Publications by authors named "Gordana Zunic"

Objectives: As a vasodilator, nitric oxide is considered to play a significant role in the homeostatic regulation of renal hemodynamics. To test the hypothesis that a kidney graft is capable of producing nitric oxide immediately after renal transplant surgery, we examined the possibility that it positively affects local metabolic acidosis.

Materials And Methods: In kidney transplant recipients, we analyzed renal vein and central vein blood samples, which reflect local and systemic metabolic alterations, respectively.

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Whole blood and/or plasma amino acids are useful for monitoring whole-body protein and amino acid metabolism in an organism under various physiological and pathophysiological conditions. Various methodological procedures are in use for their measurement in biological fluids. From the time when capillary electrophoresis was introduced as a technology offering rapid separation of various ionic and/or ionizable compounds with low sample and solvent consumption, there were many attempts to use it for the measurement of amino acids present in physiological fluids.

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The synthesis and whole body metabolism of L-arginine (Arg) are disturbed in renal diseases. Renal transplantation represents the best therapy in the end-stage of these diseases. In the present we compared alterations of plasma Arg and related compounds with renal excretory function in patients with end-stage renal disease, before and after kidney transplantation.

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Objectives: Living donor kidney transplantation is regarded as beneficial to allograft recipients and not particularly detrimental to the donors. Recently we have documented a reduced glomerular filtration rate (GFR) in living kidney donors (LKDs). Considering kidneys as essential for l-arginine (Arg) metabolism, in the present study we analyzed plasma Arg and related compounds comparing them with the function of remaining kidney in LKDs after donation.

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Whole blood and/or plasma amino acids are useful for monitoring whole body protein and amino acid metabolism in an organism under various physiological and pathophysiological conditions. Various methodological procedures are in use for their measurement in biological fluids. From the time when capillary electrophoresis was introduced as a technology offering rapid separation of various ionic and/or ionizable compounds with low sample and solvent consumption, there were many attempts to use it for the measurement of amino acids present in physiological fluids.

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A possible complication after donor nephrectomy is a decrease in glomerular filtration rate. The goal of our investigation is to estimate the function of the remaining donor kidney in the first 6 months after nephrectomy using the equations Cockcroft-Gault, Modification of Diet in Renal Disease 1 (MDRD1) and MDRD2. In addition to basic age and sex data, we collected standard biochemical data from blood: creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, and albumin.

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Nitric oxide (NO) production and free amino acid fluxes at the wound side during the first 3 days following cutaneous wound were investigated. Experiments were performed on Albino Oxford rats (n=18) underwent cutaneous implantation of polyvinyl sponges. Intact animals (n=6) were controls.

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Nitric oxide (NO) metabolism in response to the inflammatory cell infiltration and their apoptosis at the wound site, using a model of subcutaneously implanted sponges in Albino Oxford rats, were examined. The injured animals were sacrificed at days 1, 2 and 3 after the injury. Nitrites, nitrates (final products of NO metabolism), malondialdehyde (an indicator of oxidative cell damages), urea (product of arginase activity) and other parameters were measured both in plasma and wound fluid samples.

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Plasma aromatic and sulfur containing amino acids are good indicators of protein anabolism/catabolism, while blood reduced and oxidized glutathione reflect oxidative status in an organism. Using a full factorial design for screening important variables (pH, concentration, temperature) we developed a capillary zone electrophoresis method permitting their measurements in the single run, without any derivatization procedures. The best separations were obtained within less than 30 min employing a 10 mmol/l phosphate buffer, pH 2.

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Objectives: In addition to many traditional risk factors for coronary artery disease (CAD) development, enhanced oxidative stress and inflammation are serious conditions that may also be classified as novel risk factors. In the present study, we assessed the relationship between several parameters of oxidative stress status [malonaldehyde (MDA), superoxide anion (O(2)(-)) and plasma and erythrocyte superoxide dismutase (SOD) activities] with high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) and fibrinogen as inflammation markers.

Design And Methods: Oxidative stress status parameters, inflammation markers and lipid status parameters were measured in 385 subjects [188 coronary heart disease (CHD) patients with angiographically diagnosed coronary artery disease (CAD), 141 patients with occlusion >50% in at least one major coronary artery (CAD+) and 47 patients with occlusion less than 50% (CAD-), and 197 CHD-free middle-aged subjects (the control group)].

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Background/aim: We have recently reported the development of oxidative cell damages in bombing casualties within a very early period after the initial injury. The aim of this study, was to investigate malondialdehyde (MDA), as an indicator of lipid peroxidation, and osmolal gap (OG), as a good indicator of metabolic cell damages and to assess their relationship with the initial severity of the injury in bombing casualties.

Methods: The study included the males (n = 52), injured during the bombing with the Injury Severity Score (ISS) ranging from 3 to 66.

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Background: In our previous experimental studies, we found evidence for the increase of nitric oxide (NO) formation immediately after blast injury. In the present study we investigated whether NO overproduction was a trait for the period immediately after blast injury in humans. Concomitant metabolic disturbances were also studied, and compared to the alterations in other traumatized patients.

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This report describes a rapid, single-run procedure, based on the optimization of capillary electrophoresis (CE) and indirect absorbance detection capabilities, which was developed for the separation and quantification of 30 underivatized physiological amino acids and peptides, usually present in biological fluids. p-Aminosalicylic acid buffered with sodium carbonate at pH 10.2+/-0.

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