152 research outputs found
Incidence, clinical characteristics and long-term prognosis of postoperative symptomatic venous thromboembolism: a retrospective cohort study
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the incidence, clinical characteristics and prognosis of postoperative symptomatic venous thromboembolism (VTE) in Japan. DESIGN: Retrospective observational study. Two data sets, Contemporary ManageMent AND outcomes in patients with Venous ThromboEmbolism (COMMAND VTE) Registry and Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists (JSA) annual report, were used for current analyses. SETTING: Eighteen of 29 centres participated in the COMMAND VTE Registry. PARTICIPANTS: Acute symptomatic patients with VTE who had undergone surgery 2 months prior to the diagnosis at 18 centres from January 2010 to December 2013 were identified in the COMMAND VTE Registry. From each centre's JSA annual report, the overall population that had received anaesthetic management during this period was retrieved. INTERVENTIONS: None. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary outcome was the incidences and clinical characteristics of postoperative symptomatic VTE. The secondary outcomes were recurrent VTE, major bleeding and all-cause death. RESULTS: We identified 137 patients with postoperative symptomatic VTE, including 57 patients with pulmonary embolism. The incidences of postoperative symptomatic VTE and pulmonary embolism were 0.067% and 0.028%, respectively, based on data from 2 03 943 patients who underwent surgery, managed by anaesthesiologists, during the study period. The incidences of postoperative symptomatic VTE varied widely, depending on surgical and anaesthetic characteristics. Postoperative symptomatic VTE occurred at a median of 8 days after surgery, with 58 patients (42%) diagnosed within 7 days. The cumulative incidence, 30 days after VTE, of recurrent VTE, major bleeding, and all-cause death was 3.0%, 5.2%, and 3.7%, respectively. CONCLUSION: This study, combining the large real-world VTE and anaesthesiology databases in Japan revealed the incidence, clinical features and prognosis of postoperative symptomatic VTE, providing useful insights for all healthcare providers involved in various surgeries. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Not applicable
CCN3 (NOV) Drives Degradative Changes in Aging Articular Cartilage
Aging is a major risk factor of osteoarthritis, which is characterized by the degeneration of articular cartilage. CCN3, a member of the CCN family, is expressed in cartilage and has various physiological functions during chondrocyte development, differentiation, and regeneration. Here, we examine the role of CCN3 in cartilage maintenance. During aging, the expression of Ccn3 mRNA in mouse primary chondrocytes from knee cartilage increased and showed a positive correlation with p21 and p53 mRNA. Increased accumulation of CCN3 protein was confirmed. To analyze the effects of CCN3 in vitro, either primary cultured human articular chondrocytes or rat chondrosarcoma cell line (RCS) were used. Artificial senescence induced by H2O2 caused a dose-dependent increase in Ccn3 gene and CCN3 protein expression, along with enhanced expression of p21 and p53 mRNA and proteins, as well as SA-beta gal activity. Overexpression of CCN3 also enhanced p21 promoter activity via p53. Accordingly, the addition of recombinant CCN3 protein to the culture increased the expression of p21 and p53 mRNAs. We have produced cartilage-specific CCN3-overexpressing transgenic mice, and found degradative changes in knee joints within two months. Inflammatory gene expression was found even in the rib chondrocytes of three-month-old transgenic mice. Similar results were observed in human knee articular chondrocytes from patients at both mRNA and protein levels. These results indicate that CCN3 is a new senescence marker of chondrocytes, and the overexpression of CCN3 in cartilage may in part promote chondrocyte senescence, leading to the degeneration of articular cartilage through the induction of p53 and p21
女性がんサバイバーの心理的適応
The purpose of this study is to explore the psychological adjustments female cancer survivors undergo with respect to their femininity. Semi-structured interviews were performed with 29 female cancer(breast or gynecologic cancer)survivors in their20s to50s. Qualitative descriptive study data was interpreted according to Krippendorff’s content analysis method.
As a result, six categories were generated as psychological adjustments utilized by female cancer survivors from the viewpoint of femininity : “I like the way I am” ; “I am charming as a woman” ; “I live independently as a woman” ; “I am expanding my life as a woman” ; “I can feel connected with someone” ; and “I have graduated from pessimism.” These could be interpreted as psychological adaptations that reflect feminine emotions and reflect the strength and resilience of female cancer survivors. In order for female cancer survivors to adjust to living with cancer in a psychologically healthy way, it was suggested that nursing support was important to restore the feelings of the survivors from the perspective of these feminine characteristics
Five isoforms of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase regulatory subunit exhibit different associations with receptor tyrosine kinases and their tyrosine phosphorylations
AbstractThere are five isoforms of the regulatory subunit for the heterodimeric type of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase. These five regulatory subunit isoforms were overexpressed using an adenovirus transfection system, and their own tyrosine phosphorylations and associations with various tyrosine kinase receptors were investigated. When overexpressed in CHO-PDGFR cells, the associations of these regulatory subunit isoforms with the platelet-derived growth factor receptor were similar. However, when overexpressed in CHO-IR cells, p55γ exhibited a significantly lower ability to bind with IRS-1 upon insulin stimulation, as compared with other regulatory subunit isoforms. Furthermore, p55α and p55γ were found to be tyrosine-phosphorylated. Finally, interestingly, when overexpressed in CHO-EGFR cells or A431 cells and stimulated with epidermal growth factor (EGF), phosphorylated EGF receptor was detected in p85α, p85β and p50α immunoprecipitates, but not in p55α and p55γ immunoprecipitates. In addition, EGF-induced tyrosine phosphorylation was observed in p85α, p85β, p55α and p55γ, but not in p50α, immunoprecipitates. Thus, each regulatory subunit exhibits specific responses regarding both the association with tyrosine-phosphorylated substrates and its own tyrosine phosphorylation. These results suggest that each isoform possesses specific roles in signal transduction, based on its individual tyrosine kinase receptor
EMPRESS. XIII. Chemical Enrichments of Young Galaxies Near and Far at z ~ 0 and 4-10: Fe/O, Ar/O, S/O, and N/O Measurements with Chemical Evolution Model Comparisons
We present gas-phase elemental abundance ratios of 7 local extremely
metal-poor galaxies (EMPGs) including our new Keck/LRIS spectroscopy
determinations together with 33 JWST star-forming galaxies in the
literature, and compare chemical evolution models. We develop chemical
evolution models with the yields of core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe), Type Ia
supernovae, hypernovae (HNe), and pair-instability supernovae (PISNe), and
compare the EMPGs and high- galaxies in conjunction with dust depletion
contributions. We find that high Fe/O values of EMPGs can (cannot) be explained
by PISN metal enrichments (CCSN/HN enrichments even with the
mixing-and-fallback mechanism enhancing iron abundance), while that the
observed Ar/O and S/O values are much smaller than the predictions of the PISN
models. The abundance ratios of the EMPGs can be explained by the combination
of Type Ia SNe and CCSNe/HNe whose inner layers of argon and sulfur mostly
fallback, which are comparable with Sculptor stellar chemical abundance
distribution, suggesting that early chemical enrichment is taken place in the
EMPGs. Comparing our chemical evolution models with the star-forming galaxies
at , we find that the Ar/O and S/O ratios of the high- galaxies
are comparable with those of the CCSNe/HNe models, while majority of the
high- galaxies do not have constraints good enough to rule out contributions
from PISNe. The high N/O ratio recently reported in GN-z11 cannot be explained
even by rotating PISNe, but could be reproduced by the winds of rotating Wolf
Rayet stars that end up as a direct collapse
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