36 research outputs found

    Effect of lung inflation and hypoxia on pulmonary arterial blood volume

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    Pregnancy outcome in human couples with recurrent spontaneous abortions: HLA antigen profiles; HLA antigen sharing; female serum MLR blocking factors; and paternal leukocyte immunization

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    Critical features of the trophoblast for immune protection in the mother are: (1) its resistance to cytotoxic lymphocytes and antibodies; (2) it forms a physical barrier to immune effector cells, but not antibody, from reaching the fetus; (3) it signals the migration of suppressor and other functionally hyporesponsive lymphocytes into the uterine decidua and uterine lymphatics; (4) it promotes the production of maternal serum MLR (mixed lymphocyte reaction) blocking antibody with paternal antigen specificity. Some of these immunological features are lacking in women with recurrent abortions of immune etiology. Eleven women who aborted an additional time after immunization with paternal leukocytes were compared with 14 women who delivered infants at term post-immunization. It was found that those who aborted: (1) had HLA antigen profiles that did not differ significantly from those of control fertile couples or from observed antigen frequencies in North American Caucasians; (2) shared more HLA A, B, D/DR, and MT antigens with their spouses than controls; (3) were not more hyporesponsive in MLR to paternal antigens pre- and post-immunization when compared to controls; (4) failed to develop female serum MLR blocking factors post-immunization; (5) failed to develop humoral alloantibodies to B-cell alloantigens; (5) had lymphocytes in the uterine decidua mantling the conceptus and in the uterine lymphatics that were reactive/cytotoxic to paternal stimulating alloantigens. These results are in sharp contrast to the immunodynamics of peripheral blood leukocytes and decidual leukocytes to paternal alloantigens in women who delivered infants at term post-immunization

    Drug Concentration Errors Related to Sampling from Silastic Catheters

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    A new type of internal hernia after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass.

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    Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGBP) is currently the most common bariatric procedure. One of its late complications is the development of internal hernia, which can lead to acute intestinal obstruction or recurrent colicky abdominal pain. The aim of this paper is to present a new, unusual, and so far not reported type of internal hernia. A common computerized database is maintained for all patients undergoing bariatric surgery in our departments. The charts of patients with the diagnosis of internal hernia were reviewed. Three patients were identified who developed acute intestinal obstruction due to an internal hernia located between the jejunojejunostomy and the end of the biliopancreatic limb, directly between two jejunal limbs with no mesentery involved. Another seven patients with intermittent colicky abdominal pain, re-explored for the suspicion of internal hernia, were found to also have an open window of the same location apart from a hernia at one of the typical hernia sites. Since this gap is systematically closed during RYGBP, no other patient has been observed with this problem. Even very small defects can lead to the development of internal hernias after RYGBP. Patients with suggestive symptoms must be explored. Closure of the jejunojejunal defect with nonabsorbable sutures prevents the development of an internal hernia between the jejunal loops at the jejunojejunostomy
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