188 research outputs found
Atrophy of the lower limbs in elderly women: is it related to walking ability?
This study investigated the relationship between walking ability and age-related muscle atrophy of the lower limbs in elderly women. The subjects comprised 20 young women and 37 elderly women who resided in nursing homes or chronic care institutions. The elderly subjects were divided into three groups according to their walking ability. The muscle thickness of the following ten lower limb muscles were measured by B-mode ultrasound: the gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, gluteus minimus, psoas major, rectus femoris, vastus lateralis, vastus intermedius, biceps femoris, gastrocnemius and soleus. Compared to the young group, muscle thicknesses of all muscles except the soleus muscle were significantly smaller in all the elderly groups. There were no significant differences between the fast- and slow-walking groups in the thickness of any muscle. In the dependent elderly group, noticeable muscle atrophy was observed in the quadriceps femoris muscle. The results of this study suggest that the elderly who are capable of locomotion, regardless of their walking speed, show a moderate degree of age-related atrophy, while those who do not walk exhibit more severe atrophy, especially in the quadriceps femoris muscle
Preparation of Rat Gingival Mitochondria with an Improved Isolation Method
In order to establish a method of obtaining rat gingival mitochondria (Mt), Mt fractions were prepared in various combinations of homogenizing time with collagenase concentration. Rat gingival tissues were excised, minced, treated with collagenase, homogenized, and subjected to differential centrifugation rates. Both the respiratory control ratio (RCR) and adenosine diphosphate/oxygen (ADP/O) ratio of the Mt fraction prepared in a combination of 40, 50, or 60 sec homogenization with collagenase in a concentration range of 0.115%–0.130% (w/v) were measured. The values for the RCR and ADP/O ratio of the Mt fraction obtained in an optimal condition was 1.80 ± 0.05 and 1.65 ± 0.03, respectively. These results suggest that Mt of fairly high quality can be obtained through this refined combination of the homogenizing time and collagenase concentration
Low dose RAI ablation
Outpatient ablation therapy with low-dose radioactive iodine (RAI) is applied to non-low-risk papillary thyroid cancer patients due to a chronic shortage of inpatient RAI treatment wards in Japan. We used the maximum dosage available for outpatient therapy of 30 mCi of RAI for ablation and diagnostic (Dx) whole-body scintigraphy (WBS). This study aimed to examine the significance of the second dose of 30 mCi. DxWBS was performed 6 months after ablation, and assessment of success or failure was performed 12 months after ablation. A second WBS was performed in the remaining RAI accumulation cases in the neck on DxWBS. The criteria for successful ablation was negative cervical accumulation on WBS, thyroid stimulating hormone-suppressed thyroglobulin (sup-Tg) below 1.0 ng / mL, and no increase in thyroglobulin antibody (TgAb) level. At the time of DxWBS, 35 / 68 cases met the successful criteria, and 45 cases achieved success at assessment. Sup-Tg values decreased significantly after ablation and decreased further after DxWBS in successful ablation cases, whereas those were not changed in ablation failure cases. Findings indicated that RAI used in DxWBS had therapeutic effects. It makes sense to use 30 mCi for DxWBS, given the current difficulty of inpatient ablation therapy with high-dose RAI
Blood flow in microchannel with stenosis measured by a confocal micro PTV system
Blood in microcircualtion is not a homogenous fluid
but the suspension of Red Blood Cells(RBC). So
individual RBCs behavior is essential to get good
comprehension about the blood flow in
microcirculation. In this study we observe the RBCs
behavior through the stenosis by using confocal-micro-
PTV system. And we can observe the difference of the
cell free layer thickness according to Hct
Specific Removal of Monocytes from Peripheral Blood of Septic Patients by Polymyxin B-immobilized Filter Column
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is one of the major causes of septic shock. The polymyxin B-immobilized filter column (PMX) was developed for the adsorption of endotoxin by direct hemoperfusion and has been used for the treatment of LPS-induced septic shock. In this study, we demonstrated that PMX also specifically bound monocytes from the peripheral blood leukocytes of septic patients by mean of an analysis of bound cells using immunocytochemical and electron microscopic techniques. The specific removal of monocytes from septic patients may produce beneficial effects by reducing the interaction between monocytes and functionally associated cells including vascular endothelial cells
Coinfection of Invasive Pulmonary Aspergillosis and Pneumocystis Jiroveci Pneumonia in a Non-HIV Patient
Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA) and pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia (PCP) are life-threatening opportunistic infections that occur in immunocompromised hosts. Early diagnosis and treatment of these opportunistic infections is essential to the survival of immunocompromised patients. We report a 60-year-old man undergoing short-term steroid therapy after surgical resection of a brain tumor infected with combined invasive pulmonary aspergillosis and pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia diagnosed by bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage. Our case demonstrated that short-term systemic steroid therapy in non-HIV patients with underlying chronic lung conditions and malignancies was a risk factor for IPA and PCP, and for a combination of these infections
- …