291 research outputs found
Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome and Features of the Neurophysiological Sleep Pattern
The high prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSA) causes a steady interest in this pathology. In recent years, one of the urgent problems in modern somnology is the assessment of the main mechanisms of neuronal dysfunction during the day and at night in OSA, the ideas about which, to a large extent, remain contradictory and not fully understood. One of the modern methods for assessing neuronal dysfunction during sleep is the study of the sleep microstructure, and for its assessment, the method of analysis of cyclic alternating pattern (CAP), an EEG marker of unstable sleep, is used. The cyclic alternating pattern is found both in the sleep of adults and children with various sleep disorders and, in particular, with OSAS, therefore, it is a sensitive tool for studying sleep disorders throughout life. With the elimination of night hypoxia against the background of CPAP therapy, the sleep microstructure is restored, the spectral characteristics of the EEG change, and a decrease in the number of EEG arousals after treatment leads to the restoration of daytime functioning. Understanding the role of short-term EEG activations of the brain during sleep can provide significant data on sleep functions in health and disease. Despite the improving diagnosis of sleep disorders using machine algorithms, assessing the relationship of structures and functions of the brain during sleep, neurophysiological data are not entirely clear, which requires further research. In this review, we tried to analyze the results of the main studies of the neurophysiological sleep pattern in OSA against the background of respiratory support during sleep
Assessment of functional state of the pituitary-gonadal system in fertile women with acute hepatitis A
Liver is a necessary participant of the metabolism of steroid hormones, so dysfunction of pituitary-gonadal system is possible at viral hepatitis A. We assessed functional state of pituitary-gonadal part of neuroendocrinal regulation system in fertile women with acute hepatitis A and detected changes that can be regarded as compensatory-adaptive shielding of an organism
Microecological and associative structure of intestinal biocenosis in children with functional gastrointestinal disorders
The article is devoted to one of actual problems of gastroenterology - study of microbiocenosis of gastrointestinal tract in functional disorders. Functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGID) or minimal dysfunctions of digestion are frequent in the first months of child's life and provoke anxiety both in parents and in pediatricians. Aim: to explore the microbial landscape and the associative structure of the microbiota of the large intestine in children with functional disorders of the gastrointestinal tract. Subjects and methods: Intestinal microbiota composition of 225 children with functional gastrointestinal disorders and 100 healthy children was studied using bacteriological method. Results. The 88.4 % frequency of detection of intestinal eubiosis disorders is discussed. Information is provided on the species composition of the major opportunistic organisms that inhabit this biotope. According to the results, decrease of bifidobacteria amount in structure of large intestine microbiota increases rate of detection of opportunistic microorganisms - predominantly, Klebsiella genus bacteria and Staphylococcus aureus. The intestinal microbial community is dominated by multicomponent transient association. The frequency of detection of pathogenic Staphylococcus in children under one year is discussed in detail. Conclusions. A distinctive feature of the intestinal biocenosis microecological status is significantly greater spread of enterococci than in healthy children, which can be a risk for the emergence of strains with the presence of a number of pathogenecity factors that cause infectious processes
THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SERUM ANTIOXIDATIVE PARAMETERSAND HORMONAL LEVELS IN MEN WITH INFERTILITY
The following research analyses relationships between antioxidative parameters and hormonal levels in men with infertility. The getting data could be used for differentiated approach to diagnostics and prophylactics of men infertility
Multiwavelength Intraday Variability of the BL Lac S5 0716+714
We report results from a 1 week multi-wavelength campaign to monitor the BL
Lac object S5 0716+714 (on December 9-16, 2009). In the radio bands the source
shows rapid (~ (0.5-1.5) day) intra-day variability with peak amplitudes of up
to ~ 10 %. The variability at 2.8 cm leads by about 1 day the variability at 6
cm and 11 cm. This time lag and more rapid variations suggests an intrinsic
contribution to the source's intraday variability at 2.8 cm, while at 6 cm and
11 cm interstellar scintillation (ISS) seems to predominate. Large and
quasi-sinusoidal variations of ~ 0.8 mag were detected in the V, R and I-bands.
The X-ray data (0.2-10 keV) do not reveal significant variability on a 4 day
time scale, favoring reprocessed inverse-Compton over synchrotron radiation in
this band. The characteristic variability time scales in radio and optical
bands are similar. A quasi-periodic variation (QPO) of 0.9 - 1.1 days in the
optical data may be present, but if so it is marginal and limited to 2.2
cycles. Cross-correlations between radio and optical are discussed. The lack of
a strong radio-optical correlation indicates different physical causes of
variability (ISS at long radio wavelengths, source intrinsic origin in the
optical), and is consistent with a high jet opacity and a compact synchrotron
component peaking at ~= 100 GHz in an ongoing very prominent flux density
outburst. For the campaign period, we construct a quasi-simultaneous spectral
energy distribution (SED), including gamma-ray data from the FERMI satellite.
We obtain lower limits for the relativistic Doppler-boosting of delta >= 12-26,
which for a BL\,Lac type object, is remarkably high.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, table 2; Accepted for Publication in MNRA
Characteristics of neutrophilic granulocytes of peripheral blood in patients with mechanical jaundice caused by cholangiocarcinoma
Obstructive jaundice caused by cholangiocarcinoma takes a special place among malignant disorders and surgical pathology in Russia. Involvement of nonspecific immunity and the role of neutrophils in carcinogenesis are ambiguously evaluated. The aim of this study was to study functional activity of peripheral blood neutrophilic granulocytes and their phenotype in obstructive jaundice caused by cholangiocarcinoma. The study included 56 patients with obstructive jaundice associated with cholangiocarcinoma at the T2- 3N0- 1M0 stage (clinical stages II-III), and 90 apparently healthy volunteers of similar age group. Neutrophilic granulocytes were isolated from peripheral blood by means of double-density Ficoll-Urografin gradient.Venous blood was collected in patients into vacutainers with heparin upon admission to the hospital, before the surgery was performed. Spontaneous cytokine production (IL-8, IFNá) was determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using Vector-Best diagnostic kits. To assess phagocytic activity of neutrophilic granulocytes, the phagocytic index (according to Hamburger), number of phagocytes (according to Wright) and the index of completed phagocytosis (according to Rudik, 2006) were calculated. Immunophenotyping of neutrophilic granulocytes was carried out using an FC500 flow cytometer (Beckman Coulter, USA) with monoclonal antibodies to CD11b+, CD16+, CD95+. The results were statistically analyzed using the Statistica v.12.0 software (StatSoft Inc., USA). To assess intergroup differences, the nonparametric Kruskal-Wallis tests (for three or more comparison groups) and Mann-Whitney tests (for pairwise comparison) were used. Comparison of groups for a qualitative binary trait was carried out using the two-sided Fisher’s exact test. Data are presented as Median (25 quartile-75 quartile).The study of the functional activity of peripheral blood neutrophiles in obstructive jaundice patients caused by cholangiocarcinoma revealed an increase in their relative and absolute number, increased phagocytic index and decreased phagocytic number of neutrophilic granulocytes, increased expression of CD11b+, CD16+, CD95+ immunological markers. The changes in neutrophil secretory activity were characterized by a decrease in cytokine production (IL-2, IFNá). An increase in functional activity of neutrophilic granulocytes, along with a decrease in their cytokine production suggests that, in obstructive jaundice observed in cholangiocarcinoma at clinical stage T2-3N0-1M0, an equilibrium stage is revealed between the cells of immune system and malignant tumor
Establishment of Fruit Bat Cells (Rousettus aegyptiacus) as a Model System for the Investigation of Filoviral Infection
Marburg virus and several species of Ebola virus are endemic in central Africa and cause sporadic outbreaks in this region with mortality rates of up to 90%. So far, there is no vaccination or therapy available to protect people at risk in these regions. Recently, different fruit bats have been identified as potential reservoirs. One of them is Rousettus aegyptiacus. It seems that within huge bat populations only relatively small numbers are positive for filovirus-specific antibodies or filoviral RNA, a phenomenon that is currently not understood. As a first step towards understanding the biology of filoviruses in bats, we sought to establish a model system to investigate filovirus replication in cells derived from their natural reservoir. Here, we provide the first insights into this topic by monitoring filovirus infection of a Rousettus aegyptiacus derived cell line, R06E. We were able to show that filoviruses propagate well in R06E cells, which can, therefore, be used to investigate replication and transcription of filovirus RNA and to very efficiently perform rescue of recombinant Marburg virus using reverse genetics. These results emphasize the suitability of the newly established bat cell line for filovirus research
SERUM OXIDATIVE STRESS VARIABLES IN WOMEN OF DIFFERENT ETHNIC GROUPS WITH ENDOCRINE INFERTILITY IN REPUBLIC BURYATIA
Serum lipoperoxidation variables were studied in 117 Buryat and Russian women with endocrine infertility. We found elevation of final lipoperoxidation substances in the most of infertile patients. In such case, decreasing of total antioxidative activity, tocopherol level and superoxide dismutase activity were found mostly in the buryat women with infertility
Towards Novel Potential Molecular Targets for Antidepressant and Antipsychotic Pharmacotherapies
Depression and schizophrenia are two highly prevalent and severely debilitating neuropsychiatric disorders. Both conventional antidepressant and antipsychotic pharmacotherapies are often inefficient clinically, causing multiple side effects and serious patient compliance problems. Collectively, this calls for the development of novel drug targets for treating depressed and schizophrenic patients. Here, we discuss recent translational advances, research tools and approaches, aiming to facilitate innovative drug discovery in this field. Providing a comprehensive overview of current antidepressants and antipsychotic drugs, we also outline potential novel molecular targets for treating depression and schizophrenia. We also critically evaluate multiple translational challenges and summarize various open questions, in order to foster further integrative cross-discipline research into antidepressant and antipsychotic drug development. © 2023 by the authors.075-15-2021-684; 857600; 122030100170-5; Suzhou University of Science and Technology; State Committee of Science, SCS: N 10-14/23-I/YSMUThis work was supported by the Republic of Armenia State Committee of Science (N 10-14/23-I/YSMU) and the European Union-funded H2020 COBRAIN project (857600). The funders had no role in the design, analyses and interpretation of the submitted study, or decision to publish.Computer-aided prediction of biological activity in this pharmacotherapeutic field (A.A.L. and V.V.P.) was overviewed within the framework of the Program for Basic Research in the Russian Federation for a long-term period (2021–2030) (project 122030100170-5). The research partially used the facilities and equipment of the Resource Fund of Applied Genetics MIPT (support grant 075-15-2021-684). A.V.K. is supported by St. Petersburg State University 2023 budget assignment funds. T.O.K. is supported by Neurobiology program of Sirius University of Science and Technology 2023 research budget funds. The authors thank Hasmik Harutyunyan (COBRAIN Center, Yerevan State Medical University) for help with graphical illustrations
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