34 research outputs found
Nitric oxide mediated effects of nebivolol in myocardial infarction: the source of nitric oxide
OBJECTIVE: After MI pathological LV remodeling is one of the major causes of death. We previously showed the NO mediated beneficial effects of nebivolol in rat MI model, in this study we aimed to evaluate the NOS related mechanisms in this phenomenon
Rapid Detection of Salmonella in Milk by Combined Immunomagnetic Separation-Polymerase Chain Reaction Assay
During the past few years, milk has presented a risk of Salmonella contamination; it has been implicated as the cause in several outbreaks of salmonellosis. Because conventional detection methods require 5 to 7 d for completion and involve several subcultivation stages followed by biochemical and serological tests, rapid and sensitive methods have been sought, mainly at the DNA level. Therefore, a study including milk samples was conducted to evaluate the performance of a combination of 2 techniques-immunomagnetic separation and polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-for the detection of Salmonella. The 16-, 14-, 12-, 10-, and 8-h nonselective pre-enrichment steps before immunomagnetic separation and the high-pure DNA preparation method before PCR were used in a combined assay. Milk samples, which were found to be Salmonella-negative by a reference method, were first inoculated with Salmonella Enteritidis. Next, the shortest preenrichment time that is required for detection of 1 or 10 cfu of Salmonella/mL by combined immunomagnetic separation-PCR assay was found by using 16-, 14-, 12-, 10-, and 8-h incubation periods. The detection limit using a 16-, 14-, or 12- h nonselective pre-enrichment was 1 to 10 cfu/mL. However, the sensitivity decreased to 10(1) and 10(2) cfu/mL, respectively, when 10- and 8-h pre-enrichments were used. This assay, in conjunction with a 12-h pre-enrichment, proved to be rapid (overall 16 h) and sensitive (1-10 cfu/mL) for the detection of Salmonella in milk samples and promising for routine use in the detection of Salmonella in milk.WoSScopu
Non-invasive evaluation of endothelial function in hypertensive elderly patients
Impaired endothelium-dependent vasomotion is a diffuse disease process resulting in abnormal regulation of blood vessel tone and loss of several atheroprotective effects of the normal endothelium. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of aging and hypertension on endothelial function. Sixty-six geriatric subjects with ages over 60 (48 hypertensive and 18 healthy) and 40 middle-aged subjects (16 hypertensive and 24 healthy) were included in the study. Systemic vascular endothelial function was evaluated through measuring brachial arterial vasodilation, a physiologic answer to reactive hyperemia occured with increased blood flow in the vessel after transient ischemia (flow-mediated dilation, FMD%), and with carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT) measurement, using high-resolution ultrasonography. Endothelial independent vasodilation was also measured after administration of sublingual isosorbide dinitrate (isosorbide dinitrate mediated dilation, IDNMD%). FMD% was significantly decreased in elderly and/or hypertensive (HT) patients (geriatric HT: 9.5 +/- 4.7%, geriatric non-HT: 12.7 +/- 5.5%, middle-aged HT: 12.9 +/- 4.3% and middle-aged non-HT: 18.9 +/- 8.1 %) (geriatric HT versus geriatric non-HT (P = 0.02), geriatric HT versus middle-aged HT (P = 0.01), geriatric non-HT versus middle-aged non-HT (P = 0.008)). Both FMD% and IDNMD% were inversely correlated with age, baseline vessel diameter and carotid artery intima-media thickness. FMD% was also inversely correlated with diastolic blood pressure. No correlation was found between FMD% and systolic blood pressure, serum cholesterol and triglyceride levels. Endothelium dependent (EDD) and independent dilatation of large arteries decreased with aging even in the healthy elderly, and FMD further declined in HT elderly patients, indicating that age and hypertension independently impair endothelial function. Positive correlations with age and hypertension, and significant inverse correlation with FMD, makes carotid artery IMT a possible indicator of endothelial function. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved
Endothelial dysfunction in renal transplant patients is closely related to serum cyclosporine levels
Background. Cyclosporine (CsA), one of the standard agents used in renal transplant recipients, has been considered to cause endothelial dysfunction and to contribute to arterial complications posttransplant. Since concentration-dependent effects of CsA on endothelial functions in humans have not been examined, this study was performed to investigate this relationship