Publications by authors named "Berria M"

Background: Some studies with inconclusive results have reported a link between sarcoidosis and an increased risk of pulmonary embolism (PE). This study aimed at assessing a possible correlation between potential risk factors and PE in sarcoidosis patients.

Methods: A total of 256 sarcoidosis patients (84 males and 172 females; mean age at diagnosis 49 ± 13) were enrolled after giving written informed consent.

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The neural retina is organized along central-peripheral, dorsal-ventral, and laminar planes. Cellular density and distributions vary along the central-peripheral and dorsal-ventral axis in species including primates, mice, fish, and birds. Differential distribution of cell types within the retina is associated with sensitivity to different types of damage that underpin major retinal diseases, including macular degeneration and glaucoma.

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Although HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) result from injury and loss of neurons, productive infection routinely takes place in cells of macrophage lineage. In such a complex context, astrocytosis induced by local chemokines/cytokines is one of the hallmarks of HIV neuropathology. Whether this sustained astrocyte activation is able to alter telomere-aging process is unknown.

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Since astrogliosis is a histological marker usually observed in HIV-associated dementia (HIV-D), we decided to investigate the potential relationship between the expression of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and the regional distribution of cells positive (+) for this specific marker of astrocyte activation. Histological sections of brain tissues obtained at necropsy from 5 HIV-D patients and 5 age-matched controls without history of neuropsychiatric illness were immunostained with peroxidase. Mean numbers of GFAP(+) astrocytes were significantly increased in entorhinal cortex, hippocampus and subcortical white matter of patients, but values in frontal cortex and basal ganglia were similar to those of controls.

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The quantitative relationship between glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) hyper-reactivity and beta-amyloid protein (betaAP) deposition was investigated by double immunoperoxidase labeling of hippocampal and entorhinal cortex sections from five Alzheimer's disease (AD) cases and five age-matched controls. betaAP plaques, which were absent in controls, were found in all AD samples, without significant differences in number or perimeter according to their location among the regions studied. In contrast, the mean number of GFAP (+) cells was significantly greater in the hippocampus than in the entorhinal cortex from AD cases (49 vs.

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Objectives: We aimed to address if selective astrocyte apoptosis is involved in the lack of murine demyelinating disease following infection by the L*-1 variant of Theiler's virus. In addition, we investigated whether L*-1-infected astrocytes were able to selectively express molecules whose effects would play a role as pathogenic factors.

Methods: Murine cultured astrocytes were infected with two Theiler viruses, the DA strain and the mutated DA variant L*-1, which does not synthesize the out of frame L* protein.

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Cholinergic regulation of baker's yeast cell phagocytosis in rat cultured astrocytes was studied. Phagocytic activity was reduced by 1 x 10(-5) M of atropine or pirenzepine, but not by AF-DX116 or 4-DAMP. In addition, carbachol stimulated phagocytosis in a dose-dependent manner.

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We demonstrated the presence of circulating antibodies from schizophrenic patients able to interact with cultured astrocytes activating muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs). Sera and purified IgG from 15 paranoid schizophrenic and 15 age-matched normal subjects were studied by indirect immunofluorescence (IFI), flow cytometry, dot blot, enzyme immunoassay (ELISA), and radioligand competition assays. Astrocyte membranes and/or a synthetic peptide, with identical amino acid sequence of human M(1) and M(2) mAChR, were used as antigens.

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Cell differentiation degree and mitotic activity were sequentially assessed by immunoperoxidase labeling of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and proliferative cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), respectively, in rat brain cultured astrocytes maintained up to 60 days in vitro (DIV) of first subculture, or weekly passaged until their 12th subculture. Cell count was performed through a 0.01 mm2 section reticule and morphometric analysis with a stereological grid.

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Immunoperoxidase labeling was performed in histological sections from rat brain harvested during acute (10-30 days), clinically inapparent (90-270 days) and late (450-540 days) stages of Junin virus-induced neurological disease. In frontoparietal cortex, count of viral antigen (+) neurons peaked during the acute period (27.7+/-6.

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Hematologic involvement is the main feature of Argentine hemorrhagic fever (AHF), an endemo-epidemic disease caused by Junin virus (JV). Since endothelial dysfunction could play a role in AHF-altered hemostasis, we studied human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) infection with a virulent (JVv) and a non-virulent (JVa) JV strain. Cells were infected by the two JV variants with no detectable apoptosis or cytopathic effect.

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A case of neurological disease featuring human T lymphocyte virus-associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP) was diagnosed by serological (Western blot) and molecular (polymerase chain reaction) criteria as related to human T lymphocyte virus (HTLV)-II infection. This is, to our knowledge, the first case of this kind found in Argentina and is additional evidence that HAM/TSP solely related to HTLV-II infection occurs in HTLV-I-negative subjects.

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Compared with other regions in Argentina, greater human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I) seroprevalence has been reported in Jujuy Province, where it reaches 2.32% in the general population, so that a search for HTLV-I-associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP) cases deserved to be carried out. Accordingly, a clinically diagnosed and serologically confirmed cluster of cases in 1 man and 10 women, including 2 sisters, is described here.

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Because Junin virus (JV) experimental encephalitis of mice and rats is characterized by mild histopathological changes that do not seem to justify per se lethality after intracerebral infection, such a murine model seems adequate to investigate the potential role of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) as a pathogenic factor. Concomitant with a predominant astrocyte reaction, increased immunoperoxidase expression of iNOS, mitochondrial superoxide dismutase (SODm) and glutathione peroxidase (GPX) was disclosed in brain of mice infected with JV strain #44. When specific inhibition of iNOS was achieved by intraperitoneal administration of amino guanidine (AG), significantly greater mortality was observed in treated animals (70% vs.

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Our original aim was to determine whether dBcAMP-induced activation of cultured astrocytes affected the course of subsequent viral infection. After 2 h exposure of 2-day-old first subculture of mouse astrocytes to dBcAMP 1 mM, cell monolayers grown in glass coverslips of Leighton tubes were inoculated with 10(3) PFU of Theiler virus-GDVII strain (TMEV-GDVII). At 9 days post-infection (pi), viral infectivity persisted in supernatants from dBcAMP-treated cultures, but was no longer detectable in non-stimulated controls.

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The purpose of the present work was to determine whether dietary selenium (Se) deficiency could influence the injurious effect of human viruses other than Coxsackie virus B3 (CVB3) on mouse heart. Weanling C3H/HeN mice were fed a Se-deficient or Se-adequate diet for 4 wk and then were inoculated intraperitoneally with one of the following viruses: Coxsackie virus B1 (CVB1), echovirus 9 (EV9), Coxsackie virus A9 (CVA9), or herpes simplex 1 (HSV1). Polio virus 1 (PV1) was employed as a negative control.

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Both image analysis at light microscopy level and ultrastructural characterization by transmission electron microscopy were employed to evaluate the differentiation stage in young cultured mouse astrocytes after 1-day exposure to dBcAMP, a chemical compound known to induce cell activation. The aim was to validate an experimental model of stimulated astrocytes preserving the properties of recently seeded cells, thus avoiding the overlapping effects of in vitro aging. Differentiated astrocytes, as evidenced by GFAP labeling by streptavidin-peroxidase, doubled their number in treated cultures (45%) versus controls (23%).

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In 17beta-estradiol (E)-treated ovariectomized (OVX) rabbits, the coitus-induced luteinizing hormone (LH) surge is only one fourth that in ovarian-intact rabbits. In this study, we determined the pattern of the coitus-induced gonadotropin release, i.e.

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A triple staining procedure (PAP labeling for GFAP, PAS reaction for added yeast cells and hematoxylin for nuclear staining of the whole cell monolayer) had disclosed that Junin virus infection enhanced phagocytic activity by inducing greater astrocyte differentiation. Here, we resorted to a mathematical approach for simultaneous evaluation of astrocyte differentiation and potential phagocytosis. At light microscopy level, the total number of: a) PAS-stained yeast cells, b) PAS-stained yeast cells associated to GFAP-positive astrocytes, c) GFAP-positive astrocytes, and d) total number of GFAP-labeled and non-labeled astrocytes, were counted within the monolayer area delimited by a grid with a total area of 0.

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Since efficiency of phagocytic potential in activated astrocytes is still a subject of controversy, an attempt was made to quantify simultaneously phagocytic activity and astrocyte differentiation. Resorting to Junin virus, known to induce astrocyte activation, infected vs control samples of cultured rat astroglial cells were serially harvested up to day 12 post-inoculation (pi), and subjected to a triple staining procedure consisting in immunoperoxidase labeling of GFAP, periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) reaction in added baker's yeast cells and hematoxylin for nuclear staining of the whole cell monolayer. Adopting GFAP labeling as a specific marker of astrocyte differentiation, the immunoprecipitate development over time was measured.

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Concomitant fluctuations in median eminence perfusate GnRH and plasma LH occur in rhesus macaques during the periovulatory period and after ovariectomy. The association between GnRH and LH pulses during the follicular and luteal phases of the monkey menstrual cycle is less clearly defined. However, observed LH patterns suggest higher amplitude and slower pulses of GnRH in the luteal than in the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle.

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