Publications by authors named "Dalldorf F"

Bacterial infections play an important role in the multifactorial etiology of rheumatoid arthritis. The arthropathic properties of Gram-positive bacteria have been associated with peptidoglycan-polysaccharide complexes (PG-PS), which are major structural components of bacterial cell walls. There is little agreement as to the identity of cellular receptors that mediate innate immune responses to PG-PS.

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Two greater kudu calves (Tragelaphus strepsiceros) born 7 years apart were found with fissures and thickened, scaly, cutaneous plates covering over 80% of their bodies. One was dead at presentation, and the other was euthanized shortly after birth. Both animals shared a common sire.

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Cholesterol granulomas are uncommon pathologic lesions in animals, although they are important intracranial tumors in humans. This report describes cholesterol granulomas associated with multiple organ systems of three captive meerkats. In the most severe case, meerkat No.

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Arthritis is often associated with intestinal diseases, but the etiology is not known. We developed a rat model whereby arthritis was reactivated by experimental small bowel bacterial overgrowth (SBBO). Self-limited monoarticular arthritis was induced by intra-articular injection of 2 micrograms of rhamnose peptidoglycan-polysaccharide derived from group A streptococci into the ankle joints in female Lewis rats.

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After previous observation of increased susceptibility to Clostridium difficile enterocolitis in hamsters fed an atherogenic, high-fat diet, a study was undertaken to examine experimental reproducibility of this disease. Hamsters were fed either the high-fat diet or a control diet, then orally challenged with a toxigenic strain of C. difficile.

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A case of adenocarcinoma of the pancreas and mild lung disease in a 39-year-old man homozygous for the delta F508 cystic fibrosis mutation is presented. Cystic fibrosis is the most common lethal genetic disease in Caucasians, and is most commonly associated with severe obstructive lung disease. To our knowledge, this is only the fifth case of adenocarcinoma of the pancreas in a CF patient to be reported and the first case for which molecular data are available.

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While acute splenic sequestration and splenic infarction are commonly observed in infants and young children with sickle cell anemia, they are rarely experienced by adult hemoglobin S homozygotes because the recurrent splenic infarction that takes place during childhood is typically followed by scarring, atrophy, and splenic fibrosis. Both acute splenic sequestration and splenic infarction do remain relatively common in adults with the other sickle hemoglobinopathies. These episodes are almost certainly a consequence of the persistently enlarged and distensible spleens that often remain present in these conditions.

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A specific interleukin-1 (IL-1) receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) was used to examine the roles of IL-1 in an experimental model designed to analyze the reactivation phase of erosive arthritis, induced in rats with peptidoglycan-polysaccharide polymers (PG-APS) isolated from cell walls of group A streptococci. Monoarticular arthritis was initiated by injection of a small dose of PG-APS into an ankle joint, and reactivation was induced by intravenous injection of PG-APS 20 days later. Human recombinant IL-1ra given at a dose of 2 to 3 mg/kg at the time of reactivation of arthritis and at 6-h intervals inhibits the increase in joint swelling by at least 60%.

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Acute edematous responses were induced in Sprague-Dawley rats by the intravenous injection of group-specific polysaccharide (PS) isolated from group A streptococci. Thirty minutes after the intravenous injection of PS there was marked degranulation of subcutaneous and periarticular mast cells in all 4 feet, carbon particle labeling of adjacent venules, and an 8-fold increase in Evans blue dye content of the extremities. This acute reaction to PS was completely blocked by pretreatment with compound 48/80, but the polyarticular relapsing arthritis following the systemic injection of an arthropathic dose of streptococcal cell wall fragments containing large, covalently bound peptidoglycan-polysaccharide (PG-PS) was not blocked.

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The arthropathic activity of mouse recombinant IL-1 (mrIL-1) after intraarticular (i.a.) injection into rat ankles was investigated.

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Review of the hearts of seven patients in whom hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy had been diagnosed by the usual clinical and morphologic criteria revealed diminished angles between the interventricular septa and ascending aortas in three cases. The angles in these three hearts were 90 to 110 degrees, as compared with a mean value of 145 degrees in the other four hearts with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and 140 +/- 14 degrees in 55 control hearts. None of the patients with hypertrophic subaortic stenoses and angled aortic roots died of the heart disease, and none had either asymmetric ventricular hypertrophy or evidence of familial cardiomyopathy.

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Amiodarone is a potent new antiarrhythmic drug that has multiple effects on thyroid function, including inhibition of extrathyroidal triiodothyronine production and rarely, iodine-induced hypothyroidism. This report describes a man with recurrent ventricular tachycardia in whom hypothyroidism developed during amiodarone therapy and who died of probable myxedema coma. Parenteral and oral thyroxine therapy promptly reduced serum thyroid-stimulating hormone concentrations without increasing the patient's very low serum triiodothyronine concentration.

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Although premature closure of the foramen ovale has been proposed as a possible cause of hypoplastic left heart syndrome, very few such cases have been described. We have seen two examples of the combination and no associated malformations. In both the foramen was firmly closed on its left atrial aspect and the dimensions of the left sided structures were well below normal values.

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The following clinical and pathologic features were evaluated in 170 patients with electron microscopically documented membranous glomerulopathy: age, sex, race, American Rheumatism Association lupus criteria, serum ANA, serum complement, glomerular hypercellularity, stage of subepithelial dense deposits, endothelial tubuloreticular inclusions, tubular basement membrane deposits, tissue ANA, glomerular deposition of IgG, IgM, IgA, C3, C4, and Clq. At the time of biopsy 148 patients had no clinical evidence for lupus, and 22 had a clinical diagnosis of lupus. Six additional patients eventually developed overt lupus after an average of 12 months.

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The mechanism for syncope during pulmonary embolism is not well understood. We describe two patients with transient sinus bradycardia and atrioventricular (AV) block during syncope from recurrent pulmonary embolism. Consciousness was regained each time the rhythm returned to normal.

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Experimental arthritis developed in rats injected intraperitoneally with aqueous suspensions of peptidoglycan-polysaccharide complexes (PG-APS) isolated from group A streptococcal cell walls. Reduction of serum complement by pretreatment with cobra venom factor (COV) reduced acute joint inflammation over the first 3 days following injection of PG-APs. Thereafter, the course of the disease was not different in the COV-treated rats.

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The clinical histories, risk factors, and autopsy findings were reviewed for five deceased hemophiliacs over the age of 40 years to determine the prevalence and severity of arteriosclerosis. The presence of a severe, congenital, hypocoagulative state did not prevent these five men from displaying typical arteriosclerotic vascular disease. One patient actually died of severe, multivessel, coronary artery disease.

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Chronic, remittent, erosive arthritis was produced in rats by a single intraperitoneal injection of an aqueous suspension of cell wall fragments isolated from group A streptococci. Arthritis could be induced in rats which had been immunologically compromised by neonatal thymectomy. Delayed hypersensitivity to cell wall peptidoglycan could not be elicited in these rats, although progressive joint disease was obvious by clinical and radiological measurements.

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The intraperitoneal injection of peptidoglycan-carbohydrate fragments from Group A streptococci produces a chronic, polyarticular, erosive synovitis in rats. The cell wall material accumulates rapidly in the liver, spleen, and lymph nodes, where it causes little injury. At the same time, selective localization and persistence of the material in the synovial and periarticular tissues occurs.

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32P labeling of microtubular protein by endogenous protein kinase activity is shown to result from a net increase in protein-bound phosphate and is not the result of a phosphate exchange reaction between ATP and phosphoprotein. Protein phosphorylation is maximal in the presence of 0.5 mM Mg2+ and 0.

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A retrospective analysis of 12 patients with the diagnosis of thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura was undertaken with a review of pathological material. The gingival biopsy was found to be a poor method of diagnosing thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. Pathological review also verified chronicity of disease.

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In previous studies we have presented morphological evidence that the terminal shock-like phase of fatal meningococcemia is caused by the occlusion of the pulmonary microcirculation with thrombi composed of platelets, leukocytes, and fibrin. We have also shown that in experimental meningococcemia, pretreatment of rabbits with heparin sodium prevents fibrin formation but does not influence the cellular pulmonary thrombi and does not prolong survival. If our theory is correct, drugs that inhibit platelet aggregation and leukocyte adhesion in rabbits should prolong life.

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