210 research outputs found
Association of Chlamydia pneumoniae infection with diabetic nephropathy
W badaniu oceniano związek pomiędzy zakażeniem Chlamydia pneumoniae (CP) a rozwojem nefropatii cukrzycowej. W zależności od zaawansowania rozlanych zmian kłębuszkowych, stosując kryteria Gellmana, 60 chorych na cukrzycę typu 2 podzielono na 2 grupy: z rozpoczynającą się i z zaawansowaną nefropatią cukrzycową. Grupę kontrolną stanowiło 34 chorych na cukrzycę typu 2 bez nefropatii (normoalbuminuria) oraz 59 osób niechorujących na cukrzycę. Stężenie przeciwciał IgG przeciwko CP
mierzono za pomocą testu ELISA. Przeciwciała przeciw CP wykryto u 45,8% osób z grupy kontrolnej niechorujących na cukrzycę, u 47,1% chorych na cukrzycę bez nefropatii, u 52,6% chorych na cukrzycę z rozpoczynającą się nefropatią oraz u 78% chorych
na cukrzycę z zaawansowaną nefropatią. Obecność przeciwciał przeciw CP powodowała 4,22-krotny wzrost ryzyka wystąpienia zaawansowanej nefropatii. Wyniki badania wskazują na związek pomiędzy przewlekłym zakażeniem CP a zaawansowaną nefropatią cukrzycową.We evaluated the association of Chlamydia pneumoniae
(CP) infection with progression of diabetic
nephropathy. Type 2 diabetic patients (60) were divided
into two groups, those with incipient nephropathy
and those with advanced nephropathy, based
on the severity of diffuse glomerular lesions using
Gellman’s criteria. Type 2 (34) diabetic patients without
nephropathy (normoalbuminuria) and 59
nondiabetics served as control groups. Serum IgG-
-antibody against CP was measured using ELISA.
CP antibody was detected in 45.8% of nondiabetic
controls, in 47.1% of diabetic patients without nephropathy,
in 52.6% of diabetic patients with incipient
nephropathy, and 78% of diabetic patients
with advanced nephropathy. There was 4.22-fold increase
in the risk of advanced nephropathy associated
with the presence of CP antibody. Our findings
indicate an association between chronic CP infection
and advanced diabetic nephropathy
Investigation of Effective Modification Treatments for Titanium Membranes
Titanium membranes are used for guided bone regeneration in implant therapy. However, as a bioinert material, titanium does not have the ability to accelerate bone formation. Various titanium surface treatments to confer bioactivity have been demonstrated; however, there are concerns about the influence of chemical treatments for thin titanium membranes. This study investigated the influence of surface modifications on the structure of titanium membranes. Titanium membranes of 20 μm thickness were treated with acid or alkali solutions, and we evaluated their surface structure, wettability, thickness, and mechanical strength compared to non-treated membranes. Alkali-treated titanium membranes displayed the formation of nanoscale pore structures on their surfaces, enhanced hydrophilicity, and almost same thickness compared with acid-treated membranes. Furthermore, the tensile strength of alkali-treated membranes was comparable to non-treated membranes. These results suggest that alkali treatment is an appropriate surface modification method for titanium membranes
Hard X-ray Properties of the Merging Cluster Abell 3667 as Observed with Suzaku
Wide-band Suzaku data on the merging cluster Abell 3667 were examined for
hard X-ray emission in excess to the known thermal component. Suzaku detected
X-ray signals in the wide energy band from 0.5 to 40 keV. The hard X-ray (> 10
keV) flux observed by the HXD around the cluster center cannot be explained by
a simple extension of the thermal emission with average temperature of ~7 keV.
The emission is most likely an emission from a very hot (kT > 13.2 keV) thermal
component around the cluster center, produced via a strong heating process in
the merger. In the north-west radio relic, no signature of non-thermal emission
was observed. Using the HXD, the overall upper-limit flux within a 34'x34'
field-of-view around the relic is derived to be 5.3e-12 erg s-1 cm-2 in the
10-40 keV band, after subtracting the ICM contribution estimated using the XIS
or the XMM-Newton spectra. Directly on the relic region, the upper limit is
further tightened by the XIS data to be less than 7.3e-13 erg s-1 cm-2, when
converted into the 10--40 keV band. The latter value suggest that the average
magnetic field within the relic is higher than 1.6 uG. The non-thermal pressure
due to magnetic fields and relativistic electrons may be as large as ~20% of
the thermal pressure in the region.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures, to be appeared in PASJ 200
Molar loss and powder diet leads to memory deficit and modifies the mRNA expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor in the hippocampus of adult mice
Successful use of dupilumab for egg-induced eosinophilic gastroenteritis with duodenal ulcer: a pediatric case report and review of literature
Background Non-esophageal eosinophilic gastrointestinal disorder (non-EoE-EGID) is a rare disease in which eosinophils infiltrate parts of the gastrointestinal tract other than the esophagus; however, the number of patients with non-EoE-EGID has been increasing in recent years. Owing to its chronic course with repeated relapses, it can lead to developmental delays due to malnutrition, especially in pediatric patients. No established treatment exists for non-EoE-EGID, necessitating long-term systemic corticosteroid administration. Although the efficacy of dupilumab, an anti-IL-4/13 receptor monoclonal antibody, for eosinophilic esophagitis, has been reported, only few reports have demonstrated its efficacy in non-EoE EGIDs.
Case presentation A 13-year-old boy developed non-EoE-EGID with duodenal ulcers, with chicken eggs as the trigger. He was successfully treated with an egg-free diet, proton pump inhibitors, and leukotriene receptor antagonists. However, at age 15, he developed worsening upper abdominal pain and difficulty eating. Blood analysis revealed eosinophilia; elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate; and elevated levels of C-reactive protein, total immunoglobulin E, and thymic and activation-regulated chemokines. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy revealed a duodenal ulcer with marked mucosal eosinophilic infiltration. Gastrointestinal symptoms persisted even after starting systemic steroids, making it difficult to reduce the steroid dose. Subcutaneous injection of dupilumab was initiated because of comorbid atopic dermatitis exacerbation. After 3 months, the gastrointestinal symptoms disappeared, and after 5 months, the duodenal ulcer disappeared and the eosinophil count decreased in the mucosa. Six months later, systemic steroids were discontinued, and the duodenal ulcer remained recurrence-free. The egg challenge test result was negative; therefore, the egg-free diet was discontinued. Blood eosinophil count and serum IL-5, IL-13, and eotaxin-3 levels decreased after dupilumab treatment. The serum levels of IL-5 and eotaxin-3 remained within normal ranges, although the blood eosinophil counts increased again after discontinuation of oral prednisolone.
Conclusions Suppression of IL-4R/IL-13R-mediated signaling by dupilumab may improve abdominal symptoms and endoscopic and histologic findings in patients with non-EoE-EGID, leading to the discontinuation of systemic steroid administration and tolerance of causative foods
Suzaku Observation of HCG 62: Temperature, Abundance, and Extended Hard X-ray Emission Profiles
We present results of 120 ks observation of a compact group of galaxies
HCG~62 () with Suzaku XIS and HXD-PIN\@. The XIS spectra for four
annular regions were fitted with two temperature {\it vapec} model with
variable abundance, combined with the foreground Galactic component. The
Galactic component was constrained to have a common surface brightness among
the four annuli, and two temperature {\it apec} model was preferred to single
temperature model. We confirmed the multi-temperature nature of the intra-group
medium reported with Chandra and XMM-Newton, with a doughnut-like high
temperature ring at radii 3.3--6.5 in a hardness image. We found Mg, Si, S,
and Fe abundances to be fairly robust. We examined the possible
``high-abundance arc'' at southwest from the center, however Suzaku
data did not confirm it. We suspect that it is a misidentification of an excess
hot component in this region as the Fe line. Careful background study showed no
positive detection of the extended hard X-rays previously reported with ASCA,
in 5--12 keV with XIS and 12--40 keV with HXD-PIN, although our upper limit did
not exclude the ASCA result. There is an indication that the X-ray intensity in
region is % higher than the nominal CXB level (5--12 keV),
and Chandra and Suzaku data suggest that most of this excess could be due to
concentration of hard X-ray sources with an average photon index of
. Cumulative mass of O, Fe and Mg in the group gas and the
metal mass-to-light ratio were derived and compared with those in other groups.
Possible role of AGN or galaxy mergers in this group is also discussed.Comment: 29 pages with 9 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ Vol 60,
second Suzaku special issu
Importance of absorbable surgical sutures for the prevention of stitch abscess after surgery in patients with oral squamous cell carcinoma
To elucidate the significance of absorbable surgical sutures in the occurrence of stitch abscess after surgery in patients with oral squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). The subjects were 251 patients who underwent excision and/or reconstruction and/or neck dissection for oral SCC using absorbable surgical sutures. Detection rates and characteristics of patients with stitch abscess were retrospectively evaluated by comparing between our present and previous data. There was only one stitch abscess among the 251 patients. A significant difference in the incidence of stitch abscess was found between the present data and our previous data. Of course, no significant correlations were found between the occurrence of stitch abscess using absorbable surgical sutures and the various factors seen in our previous analysis. A complete switch of surgical sutures from silk to absorbable surgical sutures is needed for surgery in patients with oral SCC
QUALITY OF LIFE IN PATIENTS WITH DIABETES MELLITUS
We evaluated the quality of life (QOL) in 268 patients with diabetes mellitus (NIDDM, 250 cases; IDDM, 10 cases; and other type of diabetes, 8 cases) to determine which aspects were adversely affected by the disease. Information concerning life satisfaction, social activities, ability to work, sexual problems and physical symptoms was obtained from a 30-item questionnaire. Clinical characteristics including duration of diabetes, glycemic control, current treatment, obesity, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, macro- and microvascular complications were obtained from medical records. Diminished QOL was most pronounced in patients who had had a long duration of disease, required insulin therapy, and whose health was disturbed by cerebrovascular disease, end-stage renal disease, mono- and autonomic neuropathy. A significant difference in the subdimensional QOL score was noted in life satisfaction, social activities, ability to work, sexual problems and physical symptoms under these circumstances
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