SCUBA diving has several risks associated with it from breathing air under pressure--nitrogen narcosis, barotrauma and decompression sickness (the bends). Trimix SCUBA diving involves regulating mixtures of nitrogen, oxygen and helium in an attempt to overcome the risks of narcosis and decompression sickness during deep dives, but introduces other potential hazards such as hypoxia and oxygen toxicity convulsions. This study reports on a seizure during the ascent phase, its potential causes and management and discusses the hazards posed to the diver and his rescuer by an emergency ascent to the surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn intrinsic component of colorectal carcinogenesis may be the capacity to activate regenerative responses simultaneously with inhibition of apoptosis. Since apoptosis is known to be inhibited in colorectal cancer, this study sought evidence for the activation of the REG family of genes which are considered to be activated during regeneration of intestinal mucosa. Transcripts for the REG gene were found in 53% of colorectal cancers and for the PAP gene in 60% of colorectal cancers, by RT-PCR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: To investigate the association of cagA positivity and non-opsonic neutrophil activation capacity in wild-type Helicobacter pylori strains with peptic ulcer disease or chronic gastritis only.
Methods: Helicobacter pylori were isolated from antral biopsies of 53 consecutive patients with chronic antral gastritis, of whom 24 had peptic ulcer disease endoscopically. The presence of cagA, a marker for the cag pathogenicity island, was determined by polymerase chain reaction with specific oligonucleotide primers, and non-opsonic neutrophil activation capacity by luminol enhanced chemiluminescence.
Background/aims: Inhibition of programmed cell death (apoptosis) is associated with increased tumour aggressiveness, and expression of Survivin, an antiapoptosis gene, in colorectal carcinomas may provide important prognostic information.
Patients/methods: Expression of Survivin messenger RNA was evaluated by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction in 144 colorectal carcinomas and 86 adjacent histologically normal mucosa samples from patients for whom long term follow up data were available.
Results: Survivin transcripts were detected in a significantly greater proportion of carcinomas (63.
Curative surgery for gastrointestinal malignancy is commonly thwarted by local tumour recurrence. The heparin-binding growth factors, basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (HB-EGF) and vascular epidermal growth factor (VEGF) are all implicated in the metastatic process, but whether or not these essential growth factors are produced by the activated peritoneum is unknown. This study reveals that peritoneal mesothelial cells constitutively express mRNA for bFGF, HB-EGF and two VEGF spliced variants, VEGF121 and VEGF165.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFING1 plays a critical role in regulating cell cycle progression and susceptibility to apoptosis. The present study aimed to investigate allelic deletion of, and mutations within, the ING1 gene in colorectal carcinomas. Genomic DNA was extracted from 29 sporadic colorectal carcinomas and samples of adjacent normal mucosa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The integrity of the gastrointestinal mucosa is a key element in preventing systemic absorption of enteric toxins and bacteria. In the critically ill, breakdown of gut barrier function may fuel sepsis. Malnourished patients have an increased risk of postoperative sepsis; however, the effects of malnutrition on intestinal barrier function in man are unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed
May 1997
Aims: To determine whether epidermal growth factor (EGF) or the related transforming growth factor alpha (TGF alpha) may have a role in the developing human stomach; to substantiate the presence of EGF in human liquor in the non-stressed infant and whether EGF in amniotic fluid is maternally or fetally derived.
Methods: The temporal expression and localisation of EGF, TGF alpha, and their receptors during fetal and neonatal life were examined in 20 fetal and five infant stomachs. Simultaneously, samples of amniotic fluid and fetal urine from 10 newborn infants were collected and assayed for EGF by radioimmunoassay.
Background: The cause of diminished monocyte major histocompatibility complex class II antigen expression after surgery or trauma is unclear. Interleukin-10 (IL-10) regulates inflammatory cytokine production and major histocompatibility complex class II (HLA-DR) expression in vitro.
Objectives: To quantify in vivo IL-10 messenger RNA (mRNA) and protein and monocyte HLA-DR expression after major surgery and to investigate the effects of IL-10 neutralizing blockade on monocyte HLA-DR expression in vitro.
Methods Mol Med
October 2012
The interactions between Helicobacter pylori and the human gastric epithelium have been modeled in an in vitro cell culture system. The model permits investigation of the interplay between the bacteria and epithelial cells in a controled environment. Following coculture, the cells, bacteria, and culture supernatants are available for analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr
February 1997
Background: Upregulation of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II antigen in response to the T-cell lymphokine interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) is central to T cell-macrophage cooperation and immune homeostasis. We evaluated this property in malnourished surgical patients and assessed the impact of nutrition repletion with total parenteral nutrition (TPN).
Methods: Sixty-two patients were studied: 37 malnourished and 25 controls.
Renal allograft recipients are at an increased risk of neoplasia, although the extent of the problem has not been established in a typical European transplant population. To assess this risk we did a comprehensive, retrospective study of 918 patients transplanted at one centre over 24 years. The centre (Leeds) serves Yorkshire and Humberside, a region in northern England with a population of 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: To use a range of natural phenotypically variant strains of Helicobacter pylori with disparate CagA and VacA (vacuolating cytotoxin) expression to determine which bacterial factors are more closely associated with epithelial interleukin-8 (IL-8) induction.
Methods: Gastric epithelial cells (AGS and KATO-3) were co-cultured with five H pylori strains which were variously shown to express the cagA gene/CagA protein, VacA and/or to exhibit biological cytotoxicity. Secreted IL-8 was assayed by enzyme leaked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and IL-8 messenger RNA (mRNA) was assayed using a reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction based technique (RT-PCR).
Gastroenterology
December 1994
Background/aims: Epidemiological studies suggest that fecal-oral spread of Helicobacter pylori potentially represents an important route of infection. However, the bacterium has never been isolated from feces of adults in the developed world. This study attempted to isolate H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: To investigate: (1) whether Helicobacter pylori directly induces interleukin-8 (IL-8) message expression and protein secretion in established gastric epithelial cell lines; and (2) if CagA/cytotoxin positive and negative strains of H pylori differ in their ability to induce epithelial IL-8.
Methods: Gastric epithelial cell lines were co-cultured with H pylori NCTC 11637 and 10 clinical isolates (four cytotoxic, six non-cytotoxic) and secreted IL-8 was measured by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Specific induction of gastric epithelial IL-8 mRNA was examined by reverse transcription and polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) amplification.
This study characterises the somatostatin binding site in human gastrointestinal cancer and mucosa in terms of cationic specificity and relative affinity for three somatostatin analogues. Competitive displacement assays were performed on plasma membranes from human gastric and colonic tissues using radiolabelled somatostatin-14 as ligand. Comparison was made with the somatostatin binding site in rat cerebral cortex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSomatostatin is a regulatory peptide implicated in the control of cellular proliferation in epithelial tissues and this regulation may occur directly via membrane bound receptor activation. The aim of this study was to investigate somatostatin binding in human gastrointestinal cancer and normal mucosa. Plasma membranes were prepared from specimens of tumour and normal mucosa from 51 patients undergoing surgical resection for malignancy (28 gastric, 23 colorectal).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInjection of an excitatory amino acid antagonist, kynurenic acid, into the medial segment of the globus pallidus of the conscious monkey elicited dyskinesia of the contralateral limbs. In most respects the dyskinesia was indistinguishable from the disorder that is produced by ablation of the subthalamic nucleus, or injection of a GABA antagonist into the subthalamic nucleus. Injections of kynurenic acid into the lateral segment of the globus pallidus, by contrast, did not provoke dyskinesia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCholecystokinin (CCK) binding sites were assessed in post-mortem brain membrane preparations from controls and schizophrenic patients. 125I-BH CCK33 specific binding was reduced by 40% (p less than 0.02) in the hippocampus and by 20% (p less than 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of microiontophoretically applied oxytocin on the firing rates of neurones in the rat caudal brainstem have been examined. Of the sample of 156 units recorded the firing rates of 33.3% were reduced and those of 21.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropharmacology
January 1984
The binding of 125I-vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) to human brain membranes has been studied. The binding was saturable with a dissociation constant (KD) of 4.4 +/- 2.
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