127 research outputs found
<i>Mycobacterium intracellulare</i> Infection Mimicking Progression of Scleroderma
This case report describes a patient with scleroderma who developed Mycobacterium intracellulare infection, which for more than a year mimicked worsening of her connective tissue disorder. The patient was diagnosed with scleroderma based on puffy fingers that developed into sclerodactyly, abnormal nail fold capillaries, interstitial lung disease, Raynaud’s phenomenon, esophageal dysmotility, and positivity for rheumatoid factor and anti-SSA antibodies. She developed massive inflammatory changes of the cutis, the subcutis, and the muscle fasciae of the right leg, that after several failed attempts of immunosuppressive treatments were found to be caused by Mycobacterium intracellulare. While she was receiving high-dose prednisolone, as worsening of her connective tissue disease was suspected to be the cause of the inflammatory changes, she had Listeria monocytogenes meningitis and was hospitalized for several weeks, but she recovered from this without sequelae. After Mycobacterium intracellulare infection was diagnosed, she was treated with clarithromycin and rifampicin. Her skin manifestations, arthralgias, and fatigue improved considerably, and the wounds of the right leg healed, unfortunately with significant scarring. Immunodeficiency testing was unremarkable. In summary, an infection with Mycobacterium intracellulare was mistaken for an unusually severe progression of scleroderma
The nature of the Galactic Center source IRS 13 revealed by high spatial resolution in the infrared
High spatial resolution observations in the 1 to 3.5 micron region of the
Galactic Center source known historically as IRS 13 are presented. They include
ground-based adaptive optics images in the H, Kp (2.12/0.4 micron) and L bands,
NICMOS data in filters between 1.1 and 2.2 micron, and integral field
spectroscopic data from BEAR, an Imaging FTS, in the HeI 2.06 micron and the
Br line regions. Analysis of all these data provides a completely new
picture of the main component, IRS 13E, which appears as a cluster of seven
individual stars within a projected diameter of ~0.5'' (0.02 pc). The brightest
sources, 13E1, 13E2, 13E3 (a binary), and 13E4, are all massive stars, 13E1 a
blue object, with no detected emission line while 13E2 and 13E4 are high-mass
emission line stars. 13E2 is at the WR stage and 13E4 a massive O-type star.
13E3A and B are extremely red objects, proposed as other examples of dusty WR
stars. All these sources have a common westward proper motion. 13E5, is a red
source similar to 13E3A/B. This concentration of comoving massive hot stars,
IRS 13E, is proposed as the remaining core of a massive star cluster, which
could harbor an intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH) of ~1300 M_sol. This
detection plays in favor of a scenario in which the helium stars and the other
hot stars in the central pc originate from the stripping of a massive cluster
formed several tens of pc from the center. The detection of a discrete X-ray
emission (Baganoff et al. 2003) at the IRS~13 position is examined in this
context.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures (3 in color), LaTeX2e, accepted in A&
Purification and functional characterization of nine human Aquaporins produced in Saccharomyces cerevisiae for the purpose of biophysical characterization
The sparse number of high-resolution human membrane protein structures severely restricts our comprehension of molecular physiology and ability to exploit rational drug design. In the search for a standardized, cheap and easily handled human membrane protein production platform, we thoroughly investigated the capacity of S. cerevisiae to deliver high yields of prime quality human AQPs, focusing on poorly characterized members including some previously shown to be difficult to isolate. Exploiting GFP labeled forms we comprehensively optimized production and purification procedures resulting in satisfactory yields of all nine AQP targets. We applied the obtained knowledge to successfully upscale purification of histidine tagged human AQP10 produced in large bioreactors. Glycosylation analysis revealed that AQP7 and 12 were O-glycosylated, AQP10 was N-glycosylated while the other AQPs were not glycosylated. We furthermore performed functional characterization and found that AQP 2, 6 and 8 allowed flux of water whereas AQP3, 7, 9, 10, 11 and 12 also facilitated a glycerol flux. In conclusion, our S. cerevisiae platform emerges as a powerful tool for isolation of functional, difficult-To-express human membrane proteins suitable for biophysical characterization
Gemini Observations of Disks and Jets in Young Stellar Objects and in Active Galaxies
We present first results from the Near-infrared Integral Field Spectrograph
(NIFS) located at Gemini North. For the active galaxies Cygnus A and Perseus A
we observe rotationally-supported accretion disks and adduce the existence of
massive central black holes and estimate their masses. In Cygnus A we also see
remarkable high-excitation ionization cones dominated by photoionization from
the central engine. In the T-Tauri stars HV Tau C and DG Tau we see
highly-collimated bipolar outflows in the [Fe II] 1.644 micron line, surrounded
by a slower molecular bipolar outflow seen in the H_2 lines, in accordance with
the model advocated by Pyo et al. (2002).Comment: Invited paper presented at the 5th Stromlo Symposium. 9 pages, 7
figures. Accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space Scienc
Development and Validation of an OMERACT MRI Whole-Body Score for Inflammation in Peripheral Joints and Entheses in Inflammatory Arthritis (MRI-WIPE)
Objective: To develop a whole-body MRI-scoring system for peripheral arthritis and enthesitis.
Methods: After consensus on definitions/locations of MRI pathologies, four multi-reader exercises were performed. Eighty-three joints were scored 0-3 separately for synovitis and osteitis, thirty-three entheses 0-3 separately for soft tissue inflammation and osteitis.
Results: In the last exercise, reliability was moderate-good for musculoskeletal radiologists and rheumatologists with previously demonstrated good scoring proficiency. Median pairwise single-measure/average-measure ICCs were 0.67/0.80 for status scores and 0.69/0.82 for change scores; kappas ranged 0.35-0.77.
Conclusion: WBMRI scoring of peripheral arthritis and enthesitis is reliable which encourages further testing and refinement in clinical trials
The efficiency of the spiral-in of a black hole to the Galactic centre
We study the efficiency at which a black hole or dense star cluster
spirals-in to the Galactic centre. This process takes place on a dynamical
friction time scale, which depends on the value of the Coulomb logarithm ln(L).
We determine the accurate value of this parameter using the direct N-body
method, a tree algorithm and a particle-mesh technique with up to 2 million
plus one particles. The three different techniques are in excellent agreement.
Our result for the Coulomb logarithm appears to be independent of the number of
particles. We conclude that ln(L) = 6.6 +/- 0.6 for a massive point particle in
the inner few parsec of the Galactic bulge. For an extended object, like a
dense star cluster, ln(L) is smaller, with a value of the logarithm argument L
inversely proportional to the object size.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures, MNRAS, in press revised version following
referee's comments, references updated, typos correcte
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