13 research outputs found

    Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy With Inconspicuous Initial Electrocardiogram: A Potentially Serious Cardiac Pathology Related to Emotional Stress

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    Introduction: Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (TCM) is frequently associated with emotional or physical stress. Thus, patients with TCM might present primarily at a psychiatric clinic. Appropriate diagnosis and therapy may thus be delayed.Case report: A 43-year-old female patient presented as an emergency to the psychiatric outpatient clinic after experiencing severe work-related bullying. On admission, she complained of acute left thoracic chest pain as well as depressed mood, low energy, anhedonia, generalized anxiety, and sleep difficulties, present for several weeks. The initial electrocardiogram (ECG) was unremarkable; serum troponin levels, however, were markedly elevated. The patient was transferred to the department of cardiology. Via cardiac catheterization and MRI, an acute coronary syndrome was excluded and apical ballooning and left ventricular dysfunction, compatible with TCM, was found.Conclusion: Patients with acute psychopathology, recent emotional or physical stress, and acute cardiothoracic symptoms should receive immediate cardiological investigations. As the ECG may be normal in patients with TCM, concurrent measurement of the troponin serum level is recommended. Psychiatrists should consider TCM in patients who report recent stressful events accompanied by cardiothoracic symptoms

    A New Hydrogen Sensor Based on a Pt/GaAs Schottky Diode

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    4 páginas, 7 figuras, 1 tabla.-- PACS: 82.45.Jn; 07.07.Df; 85.30.Hi.A new hydrogen-sensitive detector based on a Pt/GaAs Schottky diode has been fabricated. The devices have beencharacterized by dark current-voltage and capacitance-voltage measurements, as a function of temperature and gas phasecomposition. At 150°C, the detection limit for hydrogen is 6 ppm in a nitrogen environment and 200 ppm in air.Peer reviewe

    Antagonizing Sec62 function in intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis represents a novel therapeutic strategy for head and neck cancer

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    Various cancer types including head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) show a frequent amplification of chromosomal region 3q26 that encodes, among others, for the SEC62 gene. Located in the ER membrane, this translocation protein is known to play a critical role as a potential driver oncogene in cancer development. High SEC62 expression levels were observed in various cancer entities and were associated with a poor outcome and increased metastatic burden. Because of its intracellular localization the SEC62 protein is poorly accessible for therapeutic antibodies, therefore a functional SEC62 knockdown represents the most promising mechanism of a potential antineoplastic targeted therapy. By stimulating the Ca2+ efflux from the ER lumen and thereby increasing cellular stress levels, a functional inhibition of SEC62 bears the potential to limit tumor growth and metastasis formation. In this study, two potential anti-metastatic and -proliferative agents that counteract SEC62 function were investigated in functional in vitro assays by utilizing an immortalized human hypopharyngeal cancer cell line as well as a newly established orthotopic murine in vivo model. Additionally, a CRISPR/ Cas9 based SEC62 knockout HNSCC cell line was generated and functionally characterized for its relevance in HNSCC cell proliferation and migration as well as sensitivity to SEC62 targeted therapy in vitro

    Home parenteral nutrition with an omega-3-fatty-acid-enriched MCT/LCT lipid emulsion in patients with chronic intestinal failure (the HOME study):study protocol for a randomized, controlled, multicenter, international clinical trial

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    BACKGROUND: Home parenteral nutrition (HPN) is a life-preserving therapy for patients with chronic intestinal failure (CIF) indicated for patients who cannot achieve their nutritional requirements by enteral intake. Intravenously administered lipid emulsions (ILEs) are an essential component of HPN, providing energy and essential fatty acids, but can become a risk factor for intestinal-failure-associated liver disease (IFALD). In HPN patients, major effort is taken in the prevention of IFALD. Novel ILEs containing a proportion of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFA) could be of benefit, but the data on the use of n-3 PUFA in HPN patients are still limited. METHODS/DESIGN: The HOME study is a prospective, randomized, controlled, double-blind, multicenter, international clinical trial conducted in European hospitals that treat HPN patients. A total of 160 patients (80 per group) will be randomly assigned to receive the n-3 PUFA-enriched medium/long-chain triglyceride (MCT/LCT) ILE (Lipidem/Lipoplus® 200 mg/ml, B. Braun Melsungen AG) or the MCT/LCT ILE (Lipofundin® MCT/LCT/Medialipide® 20%, B. Braun Melsungen AG) for a projected period of 8 weeks. The primary endpoint is the combined change of liver function parameters (total bilirubin, aspartate transaminase and alanine transaminase) from baseline to final visit. Secondary objectives are the further evaluation of the safety and tolerability as well as the efficacy of the ILEs. DISCUSSION: Currently, there are only very few randomized controlled trials (RCTs) investigating the use of ILEs in HPN, and there are very few data at all on the use of n-3 PUFAs. The working hypothesis is that n-3 PUFA-enriched ILE is safe and well-tolerated especially with regard to liver function in patients requiring HPN. The expected outcome is to provide reliable data to support this thesis thanks to a considerable number of CIF patients, consequently to broaden the present evidence on the use of ILEs in HPN. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, ID: NCT03282955. Registered on 14 September 2017

    Expression of FAP-1 by human colon adenocarcinoma: implication for resistance against Fas-mediated apoptosis in cancer

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    Although colon carcinoma cells express Fas receptors, they are resistant to Fas-mediated apoptosis. Defects within the intracellular Fas signal transduction may be responsible. We investigated whether the Fas-associated phosphatase-1 (FAP-1), an inhibitor of Fas signal transduction, contributed to this resistance in colon carcinomas. In vivo, apoptosis of cancer cells was detected in situ using terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labelling ( TUNEL). FAP-1, FasR, and Fas ligand (FasL) were detected using immunohistochemistry. In vitro, colon carcinoma cells were primarily cultured, and their sensitivity to Fas-mediated apoptosis was evaluated by treatment with agonistic anti-FasR CH11 IgM monoclonal antibody in the presence or absence of synthetic Ac-SLV (serine-leucine-valine) tripeptide. Fas-associated phosphatase-1 expression was detected in 20 out of 28 colon adenocarcinomas. In vivo, a positive correlation between the percentage of apoptotic tumour cells and the number of FasL-positive tumour infiltrating lymphocytes was observed in FAP-1 negative cancers, but not in FAP-1-positive ones. Primarily cultured colon cancer cells, which were refractory to CH-11-induced apoptosis, had higher expression of FAP-1 on protein and mRNA levels than the sensitive group. Resistance to Fas-mediated apoptosis in tumour cells could be abolished by Ac-SLV tripetides. Fas-associated phosphatase-1 expression protects colon cancer cells from Fas-mediated apoptosis, and blockade of FAP-1 and FasR interaction sensitises tumour cells to Fas-dependent apoptosis

    When causality matters for prediction: investigating the practical tradeoffs

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    Recent evaluations have indicated that in practice, general methods for prediction which do not account for changes in the conditional distribution of a target variable given feature values in some cases outperform causal discovery based methods for prediction which can account for such changes. We investigate some possibilities which may explain these findings. We give theoretical conditions, which are confirmed experimentally, for when particular manipulations of variables should not affect predictions for a target. We then consider the tradeoff between errors related to causality, i.e. not accounting for changes in a distribution after variables are manipulated, and errors resulting from sample bias, overfitting, and assuming specific parametric forms that do not fit the data, which most existing causal discovery based methods are particularly prone to making
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