting the inclusion of structural Marxism in a general theory of police behavior