290 research outputs found
Treatment of malignant hypercalcaemia with aminohexane bisphosphonate (neridronate).
Twenty patients with hypercalcaemia due to malignancy, which persisted following rehydration, were treated with the bisphosphonate, aminohexane bisphosphonate (AHBP), which is structurally similar to pamidronate. The treatment given was a single infusion of 125 mg of AHBP in 500 ml of normal saline infused over 4 h. Serum and urine biochemistry were measured before and after treatment. Acute toxicity was evaluated with particular attention to gastrointestinal symptoms, acute-phase reaction and change in renal function, as judged by serum creatinine. The infusion of AHBP induced a rapid fall apparent by day 3 (P < 0.001), with a nadir at day 7. The serum calcium remained lower at days 14 and 28 than at day 0, but the numbers followed up were low (n = 5 and n = 4). In all 20 patients there was a fall in serum calcium after treatment, and in 13 (65%) normocalcaemia was achieved. Failure to respond completely to AHBP appeared to be associated with a renal mechanism of hypercalcaemia. Treatment was associated with a significant decrease in fasting urinary calcium excretion (P < 0.05). There was no change in white cell count or renal function following AHBP and only two cases of mild pyrexia after infusion. We conclude that aminohexane bisphosphonate is an effective agent in the treatment of tumour-induced hypercalcaemia, with rapid onset of effect and low toxicity
Adsorption of Indium on a InAs wetting layer deposited on the GaAs(001) surface
In this work we perform a first-principles study of the adsorption properties
of an In adatom deposited on 1.75 monolayers (ML) InAs, forming a wetting layer
on GaAs with the or
reconstruction. The structural properties of these reconstructions have been
studied: we determine the equilibrium geometry of the surfaces and their
stability for various growth conditions. We have then carried out a detailed
study of the potential energy surface (PES) for an In adsorbate, finding the
minima and the saddle points. The main characteristics of the PES and the
bonding configurations of the In adatom on the surface are analyzed by
comparing with analogous studies reported in the literature, trying to extract
the effects due to: (i) the compressive strain to which the InAs adlayer is
subjected, (ii) the particular surface reconstruction, and (iii) the wetting
layer composition. We found that, in general, stable adsorption sites are
located at: (i) locations besides the As in-dimers, (ii) positions bridging two
As in-dimers, (iii) between two adjacent ad-dimers (only in ), and
(iv) locations bridging two As ad-dimers. We find also other shallower
adsorption sites which are more reconstruction specific due to the lower
symmetry of the reconstruction compared to the
reconstruction
Epithelial ovarian carcinoma diagnosis by desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry imaging
Ovarian cancer is highly prevalent among European women, and is the leading cause of gynaecological cancer death. Current histopathological diagnoses of tumour severity are based on interpretation of, for example, immunohistochemical staining. Desorption electrospray mass spectrometry imaging (DESI-MSI) generates spatially resolved metabolic profiles of tissues and supports an objective investigation of tumour biology. In this study, various ovarian tissue types were analysed by DESI-MSI and co-registered with their corresponding haematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained images. The mass spectral data reveal tissue type-dependent lipid profiles which are consistent across the n = 110 samples (n = 107 patients) used in this study. Multivariate statistical methods were used to classify samples and identify molecular features discriminating between tissue types. Three main groups of samples (epithelial ovarian carcinoma, borderline ovarian tumours, normal ovarian stroma) were compared as were the carcinoma histotypes (serous, endometrioid, clear cell). Classification rates >84% were achieved for all analyses, and variables differing statistically between groups were determined and putatively identified. The changes noted in various lipid types help to provide a context in terms of tumour biochemistry. The classification of unseen samples demonstrates the capability of DESI-MSI to characterise ovarian samples and to overcome existing limitations in classical histopathology
Effectiveness of DNA-recombinant anti-hepatitis B vaccines in blood donors: a cohort study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Although various studies have demonstrated efficacy of DNA-recombinant anti-hepatitis B vaccines, their effectiveness in health care settings has not been researched adequately. This gap is particularly visible for blood donors, a group of significant importance in the reduction of transfusion-transmitted hepatitis B.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>This is a double cohort study of 1411 repeat blood donors during the period 1998–2002, involving a vaccinated and an unvaccinated cohort, with matching of the two in terms of sex, age and residence. Average follow-up was 3.17 person-years. The outcome measure was infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV), defined by testing positive on serologic markers HBsAg or anti-HBC. All blood donors were from the blood bank in Joaçaba, federal state of Santa Catarina, Brazil.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The cohorts did not differ significantly regarding sex, age and marital status but the vaccinated cohort had higher mean number of blood donations and higher proportion of those residing in the county capital Joaçaba. Hepatitis B incidences per 1000 person-years were zero among vaccinated and 2,33 among non-vaccinated, resulting in 100% vaccine effectiveness with 95% confidence interval from 30,1% to 100%. The number of vaccinated persons necessary to avoid one HBV infection in blood donors was estimated at 429 with 95% confidence interval from 217 to 21422.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The results showed very high effectiveness of DNA-recombinant anti-HBV vaccines in blood donors. Its considerable variation in this study is likely due to the limited follow-up and the influence of confounding factors normally balanced out in efficacy clinical trials.</p
Engineering substrate promiscuity in halophilic alcohol dehydrogenase (HvADH2) by in silico design
An alcohol dehydrogenase from the halophilic archaeon Haloferax volcanii (HvADH2) has been engineered by rational design to broaden its substrate scope towards the conversion of a range of aromatic substrates, including flurbiprofenol, that is an intermediate of the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, flurbiprofen. Wild-type HvADH2 showed minimal activity with flurbiprofenol (11.1 mU/mg). A homology model of HvADH2 was built and docking experiments with this substrate revealed that the biphenyl rings of flurbiprofenol formed strong interactions with residues F85 and F108, preventing its optimal binding in the active site. Mutations at position 85 however did not increase activity. Site directed mutagenesis at position F108 allowed the identification of three variants showing a significant (up to 2.3-fold) enhancement of activity towards flurbiprofenol, when compared to wild-type HvADH2. Interestingly, F108G variant did not show the classic inhibition in the presence of (R)-enantiomer when tested with rac-1-phenylethanol, underling its potential in racemic resolution of secondary alcohols
Evidence for sub-haplogroup h5 of mitochondrial DNA as a risk factor for late onset Alzheimer's disease
BACKGROUND:
Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is the most common neurodegenerative disease and the leading cause of dementia among senile subjects. It has been proposed that AD can be caused by defects in mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. Given the fundamental contribution of the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) for the respiratory chain, there have been a number of studies investigating the association between mtDNA inherited variants and multifactorial diseases, however no general consensus has been reached yet on the correlation between mtDNA haplogroups and AD.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:
We applied for the first time a high resolution analysis (sequencing of displacement loop and restriction analysis of specific markers in the coding region of mtDNA) to investigate the possible association between mtDNA-inherited sequence variation and AD in 936 AD patients and 776 cognitively assessed normal controls from central and northern Italy. Among over 40 mtDNA sub-haplogroups analysed, we found that sub-haplogroup H5 is a risk factor for AD (OR=1.85, 95% CI:1.04-3.23) in particular for females (OR=2.19, 95% CI:1.06-4.51) and independently from the APOE genotype. Multivariate logistic regression revealed an interaction between H5 and age. When the whole sample is considered, the H5a subgroup of molecules, harboring the 4336 transition in the tRNAGln gene, already associated to AD in early studies, was about threefold more represented in AD patients than in controls (2.0% vs 0.8%; p=0.031), and it might account for the increased frequency of H5 in AD patients (4.2% vs 2.3%). The complete re-sequencing of the 56 mtDNAs belonging to H5 revealed that AD patients showed a trend towards a higher number (p=0.052) of sporadic mutations in tRNA and rRNA genes when compared with controls.
CONCLUSIONS:
Our results indicate that high resolution analysis of inherited mtDNA sequence variation can help in identifying both ancient polymorphisms defining sub-haplogroups and the accumulation of sporadic mutations associated with complex traits such as AD
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