1,139 research outputs found

    Detection of sperm antigens on mouse ova and early embryos

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    Serum and colostrum antibodies against mouse sperm were developed in two rabbits after systemic and mammary gland immunizations. Indirect immunofluorescence utilizing fluorescein-labeled goat antisera against rabbit IgG and IgA, respectively, indicated that both immune serum (IS) and colostrum (IC) compared with control samples caused intensive staining of the acrosome and tail of sperm. Absorption of IS and IC with mouse serum and the spleen, kidney, liver, and brain of male mice did not reduce the strength or the pattern of staining reaction on sperm. The absorbed IS reacted with cell surfaces of oocytes, unfertilized ova, zygotes, two-cell and four- to eight-cell fertilized ova, and blastocysts. The absorbed IC, however, reacted only with the four- to eight-cell embryo and blastocyst. Further absorption of the IS with mouse ovary removed the reaction with unfertilized ova and the one- to two-cell fertilized ova, but the staining of later embryo stages was unaffected. Therefore, it appears that specific rabbit anti-sperm antibodies are detecting two cell-membrane antigens on mouse embryos: one originating from the ovary and the other arising after fertilization.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/22638/1/0000189.pd

    Identification of Human Sperm Antigens to Antisperm Antibodies *

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98396/1/j.1600-0897.1983.tb00243.x.pd

    Absence of Antisperm Antibodies in Anejaculatory Men

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/96435/1/j.1939-4640.1990.tb00162.x.pd

    An Enhanced Perturbational Study on Spectral Properties of the Anderson Model

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    The infinite-UU single impurity Anderson model for rare earth alloys is examined with a new set of self-consistent coupled integral equations, which can be embedded in the large NN expansion scheme (NN is the local spin degeneracy). The finite temperature impurity density of states (DOS) and the spin-fluctuation spectra are calculated exactly up to the order O(1/N2)O(1/N^2). The presented conserving approximation goes well beyond the 1/N1/N-approximation ({\em NCA}) and maintains local Fermi-liquid properties down to very low temperatures. The position of the low lying Abrikosov-Suhl resonance (ASR) in the impurity DOS is in accordance with Friedel's sum rule. For N=2N=2 its shift toward the chemical potential, compared to the {\em NCA}, can be traced back to the influence of the vertex corrections. The width and height of the ASR is governed by the universal low temperature energy scale TKT_K. Temperature and degeneracy NN-dependence of the static magnetic susceptibility is found in excellent agreement with the Bethe-Ansatz results. Threshold exponents of the local propagators are discussed. Resonant level regime (N=1N=1) and intermediate valence regime (âˆŁÏ”f∣<Δ|\epsilon_f| <\Delta) of the model are thoroughly investigated as a critical test of the quality of the approximation. Some applications to the Anderson lattice model are pointed out.Comment: 19 pages, ReVTeX, no figures. 17 Postscript figures available on the WWW at http://spy.fkp.physik.th-darmstadt.de/~frithjof

    Patient Associated Factors that Affect Adherence to Warfarin Therapy in a Tertiary Referral Hospital in Kenya

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    Warfarin is the most widely used oral anticoagulant but non-adherence to its therapy contributes significantly to sub-optimal anticoagulation control. A crosssectional study was carried out among 147 adult outpatients at Kenyatta National Hospital to determine the level of adherence and explore the associated factors. Adherence was associated with age, gender heart valve surgery, alcohol consumption, and cost of treatment. On multivariate analysis, the independent variables associated with adequate adherence were age (OR = 0.429, 95% CI = 0.228-0.808; p = 0.009), gender (OR = 0.299, 95% CI = 0.123-0.728; p = 0.008) and the type of thromboembolic disease (OR = 0.385, 95% CI = 0.214-0.690; p = 0.001). Adherence was better among females, older age groups and patients who had undergone heart valve surgery. Adherence was poorer among males, younger participants and patients with venous thromboembolism. We suggest that medication adherence counseling to warfarin therapy should be emphasized in poor-adherent patient populations.Key words: Warfarin, adherence, patient factors, Keny

    Fitness consequences of Anopheles gambiae population hybridization

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    BACKGROUND: The use of transgenic mosquitoes with parasite inhibiting genes has been proposed as an integral strategy to control malaria transmission. However, release of exotic transgenic mosquitoes will bring in novel alleles along with parasite-inhibiting genes that may have unknown effects on native populations. Thus it is necessary to study the effects and dynamics of fitness traits in native mosquito populations in response to the introduction of novel genes. This study was designed to evaluate the dynamics of fitness traits in a simulation of introduction of novel alleles under laboratory conditions using two strains of Anopheles gambiae: Mbita strain from western Kenya and Ifakara strain from Tanzania. METHODS: The dynamics of fitness traits were evaluated under laboratory conditions using the two An. gambiae strains. These two geographically different strains were cross-bred and monitored for 20 generations to score fecundity, body size, blood-meal size, larval survival, and adult longevity, all of which are important determinants of the vector's potential in malaria transmission. Traits were analysed using pair-wise analysis of variance (ANOVA) for fecundity, body size, and blood-meal size while survival analysis was performed for larval survival and adult longevity. RESULTS: Fecundity and body size were significantly higher in the progeny up to the 20(th )generation compared to founder strains. Adult longevity had a significantly higher mean up to the 10(th )generation and average blood-meal size was significantly larger up to the 5(th )generation, indicating that hybrids fitness is enhanced over that of the founder strains. CONCLUSION: Hybridization of the two mosquito populations used in this study led to increased performance in the fitness traits studied. Given that the studied traits are important determinants of the vector's potential to transmit malaria, these results suggest the need to release genetically modified mosquitoes that have the same or very similar backgrounds to the native populations
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