23 research outputs found

    Gastritis Cystica Polyposa-Report of a Case

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    A case of gastritis cystica polyposa is presented. A 45-year-old woman developed gastritis cystica polyposa at the gastroduodenostomy anastomotic site four years after Billroth II gastrectomy for adenomatous polyp. There was no association of gastric cancer in the lesion

    Thymic Alterations in GM2 Gangliosidoses Model Mice

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    BACKGROUND: Sandhoff disease is a lysosomal storage disorder characterized by the absence of β-hexosaminidase and storage of GM2 ganglioside and related glycolipids. We have previously found that the progressive neurologic disease induced in Hexb(-/-) mice, an animal model for Sandhoff disease, is associated with the production of pathogenic anti-glycolipid autoantibodies. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In our current study, we report on the alterations in the thymus during the development of mild to severe progressive neurologic disease. The thymus from Hexb(-/-) mice of greater than 15 weeks of age showed a marked decrease in the percentage of immature CD4(+)/CD8(+) T cells and a significantly increased number of CD4(+)/CD8(-) T cells. During involution, the levels of both apoptotic thymic cells and IgG deposits to T cells were found to have increased, whilst swollen macrophages were prominently observed, particularly in the cortex. We employed cDNA microarray analysis to monitor gene expression during the involution process and found that genes associated with the immune responses were upregulated, particularly those expressed in macrophages. CXCL13 was one of these upregulated genes and is expressed specifically in the thymus. B1 cells were also found to have increased in the thy mus. It is significant that these alterations in the thymus were reduced in FcRγ additionally disrupted Hexb(-/-) mice. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results suggest that the FcRγ chain may render the usually poorly immunogenic thymus into an organ prone to autoimmune responses, including the chemotaxis of B1 cells toward CXCL13

    Extracellular recordings of patterned human pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes on aligned fibers

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    Human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) derived cardiomyocytes (CMs) hold high potential for use in drug assessment and myocardial regeneration. To create tissue-like constructs of CMs for extracellular monitoring, we placed aligned fibers (AFs) on the surface of a microelectrode array and then seeded hiPSC-CMs for subsequent monitoring for 14 days. As expected, the CMs organized into anisotropic and matured tissue and the extracellular recordings showed reduced premature beating higher signal amplitude and a higher probability of T-wave detection as compared to the culture without fibers. The CMs on the aligned fibers samples also exhibited anisotropic propagation of the field potential. These results therefore suggest that the hiPSC-CMs cultured on AFs can be used more reliably for cell based assays

    Optimal initial cell density that yields the highest number of primary synovial mesenchymal stem cells in a clinical setting

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    Synovial mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) transplantation improved clinical outcomes in knees. In clinical situations, nucleated cells were cultured with 10% autologous serum for 14 days. Nucleated cell number and serum volume practically varied by patient, and initial cell density and dish number affected yield/donor. Our purpose was to estimate the MSC yield/donor from the fold increase obtained in this experiment in several patterns. We obtained the data of the autologous serum volume, nucleated cell number, and initial plating cell density from 10 patients who participated in our previous clinical studies. We used these previous clinical data and the current experimental data. Experimentally, fold increase significantly decreased between 700 and 1,900 cells/cm². In cases where the nucleated cell number was low and the serum volume was high, the estimated MSC yield/donor decreased along with the initial plating density. In cases where the nucleated cell number was high and the serum volume was low, the estimated MSC yield/donor increased along with the initial plating density. In cases where some nucleated cells were discarded, the maximum MSC yield/donor were obtained when the initial cell density was the highest cell density where some nucleated cells were discarded

    Role of Adenosine in Pathogenesis of Syndrome X: Assessment With Coronary Hemodynamic Measurements and Thallium-201 Myocardial Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography

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    AbstractObjectives. This study was performed 1) to examine the role of adenosine in the pathogenesis of syndrome X in patients with this syndrome and abnormal results on myocardial scintigrams during exercise, and 2) to determine the susceptibility to myocardial ischemia in this subset of patients with syndrome X.Background. A role for adenosine in the pathogenesis of syndrome X has recently been postulated, but there are few clinical data supporting this hypothesis.Methods. Exercise thallium-201 myocardial scintigraphy after intravenous administration of aminophylline, an adenosine receptor blocking agent, or saline solution and adenosine thallium-201 scintigraphy were performed in 26 patients with syndrome X. Hemodynamic variables during exercise and perfusion defect size after aminophylline and saline infusions were compared. At cardiac catheterization, coronary hemodynamic variables during separate infusions of adenosine and dobutamine were also examined and were compared among patients with abnormal or normal scintigrams and 10 control subjects.Results. Perfusion abnormalities on exercise-thallium-201 scintigraphy occurred in 14 of 26 patients with syndrome X. Intravenous infusion of aminophylline suppressed the scintigraphic perfusion defect and prolonged the time to 1-mm ST segment depression in patients with syndrome X with abnormal exercise scintigrams. Intravenous infusion of adenosine induced a perfusion defect in the same myocardial area where the perfusion defect was observed at exercise in 7 of the 14 patients with syndrome X. At cardiac catheterization, patients with syndrome X with abnormal exercise scintigrams had lower coronary flow reserve and a greater frequency of myocardial lactate production and ST segment depression in response to the infusions of adenosine and dobutamine than did the other two groups. During adenosine infusion, great cardiac vein blood flow and oxygen content were significantly increased and myocardial oxygen consumption and lactate extraction were significantly reduced from baseline without a significant increase in rate-pressure product in this subset of patients with syndrome X.Conclusions. Patients with syndrome X with abnormal exercise scintigrams have high susceptibility to myocardial ischemia during exercise or pharmacologic stress tests, probably owing to reduced coronary flow reserve. A heterogeneous response to endogenous adenosine may contribute to scintigraphic perfusion abnormalities and myocardial ischemia during exercise in this subset of patients with syndrome X

    Femtosecond laser direct writing in SiO 2 ‐Al 2 O 3 binary glasses and thermal stability of Type II permanent modifications

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    International audienceWe investigate the potential of fabricating thermally stable refractive index contrasts using femtosecond (fs) near-infrared (IR) radiation in aluminosilicate glasses. A set of pure SiO 2-Al 2 O 3 glasses are manufactured, characterized (density and Raman), and investigated after being irradiated by fs laser within the Type II regime. The formation of nanogratings is identified and studied using quantitative birefringence measurements. Their thermal stability is then investigated through 30 minutes step isochronal annealing (up to 1250°C). For both SiO 2 and 50SiO 2-50Al 2 O 3 compositions, the normalized birefringence does not decrease when tested up to 1100°C, while for the 4,6 mol% GeO 2-SiO 2 erased for 20% at 1000°C
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