290 research outputs found
Bucillamine prevents cisplatin-induced ototoxicity through induction of glutathione and antioxidant genes.
Bucillamine is used for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. This study investigated the protective effects of bucillamine against cisplatin-induced damage in auditory cells, the organ of Corti from postnatal rats (P2) and adult Balb/C mice. Cisplatin increases the catalytic activity of caspase-3 and caspase-8 proteases and the production of free radicals, which were significantly suppressed by pretreatment with bucillamine. Bucillamine induces the intranuclear translocation of Nrf2 and thereby increases the expression of Îł-glutamylcysteine synthetase (Îł-GCS) and glutathione synthetase (GSS), which further induces intracellular antioxidant glutathione (GSH), heme oxygenase 1 (HO-1) and superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2). However, knockdown studies of HO-1 and SOD2 suggest that the protective effect of bucillamine against cisplatin is independent of the enzymatic activity of HO-1 and SOD. Furthermore, pretreatment with bucillamine protects sensory hair cells on organ of Corti explants from cisplatin-induced cytotoxicity concomitantly with inhibition of caspase-3 activation. The auditory-brainstem-evoked response of cisplatin-injected mice shows marked increases in hearing threshold shifts, which was markedly suppressed by pretreatment with bucillamine in vivo. Taken together, bucillamine protects sensory hair cells from cisplatin through a scavenging effect on itself, as well as the induction of intracellular GSH
A Generic Hybrid Model for Bulk Elastodynamics, With Application to Ultrasonic Nondestructive Evaluation
Monolayer
two-dimensional transitional metal dichalcogenides, such as MoS<sub>2</sub>, WS<sub>2</sub>, and WSe<sub>2</sub>, are direct band gap
semiconductors with large exciton binding energy. They attract growing
attentions for optoelectronic applications including solar cells,
photodetectors, light-emitting diodes and phototransistors, capacitive
energy storage, photodynamic cancer therapy, and sensing on flexible
platforms. While light-induced luminescence has been widely studied,
luminescence induced by injection of free electrons could promise
another important applications of these new materials. However, cathodoluminescence
is inefficient due to the low cross-section of the electronâhole
creating process in the monolayers. Here for the first time we show
that cathodoluminescence of monolayer chalcogenide semiconductors
can be evidently observed in a van der Waals heterostructure when
the monolayer semiconductor is sandwiched between layers of hexagonal
boron nitride (hBN) with higher energy gap. The emission intensity
shows a strong dependence on the thicknesses of surrounding layers
and the enhancement factor is more than 500-fold. Strain-induced exciton
peak shift in the suspended heterostructure is also investigated by
the cathodoluminescence spectroscopy. Our results demonstrate that
MoS<sub>2</sub>, WS<sub>2</sub>, and WSe<sub>2</sub> could be promising
cathodoluminescent materials for applications in single-photon emitters,
high-energy particle detectors, transmission electron microscope displays,
surface-conduction electron-emitter, and field emission display technologies
Retrieving positions of closely packed sub-wavelength nanoparticles from their diffraction patterns
Distinguishing two objects or point sources located closer than the Rayleigh
distance is impossible in conventional microscopy. Understandably, the task
becomes increasingly harder with a growing number of particles placed in close
proximity. It has been recently demonstrated that subwavelength nanoparticles
in closely packed clusters can be counted by AI-enabled analysis of the
diffraction patterns of coherent light scattered by the cluster. Here we show
that deep learning analysis can determine the actual position of the
nanoparticle in the cluster of subwavelength particles from a sing-shot
diffraction pattern even if they are separated by distances below the Rayleigh
resolution limit of a conventional microscope.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Chemotherapeutic Candidate Inducing Immunological Death of Human Tumor Cell Lines
The immunological death induction by EY-6 on the human tumor cell lines was screened. Human colon carcinoma (HCT15, HCT116), gastric carcinoma (MKN74, SNU668), and myeloma (KMS20, KMS26, KMS34) cells were died by EY-6 treatment with dose-dependent manner. CRT expression, a typical marker for the immunological death, was increased on the EY-6-treated colorectal and gastric cancer cells. Interestingly, the effects on the myeloma cell lines were complicated showing cell line dependent differential modulation. Cytokine secretion from the EY-6 treated tumor cells were dose and cell-dependent. IFN-Îł and IL-12 secretion was increased in the treated cells (200% to over 1000% of non-treated control), except HCT116, SNU668 and KMS26 cells which their secretion was declined by EY-6. Data suggest the potential of EY-6 as a new type of immuno-chemotherapeutics inducing tumor-specific cell death. Further studies are planned to confirm the efficacy of EY-6 including in vivo study
Idiopathic severe hypermagnesemia in an extremely low birth weight infant on the first day of life
A preterm female infant born at 27 weeks of gestation with a birth weight of 990 g developed acute hypotonia, apnea, hypotension and bradycardia mimicking septic shock syndrome at 14h after birth. Laboratory tests indicated a severe hypermagnesemia of 45 mg/dL. The renal function, complete blood count and maternal blood concentrations of magnesium were normal, and the blood cultures were negative. The patient recovered with treatment including exchange transfusion. However, the etiology of the severe hypermagnesemia remains unknown
Lower leg compartment syndrome following prolonged orthopedic surgery in the lithotomy position -A case report-
Surgical procedures necessitating the prolonged use of the lithotomy position can be associated with neuromuscular dysfunction. Compartment syndrome of the lower leg is a grave complication which, if unrecognized, can lead to either permanent neuromuscular dysfunction or limb loss. We report a case of compartment syndrome of lower leg that occurred in male patient aged 20 years after 380 minutes arthroscopic surgery in the lithotomy position
Impact of mental disorders on the risk of atrial fibrillation in patients with diabetes mellitus:a nationwide population-based study
BACKGROUND: It is unclear whether mental disorders are an independent risk factor for atrial fibrillation (AF) in patients with diabetes. We aimed to investigate whether patients with diabetes who have mental disorders have an increased risk for AF. METHODS: Using the Korea National Health Insurance Service database, we enrolled 2,512,690 patients diagnosed with diabetes without AF between 2009 and 2012. We assessed five mental disorders: depression, insomnia, anxiety, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia. Newly diagnosed AF was identified during the follow-up period, and multivariate Cox regression analysis was performed. RESULTS: Among the 2,512,690 patients (mean age 57.2â±â12.3 years; 60.1% men), 828,929 (33.0%) had mental disorders. Among the five mental disorders, anxiety (68.1%) was the most common, followed by insomnia (40.0%). During a median follow-up duration of 7.1 years, new-onset AF was diagnosed in 79,525 patients (4.66 per 1,000 person-years). Patients with diabetes who had mental disorders showed a higher risk for AF (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 1.19; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.17â1.21; p-valueâ<â0.001). Depression, insomnia, and anxiety were significantly associated with higher risk for AF (adjusted HR [95% CI]: 1.15 [1.12â1.17], 1.15 [1.13â1.18], and 1.19 [1.67â1.21], respectively; all p-valuesâ<â0.001), whereas bipolar disorder and schizophrenia were not. CONCLUSIONS: Mental disorders, especially depression, insomnia, and anxiety, were associated with an increased risk for AF in patients with diabetes. Greater awareness with a prompt diagnosis of AF should be considered for patients with both DM and mental disorders. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12933-022-01682-7
Solitary Extramedullary Plasmacytoma of the Liver without Systemic Monoclonal Gammopathy
Extramedullary plasmacytoma of the liver is a very rare tumor. Although a few cases of extramedullary plasmacytoma of the liver have been reported, we could not find any report on truly localized extramedullary plasmacytoma of the liver in the literature. The patient was a 63-yr-old man who exhibited a solitary liver mass on dynamic computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging. Histologically, the tumor was composed of mature plasma cells with mild atypia. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated monoclonal IgG and Kappa light chain expression. Bone marrow examination revealed no abnormalities. There was no evidence of a monoclonal protein in the serum and urine, lytic bone lesions, anemia, renal insufficiency, and hypercalcemia. The patient was treated with 5,000 cGy of radiotherapy, and the tumor disappeared 6 months after treatment
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