62 research outputs found

    Air-leak management after upper lobectomy in patients with fused fissure and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a pilot trial comparing sealant and standard treatment

    Get PDF
    A pilot trial to compare the efficacy of two different procedures to prevent postoperative air-leak in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients submitted to upper lobectomy for non-small cell lung cancer. Sixty patients with COPD and lung cancer at the upper pulmonary lobes eligible for lobectomy were enrolled and randomly assigned either to standard treatment (ST) with stapling device or to electrocautery dissection and application of a collagen patch coated with human fibrinogen and thrombin (TachoSil) (experimental treatment [ET]) for the intra-operative completion of their fused fissures. Thirty patients were enrolled in each group during a three-year period. Preoperative characteristics were similar between the two groups. Statistically significant reduction of air-leak was registered in the ET group when overall incidence of postoperative air-leak (55% vs. 96%; P=0.03), postoperative air-leak (mean 1.63+/-1.96 vs. 4.33+/-4.12 days; P=0.0018), chest-drain (mean 3.53+/-1.59 vs. 5.90+/-3.72 days; P=0.0021) and hospital stay duration (mean 5.87+/-1.07 vs. 7.50+/-3.20 days; P=0.01) were considered. The use of TachoSil to prevent postoperative air-leak after interlobar fissure completion in patients with COPD submitted to upper lobectomy seems to be safe and more effective than the ST based on stapling device application

    Draft Genome Sequence of the Probiotic Yeast Kluyveromyces marxianus fragilis B0399

    Get PDF
    Here, we report the draft genome sequence of Kluyveromyces marxianus fragilis B0399, the first yeast approved as a probiotic for human consumption not belonging to the genus Saccharomyces The genome is composed of 8 chromosomes, with a total size of 11.44\ua0Mb, including mitochondrial DNA

    Are sequence variations in the BK virus control region essential for the development of polyomavirus nephropathy?

    No full text
    BK virus replication is regulated by the noncoding control region (NCCR); major NCCR rearrangements could modify the strength of viral replication, having a role in the development of polyomavirus-associated nephropathy (PAN). Urine (n = 34), blood (n = 32), and renal biopsy samples (n = 13) from 5 transplant recipients with PAN underwent nested polymerase chain reaction to search for the NCCR region. Sequence analysis was performed on all NCCR fragments obtained. Decoy cells were evaluated semiquantitatively in urine and PAN staged in renal biopsy specimens; the results were related to the presence and type of NCCR sequence variations. Major NCCR rearrangements were found in urine (9/75 [12%]), blood (7/30 [23%]), and renal biopsy (4/15 [27%]) samples in 3 cases; 2 cases had only unrearranged strains. Neither the detection and number of decoy cells nor the PAN stage were related to the specific type of NCCR sequence rearrangements. NCCR rearrangements do not seem essential for the development of PAN

    Tuning supramolecular structuring at the nanoscale level : Nonstoichiometric soluble complexes in dilute mixed solutions of alginate and lactose-modified chitosan (chitlac)

    No full text
    Two oppositely charged polysaccharides, alginate and a lactose-modified chitosan (chitlac), have been used to prepare dilute binary polymer mixtures at physiological pH (7.4). Because of the negative charge on the former polysaccharide and the positive charge on the latter, polyanion-polycation complex formation occurred. A complete miscibility between the two polysaccharides was attained in the presence of both high (0.15 M) and low (0.015 M) concentrations of simple 1:1 supporting salt (NaCl), as confirmed by turbidity measurements; phase separation occurred for intermediate values of the ionic strength (I). The binary solutions were further characterized by means of light scattering, specific viscosity, and fluorescence quenching measurements. All of these techniques pointed out the fundamental role of the electrostatic interactions between the two oppositely charged polysaccharides in the formation of nonstoichiometric polyelectrolyte soluble complexes in dilute solution. Fluorescence depolarization (P) experiments showed that the alginate chain rotational mobility was impaired by the presence of the cationic polysaccharide when 0.015 M NaCl was used. Moreover, upon addition of calcium, the P values of the binary polymer mixture in 0.015 M NaCl increased more rapidly than that of an alginate solution without chitlac, suggesting an efficient crowding of the negatively charged alginate chains caused by the polycation
    corecore