During a research work about stress integration schemes for large-deformation finite element analysis many datasets are collected from both numerical and analytical models. The corresponding numerical data (stress and displacements) are computed by means of different finite element formulations including the well-established stress update schemes employed by the major commercial software packages. To this purpose a suitable finite element code, capable of easily switching the different methods, is implemented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: During the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in spring 2020, our stroke network shifted from a drip-and-ship strategy (transport of acute ischemic stroke patients to the nearest primary stroke centers) toward a mothership model (direct transportation to the Comprehensive Stroke Center). We retrospectively analyzed stroke network performances comparing the two models.
Patients And Methods: All spoke-district patients treated with endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) between 15th March-15th June 2019 (drip-and-ship) and 2020 (mothership) were considered.
The United States Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine (USARIEM) celebrated its 50th anniversary on July 1, 2011. This article reviews its history, evolution, and transition of its research programs as well as its scientific and military accomplishments, emphasizing the past 25 yr. During the 1990s, USARIEM published a series of pocket guides providing guidance for sustaining Warfighter health and performance in Southwest Asia, Somalia, the former Republic of Yugoslavia, Rwanda, and Haiti.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
March 2008
In this paper we report on results from experiments performed on a bi-modal piezoelectric transducer used both as an active ultrasound transceiver and a passive acoustic sensor. The transducer, which has a low Q factor in order to exhibit a sufficiently broad bandwidth, will be integrated into a wearable system. In particular, it is placed, along with ECG fabric electrodes, within a textile belt wrapped around the chest.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevalence and influence on liver disease of HCV and HGV infections, and HCV genotypes were studied in 28 HCV-Ab positive multitransfused thalassaemia patients with persistently normal ALT levels (group A) matched by sex and age with 28 patients with increased ALT levels (group B). Laboratory and virologic tests (all patients), liver biopsy (28 patients) and LIC by SQUID (30 patients) were performed. In group A, HCV-RNA was positive in 39%, genotype 2a was detected in 91%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe loss of compensatory splanchnic vasoconstriction during hyperthermia was assessed in rats after administration of either 0, 10, 30, or 100mg/kg N(w)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester,L-NAME. Rectal temperature (T(re)), heart rate (HR), mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), breathing frequency (BF), and renal, mesenteric and caudal blood flows (Q(R), Q(M) and Q(C)) were measured until irreversible cardiovascular collapse occurred. HR, MAP and BF increased as T(re) rose to 42 degrees C, then fell as circulatory collapse occurred.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biomater Sci Polym Ed
May 1999
The effect of endothelial cell adhesion on polyurethanes coated with Langmuir-Blodgett antibody films has been examined. The films were cross-linked with glutaraldehyde with the aim of providing a densely packed and covalently linked two-dimensional antibody network on the polyurethane surfaces. Our results demonstrate that although neither of the two polyurethanes examined were entirely suited to cellular adhesion, Langmuir-Blodgett antibody films, cross-linked with small concentrations of glutaraldehyde, are more suitable for endothelial cell adhesion than surfaces free of antibody.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOur aim was to investigate whether host genetic factors are involved in the onset of hepatitis C virus (HCV)-related mixed cryoglobulinemia (MC). We studied 25 consecutive patients presenting with a full-blown clinical picture of MC by physical examination, blood chemistry, assessment of cryoglobulins and their composition, nonorgan-specific autoantibodies, antibodies to HCV, serum HCV RNA, and HLA polymorphism. Biopsies of liver, bone marrow, and minor salivary glands were also performed in a number of patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntibodies to nuclei (ANA), smooth muscle (SMA), and liver/kidney microsomes type 1 (anti-LKM1) may occur in chronic hepatitis C. Distinct subspecificities, including ANA with the homogeneous pattern (ANA-H) and SMA with antiactin specificity (SMA-AA), are found in autoimmune hepatitis (AIH). This study was performed to characterize the hepatitis C virus (HCV)-associated autoantibodies and to evaluate their influence on the profile of the disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground/aims: To evaluate the clinical, biochemical and histological implications of a concomitant HGV infection in "HCV-related" chronic liver disease.
Methods: Eighty-three HCV-RNA positive patients with chronic liver disease were tested for GBV-C/HGV coinfection by heminested PCR.
Results: Twenty-two (26.
In both classical and exertional heatstroke and in various animal models of human heat injury, clinical manifestations have included observations of normokalemia, hyperkalemia, and hypokalemia. This review attempts to address these observations as well as the role of potassium and potassium depletion in heat injury with an emphasis on the integration of information from the level of transmembrane potassium transport mechanisms to systems physiology. Under moderate conditions of passive heat exposure or exercise in the heat, the adaptive capacity of the Na-K pump (Na+-K+ ATPase activity) and cotransport mechanisms can ordinarily accommodate the attendant increased efflux of intracellular K+ and influx of extracellular Na+ to maintain ionic equilibrium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground/aims: This study aimed to evaluate the relation between the number of hepatocytes positive for HCV antigens and the amount of HCV RNA in the liver and to evaluate the relationship between the above parameters and viremia levels, HCV genotype and response to interferon treatment.
Methods: This was a retrospective study on 31 consecutive patients with chronic HCV-related liver disease, selected on the basis of the availability of frozen liver tissue for both liver HCV antigens detection and liver HCV RNA quantitation. HCV antigens (immunohistochemistry), liver and plasma HCV RNA (competitive RT-PCR), and HCV genotype (commercial kit) were studied.
Background/aims: This study aimed to investigate the prevalence and significance of ultrasound-detected deep abdominal lymphadenopathy in chronic hepatitis due to C virus.
Methods: One hundred and thirty-four consecutive patients with various liver disorders were examined with portable real-time equipment.
Results: In 25 (19%), the procedure failed because of excessive meteorism.
Background/aims: The majority of adult patients positive for anti-liver-kidney microsomal antibody are also positive for anti-hepatitis C virus and serum HCV RNA. In these patients the role played by hepatitis C virus infection in the progression of liver damage and its relationship with anti-liver-kidney microsomal antibody are, however, still a matter of debate.
Methods: To clarify this point we have compared hepatitis C viremia in sera from 31 hepatitis C virus-related chronic hepatitis patients positive for anti-liver-kidney microsomal antibody with that of 31 patients with hepatitis C virus-related chronic hepatitis without autoantibodies using a newly developed competitive reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction technique.
To obtain information on the mechanisms of hepatocellular damage and the determinants of response to interferon, hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype, tissue HCV antigens, hepatocellular expression of HLA-A,B,C and intercellular adhesion-1 molecules, and the number of lobular T lymphocytes were studied in 38 anti-HCV-positive patients. 14 patients did not show a primary response to interferon treatment. HCV genotype 1b was detected in 11 of them.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSevere lactic acidosis usually accompanies intense endurance exercise. It has been postulated that glycogen depletion working in concert with elevated muscle and plasma lactate levels lead to a concomitant reduction in pH. Their cumulative effect during prolonged physical exertion now leads to muscular fatigue and eventually limit endurance capacity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHepatitis C virus (HCV) antigens in liver biopsy have been detected by immunohistochemistry using both spontaneous human IgG and murine monoclonal or rabbit polyclonal monospecific reagents. Conflicting results have been obtained in different studies. This was probably because of the incapacity of single experimental antibodies, raised against synthetic or recombinant peptides, to recognize native tissue antigens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAviat Space Environ Med
February 1995
Central arterial hemodynamic changes were assessed during cooling, hypothermia, and rewarming in splenectomized (SPX, n = 4) and unsplenectomized (SP, n = 4) 8-10 month old male Yucatan miniature swine (34.0 +/- 1.4 kg).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrimary response rate to alpha-interferon (IFN) is about 50% in patients with chronic hepatitis C. Criteria for predicting a positive primary response are lacking. HLA-A,B,C molecule expression is known to be stimulated by viral infections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHepatitis C virus genotypes have been characterized in 22 patients with anti-LKM-1 positive chronic hepatitis C. Following the Simmonds classification, 77% of patients were infected by hepatitis C virus genotype 1, 18% by genotype 2 and 5% by genotype 3, thus excluding the association of the autoimmune reaction with a particular viral type. Prevalences of genotype 1 and 2 were significantly different from those obtained in 79 patients with chronic hepatitis C who were negative for anti-LKM-1, as these were more rarely infected by genotype 1 and more frequently by genotype 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA competitive reverse transcription PCR (cRT-PCR)-based assay for the quantitative detection of hepatitis C virus (HCV) viremia was developed, optimized, and applied to the direct molecular analysis of clinical samples from nine patients with persistent HCV infection. As for other competitive PCR-based applications, this method consists of the reverse transcription and subsequent amplification of two RNA species in the same tube: the wild-type template (to be quantified) and a known amount of a modified synthetic template. These templates have identical primer recognition sites and very similar (but not identical) sizes, thus allowing direct detection of both template species after gel electrophoresis and ethidium bromide staining.
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