1,145 research outputs found

    CSF lactate dehydrogenase activity in patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease exceeds that in other dementias

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    The diagnosis of Creutzfeldt- Jakob disease (CJD) is still made by exclusion of other dementias. We now evaluated lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) as a possible additional diagnostic tool. CSF LDH levels of patients with CJD ( n = 26) were compared with those in other dementias ( n = 28). LDH isoenzymes were determined in a subset ( n = 9). Total LDH and isoenzyme LDH-1 were significantly higher, whereas the fractions of LDH-2 and LDH-3 were significantly lower in CJD patients. We conclude that in addition to established CSF parameters, LDH and its isoenzymes might serve as a further help to discriminate between CJD and other dementias. Copyright (C) 2004 S. Karger AG, Basel

    WingSegment: A Computer Vision‐Based Hybrid Approach for Insect Wing Image Segmentation and 3D Printing

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    This article introduces WingSegment, a MATLAB app‐designed tool employing a hybrid approach of computer vision and graph theory for precise insect wing image segmentation. WingSegment detects cells, junctions, Pterostigma, and venation patterns, measuring geometric features and generating Voronoi patterns. The tool utilizes region‐growing, thinning, and Dijkstra's algorithms for boundary detection, junction identification, and vein path extraction. It provides histograms and box plots of geometric features, facilitating comprehensive wing analysis. WingSegment's efficiency is validated through comparisons with established tools and manual measurements, demonstrating accurate results. The tool further enables exporting detected boundaries as FreeCAD macro files for 3D modeling and printing, supporting finite element analysis. Beyond advancing insect wing morphology understanding, WingSegment holds broader implications for diverse planar structures, including leaves and geocells. This tool not only enhances automated geometric analysis and 3D model generation in insect wing studies but also contributes to the broader advancement of analysis, 3D printing, and modeling technologies across various planar structures

    Electrocardiographic and echocardiographic evaluation in dogs with hypothyroidism before and after levothyroxine supplementation: A prospective controlled study.

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    Background: Improvement in cardiac function has been demonstrated after thyroxine treatment in humans with hypothyroidism using the myocardial performance index (MPI). Cardiac changes after thyroxine supplementation are poorly documented in dogs with spontaneous hypothyroidism and comparison with clinically healthy dogs is lacking. Objectives: To evaluate the electrical activity and mechanical function of the heart in dogs with primary hypothyroidism at baseline (T0) and after thyroxine supplementation (T60). Animals: Forty client-owned dogs with hypothyroidism and 20 clinically healthy dogs. Methods: Prospective cohort study. Selected electrocardiographic and echocardiographic variables, including the MPI, were measured in all dogs at T0 and in 30 hypothyroid dogs at T60. Results: Hypothyroid dogs had significantly decreased median or mean heart rate (HR), P wave amplitude, and R wave amplitude (P =.04, P =.002, and P =.003, respectively) and E-point-to-septal separation normalized to body weight (EPSSn) and trans-mitral E wave velocity (E max; P <.001 and P =.025, respectively) at T0 compared to control dogs. At T60, significantly increased median or mean HR, P wave amplitude, fractional shortening, and E max (P <.001, P =.004, P =.002, and P =.009, respectively) and significantly decreased left ventricular end-diastolic volume index, and normalized systolic diameter and EPSSn (P =.03, P =.03, and P =.001, respectively) were found. Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Hypothyroidism in dogs induces mild and reversible changes of electromechanical cardiac function. The MPI does not have clinical importance in identifying cardiac dysfunction in affected dogs

    Electrocardiographic and echocardiographic evaluation in dogs with hypothyroidism before and after levothyroxine supplementation: A prospective controlled study

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    Background: Improvement in cardiac function has been demonstrated after thyroxine treatment in humans with hypothyroidism using the myocardial performance index (MPI). Cardiac changes after thyroxine supplementation are poorly documented in dogs with spontaneous hypothyroidism and comparison with clinically healthy dogs is lacking. Objectives: To evaluate the electrical activity and mechanical function of the heart in dogs with primary hypothyroidism at baseline (T0) and after thyroxine supplementation (T60). Animals: Forty client-owned dogs with hypothyroidism and 20 clinically healthy dogs. Methods: Prospective cohort study. Selected electrocardiographic and echocardiographic variables, including the MPI, were measured in all dogs at T0 and in 30 hypothyroid dogs at T60. Results: Hypothyroid dogs had significantly decreased median or mean heart rate (HR), P wave amplitude, and R wave amplitude (P =.04, P =.002, and P =.003, respectively) and E-point-to-septal separation normalized to body weight (EPSSn) and trans-mitral E wave velocity (E max; P <.001 and P =.025, respectively) at T0 compared to control dogs. At T60, significantly increased median or mean HR, P wave amplitude, fractional shortening, and E max (P <.001, P =.004, P =.002, and P =.009, respectively) and significantly decreased left ventricular end-diastolic volume index, and normalized systolic diameter and EPSSn (P =.03, P =.03, and P =.001, respectively) were found. Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Hypothyroidism in dogs induces mild and reversible changes of electromechanical cardiac function. The MPI does not have clinical importance in identifying cardiac dysfunction in affected dogs

    Red Blood Cell Distribution Width, Hematology, and Serum Biochemistry in Dogs with Echocardiographically Estimated Precapillary and Postcapillary Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

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    Background: Red blood cell distribution width (RDW) is a quantitative measurement of anisocytosis. RDW has prognostic value in humans with different cardiovascular and systemic disorders, but few studies have investigated this biomarker in dogs. Objectives: To compare the RDW in dogs with precapillary and postcapillary pulmonary hypertension (PH) and a control population of dogs and to correlate RDW with demographic, echocardiographic, and laboratory variables. Animals: One hundred and twenty-seven client-owned dogs including 19 healthy dogs, 82 dogs with myxomatous mitral valve disease (50 dogs without PH and 32 dogs with postcapillary PH), and 26 dogs with precapillary PH. Methods: Prospective study. Dogs were allocated to groups according to clinical and echocardiographic evaluation. RDW and selected laboratory and echocardiographic variables were compared among dog groups. Associations between RDW and demographic, laboratory, and echocardiographic variables were analyzed using correlation and multiple regression analysis. Results: Median RDW in dogs with precapillary PH (13.8%, interquartile range 13.2\ue2\u80\u9314.9%) and postcapillary PH (13.7, 13.2\ue2\u80\u9314.7%) was significantly increased compared to healthy dogs (13.3, 12.3\ue2\u80\u9313.7%; P <.05 for both comparisons), but only dogs with severe PH had significantly increased RDW compared to dogs without PH (P <.05). Peak tricuspid regurgitation pressure gradient was significantly associated with increased RDW (rho = 0.263, P =.007). Serum urea concentration, hematocrit, age, and white blood cell number were significantly associated with RDW in the multivariate analysis. Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Underlying pathophysiologic processes associated with PH instead of severity of PH are likely responsible for increased RDW in dogs with PH

    Echocardiographic predictors of first onset of atrial fibrillation in dogs with myxomatous mitral valve disease

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    Background: Atrial fibrillation (AF) occurs in dogs with myxomatous mitral valve disease (MMVD) as a consequence of left atrial (LA) dilatation, and it affects survival and quality of life. Objectives: To evaluate the usefulness of echocardiography in predicting the first occurrence of AF in dogs with MMVD. Animals: Forty-four client-owned dogs with MMVD, 22 dogs that developed AF, and 22 dogs that maintained sinus rhythm. Methods: Retrospective observational study. Medical databases were reviewed for dogs that developed AF during the year after diagnosis of MMVD (AF group). The last echocardiographic examination obtained while still in sinus rhythm was used to derive selected variables. For each dog with AF, a control dog matched for body weight, class of heart failure, and LA dimension was selected. Echocardiographic results including LA volumes and LA speckle tracking echocardiography (STE)-derived variables were measured. Results: Among the tested echocardiographic variables, only LA diameter (P =.03) and left ventricular internal diameter in diastole (P =.03) differed significantly between groups, whereas body weight-indexed variables of cardiac dimension as well as LA volumes and volume-derived functional variables were not different. Among the STE-derived variables, peak atrial longitudinal strain (PALS) results differed significantly between the AF group (23.8% \ub1 8.6%) and the control group (30.5% \ub1 9.6%; P =.03). A value of PALS 6428% predicted AF occurrence with sensitivity and specificity of 0.80 and 0.65, respectively. Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Absolute cardiac diameters and LA STE (in particular, PALS) are useful echocardiographic predictors for the development of AF in dogs with MMVD

    Konsensueller Sadomasochismus: eine empirische PrĂŒfung von Bindungsstil und Sozialisationseinfluss

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    "Sadomasochismus ist laut vorherrschender, meist psychoanalytisch orientierter Theorien, eine Störung, die sich Ă€tiologisch auf strafende, wenig einfĂŒhlsame Eltern oder kindliche Traumata zurĂŒckfĂŒhren lĂ€sst und mit mangelnder BindungsfĂ€higkeit im Erwachsenenalter einhergeht. Die Theorien haben jedoch den Schwachpunkt, fast ausschließlich auf klinischen Stichproben zu beruhen. Da Psychotherapiepatienten im Allgemeinen eine schlechtere Bindung zum Partner haben und seltener eine positive Erziehungspraxis ihrer Eltern schildern, soll die vorliegende Studie die Aussagekraft psychoanalytischer Modelle fĂŒr die Mehrheit der klinisch unauffĂ€lligen, konsensuell in einer Paarbeziehung praktizierenden Sadomasochisten ĂŒberprĂŒfen. Dabei wurden bei einer nicht-klinischen Stichprobe von Sadomasochisten und einer Kontrollstichprobe zum einen die Merkmale 'elterlicher Erziehungsstil', 'traumatische Erfahrungen', 'Bindungsstil' und 'Beziehungszufriedenheit', zum anderen als alternativer ErklĂ€rungsansatz das 'Reizsucheverhalten' ('Sensation Seeking') auf Unterschiede getestet. Die Ergebnisse stĂŒtzen die Hypothese, dass sich klinisch unauffĂ€llige, konsensuelle Sadomasochisten von Nicht-Sadomasochisten in den theoretisch hergeleiteten Bereichen nicht unterscheiden. Geringe Unterschiede konnten im Bereich des 'Sensation Seeking' gefunden werden." (Autorenreferat)"According to prevalent theories based on psychoanalyst concepts, sadomasochism is a mental disorder, which has an etiology of punitive, little empathic parents or infantile traumata and involves poor attachment capacities in adulthood. However, such theories have the flaw of resting almost exclusively on clinical samples. As psychotherapy clients generally show poorer attachment to their partners and more rarely report positive nurturing practices by their parents, this study’s goal is to examine the explanatory power of the psychoanalytic models for the majority of non-clinical sadomasochists, who consensually practice their sexual preference in a relationship. The characteristics of 'parental nurturing practice', 'traumatic experiences', 'attachment-style' and 'relationship satisfaction' on the one hand, and 'sensation seeking' as alternative explanation on the other hand are being tested for differences between the non-clinical sadomasochist group and a control group. Results corroborate the hypothesis that non-clinical consensual sadomasochists do not differ from non-sadomasochists in the above named characteristics deduced from theories. Small differences could be found in the field of 'sensation seeking'." (author's abstract

    Plasmatic Dimethylarginines in Dogs With Myxomatous Mitral Valve Disease

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    Plasmatic dimethylarginines, asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA) and symmetric dimethylarginine (SDMA) are considered biomarkers of endothelial and renal dysfunction, respectively, in humans. We hypothesize that plasmatic concentration of dimethylarginines in dogs with myxomatous mitral valve disease (MMVD) is influenced by heart disease stage. Eighty-five client-owned dogs with MMVD, including 39, 19, and 27 dogs in ACVIM stages B1, B2, and C+D, respectively, and a control group of 11 clinically healthy dogs were enrolled. A prospective, multicentric, case-control study was performed. Each dog underwent a complete clinical examination, arterial blood pressure measurement, thoracic radiography, six-lead standard electrocardiogram, transthoracic echocardiography, CBC, biochemical profile, and urinalysis. Plasmatic concentration of dimethylarginines was determined through high-performance liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry. Median ADMA was significantly increased in dogs of group C+D (2.5 ÎŒmol/L [2.1–3.0]) compared to those of group B1 (1.8 ÎŒmol/L [1.6–2.3]; p < 0.001) and healthy dogs (1.9 ÎŒmol/L [1.7–2.3]; p = 0.02). Median SDMA was significantly increased in dogs of group C+D (0.7 ÎŒmol/L [0.5–0.9]) compared to those of groups B1 (0.4 ÎŒmol/L [0.3–0.5]; p < 0.001), B2 (0.4 ÎŒmol/L [0.3–0.6]; p < 0.01), and the control group (0.4 ÎŒmol/L [0.35–0.45]; p = 0.001). In the final multivariable analysis, ADMA and SDMA were significantly associated with left atrium to aorta ratio (p < 0.001), and creatinine (p < 0.001), respectively. Increased plasmatic concentrations of dimethylarginines suggest a possible role as biomarkers of disease severity in dogs with decompensated MMVD
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