205 research outputs found
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Contains reports on four research projects.National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Grant NsG-334)Joint Services Electronics Programs (U. S. Army, U.S. Navy, and U.S. Air Force) under Contract DA 28-043-AMC-02536(E
Acute tropical pulmonary eosinophilia: characterization of the lower respiratory tract inflammation and its response to therapy
Although acute tropical pulmonary eosinophilia (TPE) is well
recognized as a manifestation of filarial infection, the processes
that mediate the abnormalities of the lung in TPE are unknown.
To evaluate the hypothesis that the derangements of the lower
respiratory tract in this disorder are mediated by inflammatory
cells in the local milieu we utilized bronchoalveolar lavage to
evaluate affected individuals before and after therapy. Inflaminatory
cells recovered from the lower respiratory tract of individuals
with acute, untreated TPE (a = 8) revealed a striking
eosinophilic alveolitis, with marked elevations in both the proportion
of eosinophils (TPE 54±5%; normal 2±5%; P < 0.001)
and the concentration of eosinophils in the recovered epithelial
lining fluid (ELF) (TPE 63±20 X 103/Al; normal 03±0.1
X 103/jl; P < 0.01). Importantly, when individuals (a = 5) with
acute TPE were treated with diethylcarbamazine (DEC), there
was a marked decrease of the lung eosinophils and concomitant
increase in lung function. These observations are consistent with
the concept that at least some of the abnormalities found in the
lung in acute TPE are mediated by an eosinophil-dominated inflammatory
process in the lower respiratory tract
Informatic Tools and Approaches in Postmarketing Pharmacovigilance Used by FDA
The safety profile of newly approved drugs and therapeutic biologics is less well developed by pre-marketing clinical testing than is the efficacy profile. The full safety profile of an approved product is established during years of clinical use. For nearly 40 years, the FDA has relied on the voluntary reporting of adverse events by healthcare practitioners and patients to help establish the safety of marketed products. Epidemiologic studies, including case series, secular trends, case-control and cohort studies, are used to supplement the investigation of a safety signal. Ideally, active surveillance systems would supplement the identification and exploration of safety signals. The FDA has implemented a number of initiatives to help identify safety problems with drugs and continues to evaluate their efforts
C. elegans Germline-Deficient Mutants Respond to Pathogen Infection Using Shared and Distinct Mechanisms
Reproduction extracts a cost in resources that organisms are then unable to utilize to deal with a multitude of environmental stressors. In the nematode C. elegans, development of the germline shortens the lifespan of the animal and increases its susceptibility to microbial pathogens. Prior studies have demonstrated germline-deficient nematodes to have increased resistance to Gram negative bacteria. We show that germline-deficient strains display increased resistance across a broad range of pathogens including Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria, and the fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans. Furthermore, we show that the FOXO transcription factor DAF-16, which regulates longevity and immunity in C. elegans, appears to be crucial for maintaining longevity in both wild-type and germline-deficient backgrounds. Our studies indicate that germline-deficient mutants glp-1 and glp-4 respond to pathogen infection using common and different mechanisms that involve the activation of DAF-16
Single-neutron transfer from 11Be gs via the (p,d) reaction with a radioactive beam
The 11Be(p,d)10Be reaction has been performed in inverse kinematics with a
radioactive 11Be beam of E/A = 35.3 MeV. Angular distributions for the 0+
ground state, the 2+, 3.37 MeV state and the multiplet of states around 6 MeV
in 10Be were measured at angles up to 16 deg CM by detecting the 10Be in a
dispersion-matched spectrometer and the coincident deuterons in a silicon
array. Distorted wave and coupled-channels calculations have been performed to
investigate the amount of 2+ core excitation in 11Be gs. The use of "realistic"
11Be wave functions is emphasised and bound state form factors have been
obtained by solving the particle-vibration coupling equations. This calculation
gives a dominant 2s component in the 11Be gs wave function with a 16% [2+ x 1d]
core excitation admixture. Cross sections calculated with these form factors
are in good agreement with the present data. The Separation Energy prescription
for the bound state wave function also gives satisfactory fits to the data, but
leads to a significantly larger [2 x 1d] component in 11Be gs.Comment: 39 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in Nuclear Physics A.
Added minor corrections made in proof to pages 26 and 3
Channel Coupling in Reactions
The sensitivity of momentum distributions, recoil polarization observables,
and response functions for nucleon knockout by polarized electrons to channel
coupling in final-state interactions is investigated using a model in which
both the distorting and the coupling potentials are constructed by folding
density-dependent effective interactions with nuclear transition densities.
Calculations for O are presented for 200 and 433 MeV ejectile energies,
corresponding to proposed experiments at MAMI and TJNAF, and for C at 70
and 270 MeV, corresponding to experiments at NIKHEF and MIT-Bates. The relative
importance of charge exchange decreases as the ejectile energy increases, but
remains significant for 200 MeV. Both proton and neutron knockout cross
sections for large recoil momenta, MeV/c, are substantially
affected by inelastic couplings even at 433 MeV. Significant effects on the
cross section for neutron knockout are also predicted at smaller recoil
momenta, especially for low energies. Polarization transfer for proton knockout
is insensitive to channel coupling, even for fairly low ejectile energies, but
polarization transfer for neutron knockout retains nonnegligible sensitivity to
channel coupling for energies up to about 200 MeV. The present results suggest
that possible medium modifications of neutron and proton electromagnetic form
factors for can be studied using recoil
polarization with relatively little sensitivity due to final state
interactions.Comment: Substantially revised version accepted by Phys. Rev. C; shortened to
49 pages including 21 figure
A polymorphic variant of the insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) receptor correlates with male longevity in the Italian population: a genetic study and evaluation of circulating IGF-1 from the "Treviso Longeva (TRELONG)" study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>An attenuation of the insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) signaling has been associated with elongation of the lifespan in simple metazoan organisms and in rodents. In humans, IGF-1 level has an age-related modulation with a lower concentration in the elderly, depending on hormonal and genetic factors affecting the IGF-1 receptor gene (<it>IGF-1R</it>).</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>In an elderly population from North-eastern Italy (<it>n </it>= 668 subjects, age range 70–106 years) we investigated the <it>IGF-1R </it>polymorphism G3174A (<it>rs2229765</it>) and the plasma concentration of free IGF-1. Frequency distributions were compared using χ<sup>2</sup>-test "Goodness of Fit" test, and means were compared by one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); multiple regression analysis was performed using JMP7 for SAS software (SAS Institute, USA). The limit of significance for genetic and biochemical comparison was set at α = 0.05.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Males showed an age-related increase in the A-allele of <it>rs2229765 </it>and a change in the plasma level of IGF-1, which dropped significantly after 85 years of age (85+ group). In the male 85+ group, A/A homozygous subjects had the lowest plasma IGF-1 level. We found no clear correlation between <it>rs2229765 </it>genotype and IGF-1 in the females.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>These findings confirm the importance of the <it>rs2229765 </it>minor allele as a genetic predisposing factor for longevity in Italy where a sex-specific pattern for IGF-1 attenuation with ageing was found.</p
Lensfree Fluorescent On-Chip Imaging of Transgenic Caenorhabditis elegans Over an Ultra-Wide Field-of-View
We demonstrate lensfree on-chip fluorescent imaging of transgenic Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) over an ultra-wide field-of-view (FOV) of e.g., >2–8 cm2 with a spatial resolution of ∼10µm. This is the first time that a lensfree on-chip platform has successfully imaged fluorescent C. elegans samples. In our wide-field lensfree imaging platform, the transgenic samples are excited using a prism interface from the side, where the pump light is rejected through total internal reflection occurring at the bottom facet of the substrate. The emitted fluorescent signal from C. elegans samples is then recorded on a large area opto-electronic sensor-array over an FOV of e.g., >2–8 cm2, without the use of any lenses, thin-film interference filters or mechanical scanners. Because fluorescent emission rapidly diverges, such lensfree fluorescent images recorded on a chip look blurred due to broad point-spread-function of our platform. To combat this resolution challenge, we use a compressive sampling algorithm to uniquely decode the recorded lensfree fluorescent patterns into higher resolution images, demonstrating ∼10 µm resolution. We tested the efficacy of this compressive decoding approach with different types of opto-electronic sensors to achieve a similar resolution level, independent of the imaging chip. We further demonstrate that this wide FOV lensfree fluorescent imaging platform can also perform sequential bright-field imaging of the same samples using partially-coherent lensfree digital in-line holography that is coupled from the top facet of the same prism used in fluorescent excitation. This unique combination permits ultra-wide field dual-mode imaging of C. elegans on a chip which could especially provide a useful tool for high-throughput screening applications in biomedical research
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