19 research outputs found

    Surface treatment of polycarbonate films aimed at biomedical application

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    Aiming to encapsulate pancreatic islets, a biocompatible polycarbonate membrane (What-man) was treated with plasma argon in order to improve its surface properties. The argon plasma treatment decreased the hydrophobicity of the membrane by fixing polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) at the surface. The water angle contact decreased from 47degrees to 20degrees after this treatment, while the structure and pore diameter were preserved. The treatment also increased significantly the water permeability from 62 +/- 8 ml/min to 200 +/- 29 ml/min (P < 0.001). ToF-SIMS analyses revealed that the argon plasma treatment of the membrane allowed the installation of an uniform PVP layer at the surface. The concentration equilibrum in glucose was reached after 8 h diffusion for the treated membrane, while it was only 32.4 +/- 8.6% (P < 0.01) for the untreated membrane. The biocompatibility of the polycarbonate membrane was assessed after one month of implantation in rats and proved to be unaffected by the surface treatment. In conclusion, the present study provided sufficient information to establish a relationship between the physicochemical modifications of the PVP-plasma-treated polycarbonate membrane and the improvement in its permeability

    Surface treatment of polycarbonate films aimed at biomedical application

    No full text
    Aiming to encapsulate pancreatic islets, a biocompatible polycarbonate membrane (Whatman) was treated with plasma argon in order to improve its surface properties. The argon plasma treatment decreased the hydrophobicity of the membrane by fixing polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) at the surface. The water angle contact decreased from 47 degrees to 20 degrees after this treatment, while the structure and pore diameter were preserved. The treatment also increased significantly the water permeability from 62 +/- 8 ml/min to 200 +/- 29 ml/min (P < 0.001). ToF-SIMS analyses revealed that the argon plasma treatment of the membrane allowed the installation of an uniform PVP layer at the surface. The concentration equilibrum in glucose was reached after 8 h diffusion for the treated membrane, while it was only 32.4 +/- 8.6% (P < 0.01) for the untreated membrane. The biocompatibility of the polycarbonate membrane was assessed after one month of implantation in rats and proved to be unaffected by the surface treatment. In conclusion, the present study provided sufficient information to establish a relationship between the physicochemical modifications of the PVP-plasma-treated polycarbonate membrane and the improvement in its permeability

    Role of chemokine signaling pathways in pancreatic islet rejection during allo- and xenotransplantation

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    During transplantation, pancreatic islets release chemokines promoting macrophage attraction, hampering engraftment of islets. The aim of this work was to examine the mechanism of macrophage-pancreatic islets interaction that mediates islet rejection during transplantation. Human macrophages exposed to supernates of human and porcine pancreatic islets for the allogeneic and xenogeneic models, respectively, were evaluated for chemotaxis and expression of chemokine receptors (CCR-5). To modulate migration and identify the signaling pathway of macrophages, we tested pertussis toxin (PTX) to block Gi protein, and staurosporin and wortmannin to inhibit the protein kinase, and phosphoinositol-3 kinase, respectively. The addition of these agents significantly reduced macrophage migration induced by human islet supernates from 3.2 +/- 0.5 to 1.5 +/- 0.2, 0.9 +/- 0.1, and 1 +/- 0.1, respectively (P < .001, n = 3). In a xenotransplantation model, the reduction was less decreased, from 4.1 +/- 0.4 to 2.7 +/- 0.3 (P < .01), to 2.5 +/- 0.3 (P < .01), or to 1 +/- 0.1 (P < .001). Western blot analysis of chemokine receptor expression showed increased CCR-5 expression with human pancreatic islet supernates. Moreover, decreased islet purity increased CCR-5 expression. Pharmacologic study showed that PTX induced an increase in CCR-5 expression in allogeneic transplantation, whereas only staurosporin induced an increased receptor expression in the xenogeneic model, suggesting that chemokines participate in islet rejection even though the chemokine signaling pathways differ between allo- and xenotransplantation. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of islet rejection may improve graft survival

    Bulk Liquid Water at Ambient Temperature and Pressure from MP2 Theory

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    MP2 provides a good description of hydrogen bonding in water clusters and includes long-range dispersion interactions without the need to introduce empirical elements in the description of the interatomic potential. To assess its performance for bulk liquid water under ambient conditions, an isobaric-isothermal (NpT) Monte Carlo simulation at the second-order Moller-Plesset perturbation theory level (MP2) has been performed. The obtained value of the water density is excellent (1.02 g/mL), and the calculated radial distribution functions are in fair agreement with experimental data. The MP2 results are compared to a few density functional approximations, including semilocal functionals, hybrid functionals, and functionals including empirical dispersion corrections. These results demonstrate the feasibility of directly sampling the potential energy surface of condensed-phase systems using correlated wave function theory, and their quality paves the way for further applications

    Fase di avanzamento degli studi promossi dal gruppo collaborativo MODS. [Progress of studies promoted by the MODS collaborative group].

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    n industrialised countries, carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is considered an epidemic work-related disease. We have set up the MODS (Malattie Occupazionali Da Sovraccarico biomeccanico, biomechanical overload-related occupational diseases) collaborative group, formed by epidemiologists, ergonomists and occupational physicians to investigate CTS in Italy, applying the methods that epidemiologists commonly use to understand epidemics. Several studies are already ongoing. Two different descriptive studies based on current hospitalisation data are in the reporting phase. A pilot case-control multicentre study (260 cases and 520 controls in 13 centres) is in the final phase of data collection. A longitudinal study on a cohort of 3000 subjects exposed to different risk factors has reached the third year of follow-up. Moreover, a surveillance system has been set up to cover selected districts of the Emilia Romagna region. These studies will generate new information about the prevalence and incidence of CTS in Italy, along with identification of regional, high-risk job titles and work sectors, and the relative influence of non-occupational factors
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