Contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) are compounds found in several environmental compartments whose ubiquitous presence can cause toxicity for the entire ecosystem. Several personal care products, including antibiotics, have entered this group of compounds, constituting a major global threat. It is essential to develop simple and reliable methods by which to quantify these contaminants in several matrices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTiamulin is an antibiotic approved exclusively in veterinary medicine, active against G-positive bacteria as well as Mycoplasma spp. and Leptospirae spp. The study was aimed to establish its pharmacokinetics and to evaluate drug effects on resistance in cloacal flora in geese.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol
July 2023
Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces
May 2022
The application of a formulation on the skin represents an effective way to deliver bio-active molecules for therapeutical purposes. Moreover, the outermost skin layer, the stratum corneum, can be overcome by employing chemical permeation enhancers and edge activators as components. Several lipids can be considered as permeation enhancers, such as the ubiquitous monoolein, one of the most used building blocks for the preparation of lipid liquid crystalline nanoparticles which are applied as drug carriers for nanomedicine applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntibiotics are used for therapeutic and prophylactic purposes in both human and veterinary medicine and as growth promoting agents in farms and aquaculture. They can accumulate in environmental matrices and in the food chain, causing adverse effects in humans and animals including the development of antibiotic resistance. This review aims to update and discuss the available data on antibiotic residues, using bivalves as biomonitoring organisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
October 2021
Refugees are at great risk of developing mental health problems. Yet, little is known about how to optimally help this vulnerable group as there is a lack of evaluated refugee mental health interventions. The current article presents the results of a literature review which investigates the importance of place attachment for the promotion of refugees' well-being in the resettlement process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: The recent lockdown, resulting from the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, has had a strong social and psychological impact on the most fragile individuals and family structures. In the present work we investigated the experience of families without specific elements of social or health vulnerability during the quarantine period that occurred in the spring of 2020.
Materials And Methods: Between May and July 2020, 22 primary care pediatricians belonging to AUSL Romagna administered to a number of families a questionnaire to detect changes that occurred, during the lockdown, in family environment, school attendance and personal attitudes.
Assessing cognitive functions in illiterate people is a difficult task because most of the neuropsychological tests exploring episodic memory have been validated in formally educated people, are based on verbal material and, therefore, require a good knowledge of language. Two episodic memory tests (TNI93 and TMA93) designed to be used for cognitive impairment screening in illiterate people have been designed, then validated in a multicultural low-educated population. Four hundred and thirty seven subjects aged 60 and over, living in the Seine-Saint-Denis district, received a medical check up offered by the National Health Service and their episodic memory performance was examined with these screening tests.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of novel enantiomerically pure azole derivatives was synthesized. The new compounds, bearing both an imidazole as well as a triazole moiety, were evaluated as antimycobacterial agents. One of them proved to have activity against Mycobaterium tuberculosis comparable to those of the classical antibacterial/antifungal drugs Econazole and Clotrimazole.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe risk of hypertension and the benefits of antihypertensive treatment are well established in older patients aged up to 80 years. For people aged 85 and over, data are scarce and conflicting. A positive association between blood pressure and survival has been found in several cohort studies; this relationship held true after adjustment for many factors in some studies, but disappeared after adjustment for indicators of poor health in others.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKainate (KA) is a potent neuroexcitatory agent in several areas of the adult brain, with convulsant and excitotoxic properties that increase as ontogeny proceeds. Besides its depolarizing actions, KA may enhance intracellular accumulation of Ca2+ to promote selective neuronal damage. The effects of KA are mediated by specific receptors recently considered to be involved in fast neurotransmission and that can be activated synaptically.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe main lesions of Alzheimer's disease are: 1. amyloid deposits, labelled by antibodies directed against the A beta peptide (core of the senile plaques, diffuse deposits and amyloid angiopathy), 2. neurofibrillary lesions labelled by anti-tau antibodies (neurofibrillary tangles, neuropil threads, crown of the senile plaques) and 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neural Transm Suppl
November 1998
Senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles are the markers of Alzheimer's disease. They are also found in old patients who have been considered to be intellectually normal throughout their life, a situation referred to as "physiological aging". The neurofibrillary tangles are made of abnormally phosphorylated tau.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe clinical-pathological correlations that were prospectively obtained in a cohort of old patients (> 75 years of age) are reviewed. The pathological data were obtained in 31 cases, either normal or affected by Alzheimer disease of various degrees of severity. The density of the A beta peptide deposits was poorly linked with the intellectual status.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroreport
December 1997
Neurofibrillary tangles and neuropil threads, both made of hyperphosphorylated tau proteins, point to an alteration of microtubules in Alzheimer's disease. The aim of this study was to test the consequences of these lesions on axoplasmic flow, which is dependent on intact microtubule assembly. We assessed the transport of synaptic proteins from the neuronal cell body to axonal terminals, using SNAP-25 (synaptosomal-associated protein of 25 kD) immunohistochemistry as a marker of impaired axonal transport.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo-dimensional gel electrophoresis was performed to further investigate the biochemical changes in protein synthesis observed in two neuronal death models, induced respectively by cytosine arabinoside and glutamate. These drugs induced, respectively, apoptotic and necrotic types of cell death in cerebellar cultures, as previously reported. Most of the proteins showed decreased labeling after toxic exposure, as expected, but some polypeptides showed increased labeling or appeared to be newly synthesized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntracytosplasmic concentration of calcium dramatically increases after glutamate exposure in cultured neurons. Here, we investigated the effects of glutamate (100 microM, 15 min) on the intramitochondrial calcium homeostasis using 45Ca as a radioactive tracer. Calcium content increased in both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial fractions during the first 15 min following glutamate exposure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCytosine arabinoside (AraC) is a pyrimidine antimetabolite that prevents cell proliferation by inhibiting DNA synthesis. We report that AraC kills cultured cerebellar neurons in a concentration-dependent fashion with an EC50 of approximately 60 microM when added shortly after seeding. This cell death has apoptotic features because we observed (1) morphology of apoptotic nuclei as judged by DNA staining with Hoechst 33258, (2) DNA fragmentation with typical ladder pattern on agarose gel, (3) positive nuclear labeling with a specific in situ DNA fragmentation staining, (4) prevention by deoxycytidine (IC50 = 1 microM), protein, and RNA synthesis inhibitors, and (5) release of DNA fragments in the incubating medium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCalponin, an actin- and Ca(2+)-calmodulin-binding protein characterized as an inhibitory factor of the smooth-muscle actomyosin activity, has also been shown to be present in some non-muscle cells. However, there is a controversy as to whether calponin is present or not in brain. Several laboratories indicate that this protein is absent in chicken or bovine brains, while Applegate et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have previously shown that glutamate-induced neurotoxicity is mediated by a sodium-chloride component and a calcium component in our cerebellar granule cell culture. In order to further characterize these two different components, the time course of neuronal death induced by glutamate (100 microM) in basal solution and in low sodium-chloride solution was studied by morphological and biochemical criteria. As shown by phase-contrast microscopy, cerebellar granule cells exhibited clear neuronal degeneration within 4 h after exposure to this excitotoxin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relative contribution of sodium, chloride and calcium ions in the neuronal death induced by glutamate is controversial. We have therefore reassessed the effects of extracellular ion substitution on glutamate-induced neuronal death in cerebellar granule cell culture. Sodium or chloride substitution by impermeant ions prevented the initial swelling observed after glutamate exposure (100 microM, 15 min) in balanced salt solution but did not prevent the progressive degeneration of cerebellar neurons over the next few hours.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMK-801 is a selective non-competitive N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) channel blocker which has been extensively used in order to determine the properties of NMDA receptors and their role in epilepsy and ischaemic cell death. We now report that MK-801 (10 microM) inhibits [35S]methionine incorporation into polypeptides by 45 +/- 7.5% in adult rat hippocampal slices and by 35 +/- 10% in cultured glial cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Pharmacol
December 1993
Glutamate release has been reported to be involved in the neuronal death following ischemic or anoxic injury. Riluzole (2-amino-6-trifluoromethoxy-benzothiazole) is a putative inhibitor of glutamate release. We investigated the effect of this drug on anoxic injury in vitro.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have studied whether the delayed cell death induced by transient forebrain ischemia is associated with an internucleosomal cleavage of DNA into oligonucleosome-sized fragments. The integrity of genomic DNA in various brain regions after a 20-min four-vessel ischemia was examined using gel electrophoresis. We found typical ladders of oligonucleosomal DNA fragments in the striatum and in the Ammon's horn.
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