4 research outputs found

    Post-extra systolic potentiation: influence of calcium and verapamil in rat and rabbit hearts

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    The interactions of the inotropic effects of verapamil (0.05-2.0 µmol/l-1, calcium (0.33-5.2 mmol/l-1) and post extra systolic potentiation (PESP) as induced by paired stimulation were studied in isolated rabbit and rat hearts under isovolumic and isotonic conditions. At low doses of verapamil, contractions were depressed, but those elicited by paired stimulation showed less depression than contractions of the same rate during single stimulation and even exceeded the unpotentiated contractions without verapamil. At high doses of verapamil contractility could not be restored by paired stimulation. Although contractions were restored to control level by an increase in extra-cellular calcium they were still abnormal in the sense that PESP could not be elicited. The excitation-contraction (e-c) uncoupling due to low calcium perfusion could be counteracted by paired stimulation but e- c uncoupling due to high dose verapamil could not be reversed by paired stimulation. Our results support the view that PESP does not only depend on augmented slow channel calcium influx but also on an enhanced calcium shift within the sarcoplasmic reticulum. We are doubtful about the idea that PESP can be used clinically to counteract the negative inotropic effect of high doses of verapamil

    Potency of veterinary rabies vaccines in The Netherlands: A case for continued vigilance.

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    Commercial rabies vaccines, used by veterinarians in the Netherlands, were collected for testing in the mouse potency test. Of the six vaccines tested, two were clearly below the minimal requirements for potency of 1.0 IU. Of these six vaccines the rabies virus glycoprotein (GP) and nucleoprotein (NP) contents were determined in an antigen competition ELISA. The GP content proved to correlate well with the potency found in the mouse potency test (r = 0.95, p 0.05). After the manufacturers were told about the results, one of the two vaccines that did not comply with the requirements was withdrawn from the market. Measurement of the GP content of a second lot of the remaining vaccines indicated that sufficiently high levels of GP were present in all five. Additional in vivo testing in mice for efficacy against intracerebral challenge with the Dutch bat rabies virus EBL1-12 resulted in acceptable levels of protection with four of these five vaccines of the second lot. The data presented illustrate the need for continued potency evaluation of veterinary rabies vaccines in the Netherlands

    Prevalence of Mycobacterium avium in slaughter pigs in the Netherlands and comparison of IS1245 restriction fragment length polymorphism patterns of porcine and human isolates

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    A significant increase in the incidence of caseous lesions in the lymph nodes of slaughter pigs prompted a large-scale investigation in five slaughterhouses in The Netherlands. In total, 158,763 pigs from 2,899 groups underwent gross examination. At least one pig with caseous lesions in the submaxillary and/or mesenteric lymph nodes was observed in each of 154 of the 2,899 groups examined (5%). In total, 856 pigs (0.5%) were affected. As many as five pigs in each of 141 of the 154 positive groups (91.5%) had lymph node lesions. Greater numbers of pigs with affected lymph nodes were found in 13 groups (8.5%). Four pigs had lesions in thekidneys, liver, or spleen. Acid-fast bacteria were detected by microscopic examination of 121 of 292 Ziehl-Neelsen-stained smears of caseous lesions (41%). In a follow-up study, Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) bacteria were isolated from 219 of 402 affected lymph nodes (54.2%). Ninety-one of the isolated strains were analyzed by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) typing with insertion sequence IS1245 as a probe. All but 1 of these 91 strains contained IS1245 DNA, indicating that pigs in The Netherlands carried almost exclusively M. avium bacteria and no other bacteria of MAC. Only one pig isolate exhibited the bird-type RFLP pattern. MAC isolates from 191 human patients in The Netherlands in 1996 were also typed by RFLP analysis. Computer-assisted analysis showed that the RFLP patterns of 61% of the human isolates and 59% of the porcine isolates were at least 75% similar to the RFLP patterns of the other group of strains. This indicates that pigs may be an important vehicle for M. avium infections in humans or that pigs and humans share common sources of infectio
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