Publications by authors named "Factor S"

BALB/c mice develop autoimmune myocarditis after immunization with mouse cardiac myosin, whereas C57B/6 mice do not. To define the immunogenicity and pathogenicity of cardiac myosin in BALB/c mice, we immunized mice with different forms of cardiac myosin. These studies demonstrate the discordance of immunogenicity and pathogenicity of myosin heavy chains.

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We report a primary smooth-muscle tumor of undetermined malignant potential of the liver in a child with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). This patient represents the eighth child infected with the human immunodeficiency virus who developed a mesenchymal tumor other than Kaposi's sarcoma. All these children were younger than 10 years of age.

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Inflammatory and immune reactions are thought to mediate both calcification and biodegradation of bioprosthetic cardiac valve implants. To investigate the mechanisms of implant degeneration, we evaluated the role of inflammatory and immune reactions and the effects of tissue preservative treatment in three series of experiments. In the first experiment, three kinds of implants, i.

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This study was designed to evaluate whether myocardial risk factors other than those strictly related to human immunodeficiency virus infection contribute to histologic cardiomyopathic changes in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patients. We analyzed 91 consecutive adult human immunodeficiency virus-positive autopsy cases (85% acquired immunodeficiency syndrome by Centers of Disease Control criteria) from 1987-1991 for histologic cardiomyopathic changes (e.g.

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Background: Health care personnel are at increased risk of occupational acquisition of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. While effective vaccination for HBV is widely available, the prevalence of HBV and vaccine acceptance in hospital personnel have not been recently assessed. In addition, hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a newly recognized cause of parenterally acquired hepatitis, and the risk of HCV transmission to health care personnel remains unclear.

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Cardiac size and geometry have an important influence on clinical prognosis in heart disease. The cardiac interstitium would appear to play a major role in modulating muscle configuration after ischaemic insults. Ischaemic reperfusion injury of the heart should not be viewed as confined to the myocyte compartment.

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The use of early combination therapy with bromocriptine (Br) and levodopa (LD) in Parkinson's disease is controversial. It has been suggested that treatment with this regimen would prevent or delay the onset of motor fluctuations and dyskinesia. Thus, some have recommended it as a standard of care.

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Clinicopathologic features of 13 women with peripartum cardiomyopathy were compared to 13 women aged 19 through 38 with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. No presenting clinical or pathologic variable distinguished either group. However, the clinical course differed between the groups.

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Cervical dystonia (CD) is usually an idiopathic disorder that results in abnormal movements and painful postures of the neck. Although symptomatic CD caused by focal CNS lesions has been described in the literature, it is an exceedingly rare phenomenon. We report two women who had an abrupt onset of CD at the ages of 39 and 68 years.

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Early combination therapy with bromocriptine (Br) and levodopa (LD) is believed to delay or prevent the onset of late treatment complications typically associated with LD monotherapy in Parkinson's disease (PD). Studies recommending this regimen have been uncontrolled. We evaluated this possibility in a 4-year, double-blind, randomized, parallel group trial comparing Br and LD both alone and in combination in 22 PD patients never before treated with dopaminergic medications.

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We studied host endothelial growth and calcification of bovine pericardial valve prostheses treated with: (A) 0.625% glutaraldehyde + 4% formaldehyde, (B) 99.5% glycerol or (C) 99.

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A line of transgenic mice with two cointegrated transgenes, the human beta S- and alpha 2-globin genes, linked to the beta-globin locus control region was produced and bred with mice carrying a deletion of the mouse beta major-globin gene. In transgenic mice homozygous for the beta major deletion (alpha H beta S[beta MDD]; where alpha H is human alpha-globin and MD is mouse deletion), 72.5 +/- 2.

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Microfibrils-small, ubiquitous components of the extracellular matrix in many tissues-generally have not been recognized as causing infiltrative heart disease, except in a group of cardiac transplant patients treated with cyclosporin. Microfibrils are often associated with elastic tissue and contain the glycoprotein fibrillin, the P component of amyloid, and bound fibronectin. A genetically determined abnormality of fibrillin caused by point mutations of fibrillin genes recently was reported as the cause of Marfan's syndrome.

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Calcification is a major cause of glutaraldehyde-fixed bioprosthetic valve failure. Recent studies have shown that dystrophic calcification shares basic features with normal bone mineralization, including crystal initiation through the mediation of cell membranes, usually in the form of extracellular vesicles. In this study, we observed that calcification of the myocardium of DBA/2J mice was inhibited or reversed by diets supplemented with 100 mg/kg diet diphenylhydantoin (dilantin) for 70 days, with a calcification incidence of 25% in the dilantin group versus 58% in control.

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Nonautoimmune mice transgenic for the heavy chain of an IgG2b anti-double-stranded-DNA antibody express the transgene in lymphoid organs and display partial allelic exclusion of this gamma 2b transgene. The spleens of these mice are characterized by marked B-cell depletion. Although there are B cells in these mice that express the transgene and recognize double-stranded DNA, they are anergic in vivo.

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Coronary microvascular spasm and platelet hyperreactivity have been implicated in the pathogenesis of Chagas' cardiomyopathy. To clarify further the role of the microvasculature in this disease, alterations in cytokine gene expression due to Trypanosoma cruzi infection of human umbilical vein endothelial cells were examined. Northern blot analysis of total RNA from endothelial cells demonstrated that interleukin (IL)-1 beta, IL-6, and colony-stimulating factor 1 (CSF-1) mRNA expression was absent or minimal in uninfected cells but significantly increased in infected cells.

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Different morphologic and density classes of sickle cells (SS) may play distinct roles in the generation of vasoocclusion, explaining the complexity of this phenomena. The densest SS red blood cells (RBCs) (SS4) can induce vasoocculsion in ex vivo microcirculatory preparations as well as in an intact animal model. Previous studies of the interaction of SS deformable discocytes with endothelial monolayers or the rat ex vivo mesocecum preparation have shown adhesion that is desmopressin (dDAVP)-stimulated, von Willebrand factor (vWF)-mediated, and limited to the small venules.

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Comparative histological studies have been performed on the various arterial conduits available for myocardial revascularization including the inferior epigastric artery which has recently become the focus of intense investigation. In this study, 10 patients with known risk factors for atherosclerotic disease had their inferior epigastric artery harvested and the entire specimen examined for the microscopical presence of atherosclerosis or its precursors. Histopathological findings that have been shown to be theoretically protective against the progression of atherosclerosis were observed.

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Psychosis secondary to dopaminergic therapy can limit the ability to manage motor symptoms of advanced Parkinson's disease (PD). We report the results of an open label 3-month trial that evaluated the antipsychotic effects of clozapine in eight PD patients with drug-induced psychosis. Response was quantified using a simplified brief psychiatric rating scale and two PD scales.

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Hypertensive diabetic rats develop a cardiomyopathy characterized by systolic and diastolic ventricular dysfunction, myocardial hypertrophy and fibrosis, pulmonary congestion and a very high mortality rate. Alterations in contractile proteins and sarcoplasmic reticular calcium (Ca2+) transport in diabetic myocardium and their partial reversal with verapamil suggest that calcium channel blockade may prevent death from congestive heart failure in hypertensive diabetic rats. A large group of rats with renovascular hypertension and streptozotocin diabetes were divided into four groups: untreated animals (Group 1) and animals treated with 100 (Group 2), 300 (Group 3) or 600 (Group 4) mg/kg per day of sustained release diltiazem mixed in their food.

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