39 research outputs found

    Clinical meaning of sarcopenia in patients undergoing endoscopic treatment

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    With increasing global life expectancy, the significance of geriatric assessment parameters has increased. Sarcopenia is a crucial assessment parameter and is defined as the age-related loss of muscle mass and strength. Sarcopenia is widely acknowledged as a risk factor for postoperative complications in diverse advanced malignancies and has a detrimental effect on the long-term prognosis. While most studies have primarily concentrated on the correlation between sarcopenia and advanced cancer, more recent investigations have focused on the relationship between sarcopenia and early-stage cancer. Endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD), which is less invasive than surgical intervention, is extensively employed in the management of early-stage cancer, although it is associated with complications such as bleeding and perforation. In recent years, several reports have revealed the adverse consequences of sarcopenia in patients with early-stage cancer undergoing ESD. This literature review briefly summarizes the recent studies on the association between sarcopenia and ESD

    Action of near UV and blue light on the photocontrol of phycobiliprotein formation; a complementary chromatic adaptation.

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    Action of near UV to blue light on photocontrol of phycoerythrin (PE) and phycocyanin (PC) formation was investigated with non-photobleached Tolypothrix tenuis and Fremyella diplosiphon; this study was done to evaluate the proposition of Haury and Bogorad [(1977) Plant Physiol., 60: 835] that near UV to blue light is as effective as green and red light for photocontrol of PE and PC formation in blue-green algae and that lack of the blue effect in previous experiments was due to destruction of blue-absorbing pigment(s) by the photobleaching treatment involved in the experimental method. In our present work, light effect was measured in heterotrophic cultures incubated in darkness following brief exposure to different wavelengths of light. Results indicated that (1) near UV to blue light was not effective for induction of PE formation either in T. tenuis or in F. diplosiphon, and (2) PC formation was induced by near UV light at 360 nm but not by blue light at 460 nm. These features are identical with those previously reported for photobleached cells but not with those reported by Haury and Bogorad for non-photobleached cells. We conclude that photobleaching treatment does not have any influence on the action of near UV to blue light. Action at 390 and 460 nm observed by Haury and Bogorad probably resulted from light effects other than photocontrol, e.g., the action of photosynthesis

    Diversity of phlorotannin profiles among sargassasacean species affecting variation and abundance of epiphytes

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    <p>In general, epiphytes have detrimental effects on the growth of their basiphytes due to competition for light and nutrients. Therefore, basiphyte species must expend energy suppressing epiphytes. Some studies suggest that phlorotannins, i.e. brown algal polyphenols, prevent colonization by epiphytes, whereas others question their allelopathic function because there is not necessarily a negative correlation between epiphyte abundance and the phlorotannin content of the basiphyte algae. Various phlorotannin components are found in brown algal species, thus we hypothesized that the antifouling activities of polyphenolic compounds may differ and that the analysis of phlorotannin profiles could be useful for estimating their ecological functions. We surveyed the epiphyte richness in the apical portions of 373 thalli from 15 sargassacean species, demonstrating that the variation and abundance of epiphyte species differed remarkably among the basiphyte species. However, there was a weak negative correlation between the density and total phlorotannin content of the basiphyte algae in only one of the 18 epiphyte species. The interspecific differences in the phlorotannin profile were characterized by quantitative <sup>1</sup>H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (qNMR), and four major groups were categorized based on cluster and principal component analyses of polyphenolic signals in the qNMR spectra. The epiphyte <i>Neosiphonia harveyi</i> was more abundant on <i>Sargassum hemiphyllum, S. patens</i> and <i>S. piluliferum</i> than on other basiphyte species, and these three species were similar according to the cluster analysis. These results suggest that some phlorotannin components may be more effective for antifouling; thus interspecific differences in the phlorotannin profile could affect the variation and abundance of epiphytes.</p
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