23 research outputs found
PCR clonality detection in Hodgkin lymphoma
B-cell clonality detection in whole tissue is considered indicative of B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). We tested frozen tissue of 24 classical Hodgkin lymphomas (cHL) with a varying tumor cell load with the multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primer sets for IGH and IGK gene rearrangement (BIOMED-2). A clonal population was found in 13 cases with the IGH FR1 and/or FR2/FR3 PCRs. Using the IGK-VJ and IGK-DE PCRs, an additional six cases had a dominant clonal cell population, resulting in a detection rate of 79% in frozen tissue. Of 12 cases, also the formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue was tested. Surprisingly, in eight of the 12 FFPE cases with acceptable DNA quality (allowing PCR amplification of >200 nt fragments), the IGK multiplex PCRs performed better in detecting clonality (six out of eight clonal IGK rearrangements) than the IGH PCRs (four out of nine clonal rearrangements), despite a rather large amplicon size. There was no evidence of B-cell lymphoma during follow-up of 1 to 6 years and no correlation was found between the presence of a clonal result and Epstein–Barr virus in the tumor cells. Our results indicate that the present routine PCR methods are sensitive enough to detect small numbers of malignant cells in cHL. Therefore, the presence of a clonal B-cell population does not differentiate between cHL and NHL
Use of interrupter technique in assessment of bronchial responsiveness in normal subjects
BACKGROUND: A number of subjects, especially the very young and the elderly, are unable to cooperate and to perform forced expiratory manoeuvres in the evaluation of bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR). The objective of our study was to investigate the use of the interrupter technique as a method to measure the response to provocation and to compare it with the conventional PD(20 )FEV(1). METHODS: We studied 170 normal subjects, 100 male and 70 female (mean ± SD age, 38 ± 8.5 and 35 ± 7.5 years, respectively), non-smoking from healthy families. These subjects had no respiratory symptoms, rhinitis or atopic history. A dosimetric cumulative inhalation of methacholine was used and the response was measured by the dose which increases baseline end interruption resistance by 100% (PD(100)Rint, EI) as well as by percent dose response ratio (DRR). RESULTS: BHR at a cut-off level of 0.8 mg methacholine exhibited 31 (18%) of the subjects (specificity 81.2%), 21 male and 10 female, while 3% showed a response in the asthmatic range. The method was reproducible and showed good correlation with PD(20)FEV(1 )(r = 0.76, p < 0.005), with relatively narrow limits of agreement at -1.39 μmol and 1.27 μmol methacholine, respectively, but the interrupter methodology proved more sensitive than FEV(1 )in terms of reactivity (DRR). CONCLUSIONS: Interrupter methodology is clinically useful and may be used to evaluate bronchial responsiveness in normal subjects and in situations when forced expirations cannot be performed
LACK OF SPATIAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES TO IMMUNOCONTRACEPTION APPLICATION IN AFRICAN ELEPHANTS ( LOXODONTA AFRICANA
Opinions are divided as to whether human intervention to control elephant (Loxodonta africana)
population growth is desirable, partly because of elephant welfare concerns. Female contraception through
immunization with porcine zona pellucida (PZP) proteins is viable. The effects of sustained use and
application of the PZP vaccine on elephant behavioral and spatial responses were examined by evaluating
herd ranging, fission–fusion dynamics, association patterns, and reproductive and sexual behaviors. Minimal
change was anticipated as a result of long calf dependence on and association with cows, a reduced but not
indefinite 0% growth rate and the known mechanism of action of PZP vaccines, and minimal expected change
in resource requirements necessitating behavioral or spatial use adaptations. Although behavioral effects
identified in previous hormonal contraceptive trials were evident, it was demonstrated that immunocontraception
caused no prolonged behavioral, social, or spatial changes over the 11-yr study period. Individually
identified elephants were monitored from 1999 to 2011. Minimal, short-term social disruption, with
temporary changes to the herds’ core ranges, was observed during the annual treatment events, particularly
in the first three treatment years, when vaccinations were conducted exclusively from the ground. Thereafter,
when vaccinations were conducted aerially, minor disruptions were confined to the morning of administration
only. Despite sustained treatments resulting in demographic changes of fewer calves being born, treatments
did not alter spatial range use, and no adverse interherd–intraherd relations were observed. Similarly, resource
requirements did not change as calving still occurred, although in fewer numbers. It was concluded that PZP
immunocontraception has no detectable behavioral or social consequences in elephants over the course of 11
yr, providing a convincing argument for the use of sustained immunocontraception in the medium to long
term as an important tool for elephant management. Behavioral consequences of alternative management
approaches should all receive similar scrutiny to enable managers to make informed decisions when weighing
management interventions.The Humane
Society International. Ms. Delsink received a National
Research Foundation Bursary through National
Research Foundation Grants (reference numbers:
205623 and FA2006032300024) to Robert Slotow.http://zoowildlifejournal.com/am201
Middle-Holocene alluvial forests and associated fluvial environments: a multi-proxy reconstruction from the lower Scheldt, N Belgium
Analyses of pollen, plant macrofossils (seeds, fruits, wood and mosses), molluscs, diatoms and vertebrate (mainly fish) remains allowed a detailed reconstruction of a middle-Holocene alluvial forest and its associated hydrological conditions. The use of multiple proxies resulted in a taxonomically more detailed and environmentally more comprehensive understanding of terrestrial as well as aquatic habitats. The results demonstrate possible biases in palaeoecological reconstructions of alluvial and estuarine environments drawn from single proxies. Many locally occurring woody taxa were underrepresented or remained undetected by pollen analyses. Seeds and fruits also proved to be inadequate to detect several locally important taxa, such as Ulmus and Hedera helix. Apparently brackish conditions inferred from diatoms, pollen and other microfossils conflicted strikingly with the evidence from molluscs, fish bones and botanical macroremains which suggest a freshwater environment. Brackish sediment (and the microfossil indicators) is likely to have been deposited during spring tides or storm surges, when estuarine waters penetrated more inland than usual. Despite the reworking and deposition of estuarine and saltmarsh sediment well above the tidal node at such events, local salinity levels largely remained unaffected
A practical approach to diagnostic Ig/TCR clonality evaluation in clinical pathology
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