71 research outputs found

    Wilms\u27 Tumor and Neuroblastom: Results of Therapy

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    Wilms\u27 tumor and neuroblastoma are numerically among the most common noncerebral malignant solid tumors in children. The purpose of this report is to describe the recent results of therapy

    New Concepts in the Management of Neonatal Jaundice: Use of Enzyme Induction and Phototherapy

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    All the observations suggest that phenobarbital and light may be of therapeutic value in controlling neonatal hyperbilirubinemia. In pregnancies in which one might anticipate increased bilirubin formation by the newborn baby, the use of phenobarbital during pregnancy and in the neonatal period, and exposure of the infant to light may provide methods other than exchange transfusion to reduce the concentration of serum bilirubin in the infant. Clinical trials should proceed cautiously, however, since phenobarbital is known to stimulate the activity of liver microsomal enzymes that metabolize, steroids, hormones, and other normal body substrates. It is not known whether this effect would be harmful if it occurred in the human fetus or neonate. Pediatricians should consider phototherapy in the same cautious manner as they would the use of a new drug available for the treatment of newborn infants. Considering the state of ignorance on this subject, research into the long-term effects of phototherapy is clearly needed

    Solid Tumors in Children

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    Preservation of the Bladder in Patients With Rhabdomyosarcoma

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    Purpose: To review the pathologic findings from children with gross residual rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) of the bladder and compare the treatment outcome of those who underwent cystectomy with those who did not. Patients and Methods: Primary and follow-up records and pathology specimens for 28 patients with gross residual disease entered onto the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study (IRS) III were reviewed. These patients were assigned to receive 20 weeks of multiagent induction chemotherapy and 4 weeks of radiotherapy. Future therapy decisions were based on clinical and histologic evaluation at 20 weeks. Results: All patients had a clinical and histologic response. Thirteen patients underwent cystectomy at intervals that ranged from 1.5 to 38 months after the start of therapy. All but one patient are alive and well without recurrence. Reasons for cystectomy included presumed evidence of tumor growth from imaging studies, findings at cystoscopy, or histologic interpretation of biopsies. In HE GOAL OF THE Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study (IRS) for patients with primary bladder or bladder/prostate rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is not only survival, but survival with an intact and functioning bladder.3 Retention of the bladder may also minimize some of the long-term problems of sexual dysfunction associated with cystectomy. The use of partial cystectomy has been fostered to attain this goal, but is applicable in a relatively limited number of cases. 4 5 Among patients in IRS III with gross residual disease after biopsy, subsequent cystectomies were performed most frequently in patients with intravesical primary tumors (43%), less often in those with prostatic primary tumors (36%), and least often in those with extravesical primary tumors that did not extend through the bladder wall (14%). Because more cystectomies were performed for intravesical primary tumors and subsequent biopsies more readily obtained at cystoscopy, this group was chosen for review. Pathologic review of primary and follow-up specimens was made, comparing findings between those patients who retained the bladder and those who underwent cystectomy. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patient Selection One hundred three patients were entered onto IRS III with primary tumors that involved the bladder between November 1984 and September 1988. There were 35 patients with positive biopsies from intravesical bladder sites, 24 with abdominal or pelvic masses with bladder attachment, and 44 with prostatic or bladder/prostate involvement. Among the 35 intravesical tumors, four were group I cases (no gross or microscopic residual disease after initial surgery) and all are living and well following partial cystectomy and chemotherapy. A single group II patient (microscopic residual disease) underwent cystectomy as primary therapy for an intravesical tumor that extended through the bladder wall to an abdominal mass. This patient died of pneumonia after 8 months of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Two of 30 patients with group III disease died following 2 and 3 weeks of therapy from toxicity related to chemotherapy. The remaining 28 group III patients comprise the current study. Treatment After initial biopsy, patients with gross residual disease (group III) were scheduled to be treated with 20 weeks of induction chemo

    Restricting detergent protease action to surface of protein fibres by chemical modification

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    Due to their excellent properties, such as thermostability, activity over a broad range of pH and efficient stain removal, proteases from Bacillus sp. are commonly used in the textile industry including industrial processes and laundry and represent one of the most important groups of enzymes. However, due to the action of proteases, severe damage on natural protein fibres such as silk and wool result after washing with detergents containing proteases. To include the benefits of proteases in a wool fibre friendly detergent formulation, the soluble polymer polyethylene glycol (PEG) was covalently attached to a protease from Bacillus licheniformis. In contrast to activation of PEG with cyanuric chloride (50%) activation with 1,1′-carbonyldiimidazole (CDI) lead to activity recovery above 90%. With these modified enzymes, hydrolytic attack on wool fibres could be successfully prevented up to 95% compared to the native enzymes. Colour difference (ΔE) measured in the three dimensional colour space showed good stain removal properties for the modified enzymes. Furthermore, half-life of the modified enzymes in buffers and commercial detergents solutions was nearly twice as high as those of the non-modified enzymes with values of up to 63 min. Out of the different modified proteases especially the B. licheniformis protease with the 2.0-kDa polymer attached both retained stain removal properties and did not hydrolyse/damage wool fibres

    Viability Conditions for a Compartmentalized Protometabolic System: A Semi-Empirical Approach

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    In this work we attempt to find out the extent to which realistic prebiotic compartments, such as fatty acid vesicles, would constrain the chemical network dynamics that could have sustained a minimal form of metabolism. We combine experimental and simulation results to establish the conditions under which a reaction network with a catalytically closed organization (more specifically, an ()-system) would overcome the potential problem of self-suffocation that arises from the limited accessibility of nutrients to its internal reaction domain. The relationship between the permeability of the membrane, the lifetime of the key catalysts and their efficiency (reaction rate enhancement) turns out to be critical. In particular, we show how permeability values constrain the characteristic time scale of the bounded protometabolic processes. From this concrete and illustrative example we finally extend the discussion to a wider evolutionary context

    Measurement of the W boson polarisation in ttˉt\bar{t} events from pp collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 8 TeV in the lepton + jets channel with ATLAS

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    Measurement of jet fragmentation in Pb+Pb and pppp collisions at sNN=2.76\sqrt{{s_\mathrm{NN}}} = 2.76 TeV with the ATLAS detector at the LHC

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    Search for new phenomena in events containing a same-flavour opposite-sign dilepton pair, jets, and large missing transverse momentum in s=\sqrt{s}= 13 pppp collisions with the ATLAS detector

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    Search for single production of vector-like quarks decaying into Wb in pp collisions at s=8\sqrt{s} = 8 TeV with the ATLAS detector

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