11 research outputs found
BAMBERG: The Paleontological Collection at the Museum of Natural History in Bamberg (NKMB)
A role for atorvastatin and insulin combination in protecting from liver injury in a model of type 2 diabetes with hyperlipidemia
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a
major complication linked with the metabolic syndrome
associated with dyslipidemia, inflammation, and oxidative
stress. Impact of type 2 diabetes with hyperlipidemia in
NAFLD has to be established, as well as the utility of
commonly prescribed anti-diabetic and lipid-lowering
agents in improving liver injury markers. Genetic type 2
diabetic Goto–Kakizaki rats were fed with a high-fat diet to
test hepatic effects of type 2 diabetes with hyperlipidemia
and the effect of atorvastatin and insulin, individually and
in combination, in systemic and hepatic inflammatory and
oxidative stress markers. High-fat diet aggravated fasting
glycemia, systemic and liver lipids, and inflammatory and
oxidative stress markers. Individual treatments improved
glycemic and lipid profiles, but failed to improve inflammatory
markers, whereas insulin was able to reduce liver
oxidative stress parameters. Combination of insulin and
atorvastatin further improved glycemic and lipid profiles
and decreased circulating C-reactive protein levels and liver
inflammatory and oxidative stress markers. Insulin and
atorvastatin combination leads to better glycaemic and lipid
profiles and to better protection against liver inflammation
and oxidative stress, giving a superior level of liver
protection in type 2 diabetic with hyperlipidemia
A history of some fruit models in wax and other materials: scientific teaching aids and courtly table decorations
Taphonomy of neopterygian fishes from the Upper Kimmeridgian Wattendorf Plattenkalk of Southern Germany
Effect of Low-Dose Atorvastatin on Plasma Concentrations of Adipokines in Patients with Metabolic Syndrome
The first specimen of Archaeopteryx from the Upper Jurassic Mörnsheim Formation of Germany
From an initial isolated position as the oldest evolutionary prototype of a bird, Archaeopteryx has, as a result of recent fossil discoveries, become embedded in a rich phylogenetic context of both more and less crownward stem-group birds. This has prompted debate over whether Archaeopteryx is simply a convergently bird-like non-avialan theropod. Here we show, using the first synchrotron microtomographic examination of the genus, that the eighth or Daiting specimen of Archaeopteryx possesses a character suite that robustly constrains it as a basal avialan (primitive bird). The specimen, which comes from the Mornsheim Formation and is thus younger than the other specimens from the underlying Solnhofen Formation, is distinctive enough to merit designation as a new species, Archaeopteryx albersdoerferi sp. nov., but is recovered in close phylogenetic proximity to Archaeopteryx lithographica. Skeletal innovations of the Daiting specimen, such as fusion and pneumatization of the cranial bones, well vascularized pectoral girdle and wing elements, and a reinforced configuration of carpals and metacarpals, suggest that it may have had more characters seen in flying birds than the older Archaeopteryx lithographica. These innovations appear to be convergent on those of more crownward avialans, suggesting that Bavarian archaeopterygids independently acquired increasingly bird-like traits over time. Such mosaic evolution and iterative exploration of adaptive space may be typical for major functional transitions like the origin of flight.</p
