Introduction: Immunological alterations associated with increased susceptibility to infection are an essential aspect of stroke pathophysiology. Several immunological functions of adipose tissue are altered by obesity and are accompanied by chronic immune activation. The purpose of this study was to examine immune function (monocytes, granulocytes, cytokines) as a function of body mass index (BMI: 1st group: 25; 2nd group: 25 BMI 30; 3rd group: 30) and changes in body weight post stroke.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Return to sport testing is an established routine, especially for athletes who have ruptured their anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). Various tests are performed, often combined in test batteries, such as the Back-in-action (BIA) test battery. Unfortunately, pre-injury performance is often unknown, and only few athletes pass the high demands of these test batteries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Neuroblastoma (NB) is the most frequent extracranial tumor in children. The detection of bone marrow (BM) involvement is crucial for correct staging and risk-adapted treatment. We compared three methods regarding the detection of NB involvement in BM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis Phase III study evaluates an investigational quadrivalent meningococcal CRM(197) conjugate vaccine, MenACWY-CRM (Novartis Vaccines), when administered concomitantly or sequentially with two other recommended adolescent vaccines; combined tetanus, reduced diphtheria and acellular pertussis (Tdap), and human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine. In this single-centre study, 1620 subjects 11-18 years of age, were randomized to three groups (1:1:1) to receive MenACWY-CRM concomitantly or sequentially with Tdap and HPV. Meningococcal serogroup-specific serum bactericidal assay using human complement (hSBA), and antibodies to Tdap antigens and HPV virus-like particles were determined before and 1 month after study vaccinations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA microarray carrying 5,648 probes of Medicago truncatula root-expressed genes was screened in order to identify those that are specifically regulated by the arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungus Gigaspora rosea, by P(i) fertilisation or by the phytohormones abscisic acid and jasmonic acid. Amongst the identified genes, 21% showed a common induction and 31% a common repression between roots fertilised with P(i) or inoculated with the AM fungus G. rosea, while there was no obvious overlap in the expression patterns between mycorrhizal and phytohormone-treated roots.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Purpose: Recent studies have attributed the increased infection vulnerability of patients with stroke to stroke-induced immunosuppression. We have therefore explored the immunological changes in patients with ischemic stroke.
Methods: Blood from 46 patients with stroke was analyzed by fluorescent-activated cell sorter to determine leukocyte subsets.
Background: Abdominal sepsis due to intestinal leakage of endogenous gut bacteria is a life-threatening condition. In healthy individuals, T lymphocytes have essential functions in balancing the immune response to the commensal gut flora.
Aim: To determine how T lymphocytes shape the process of diffuse faecal peritonitis.
The arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM) is characterized by specific morphological structures of the fungus and the plant and by physiological adaptations which are mostly beneficial for both partners of the symbiosis. This review describes approaches to study the molecular basis of the interaction. RNA accumulation patterns have been monitored in Pisum sativum to analyse the plant response to arbuscule development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Anaesthesiol Scand
September 2006
Background: The aim of the present study was to compare 16 routine clinical and laboratory parameters, acute physiologic and chronic health evaluation (APACHE) and sequential organ failure assessment (SOFA) score for their value in predicting mortality during hospital stay in patients admitted to a general intensive care unit (ICU).
Methods: A retrospective observational clinical study was carried out in a 15-bed ICU in a university hospital. Nine hundred and thirty-three consecutive patients with ICU stay > 24 h (36.
Suppressive subtractive hybridisation was applied to the analysis of late stage arbuscular mycorrhizal development in pea. 96 cDNA clones were amplified and 81, which carried fragments more than 200 nt in size, were sequence analysed. Among 67 unique fragments, 10 showed no homology and 10 were similar to sequences with unknown function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vet Med B Infect Dis Vet Public Health
August 2002
We investigated the distribution of B and T cells in the peripheral blood of haematologically inconspicuous (non-persistent lymphocytotic, PL-) cattle infected with the bovine leukaemia virus (BLV). Flow cytometric data were obtained from six PL- cattle and compared with six age-matched animals with persistent lymphocytosis (PL+) and five non-infected healthy controls (BLV-). In the PL- group, the percentage and number of surface immunoglobulin-positive (sIg+) B cells were significantly reduced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe soluble form of the endotoxin receptor CD14 is required for the LPS-induced activation of cells lacking membrane-bound CD14. It has been shown that a deletion mutant of human CD14 consisting of the N-terminal 152 amino acids has the capacity to mediate the stimulation of different cell types by LPS. To identify the structural domains of the molecule related to this functional property, we screened a set of alanine substitution mutants using CD14-negative U373 astrocytoma cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral members of the tumour necrosis factor receptor (TNF-R) superfamily can induce cell death. For TNF-R1, Fas/APO-1, DR3, DR6, TRAIL-R1 and TRAIL-R2, a conserved 'death domain' in the intracellular region couples these receptors to activation of caspases. However, it is not yet known how TNF receptor family members lacking a death domain, such as TNF-R2, CD40, LT-betaR, CD27 or CD30, execute their death-inducing capability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Immunol
November 1998
CD40, a member of the TNF receptor family, has been characterized as an important T-B cell interaction molecule. In B cells it co-stimulates isotype switching, proliferation, adhesion and is involved in cell death regulation. In addition to B cells, CD40 expression was found on transformed cells and carcinomas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: In vitro studies suggest that mediators of systemic inflammatory response syndrome are generated in the course of hemolytic transfusion reactions. Evidence for the in vivo significance of these findings is given by the present clinical and laboratory analysis of a severe delayed hemolytic transfusion reaction (DHTR).
Case Report: A 67-year-old patient (blood group O, D-negative) with a negative pretransfusion antibody screen received a massive transfusion because of arterial bleeding (Day 1).
The CD14 molecule is a key receptor on myeloid lineage cells involved in the recognition of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and Gram-negative bacteria. The application of its soluble form, sCD14, has been shown to protect mice from lethality in LPS-induced shock. Therefore the protein or its derivatives may be considered as a possible therapeutic alternative for the treatment of patients suffering from Gram-negative septic shock.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhagocytosis of bacteria by monocytes and neutrophil granulocytes provides an important first line of defense against bacterial infections. Opsonization of bacteria with complement and phagocytosis by neutrophils is dependent on divalent cations and does not take place in blood that has been anticoagulated with EDTA. Monocytes, however, do carry out phagocytosis even in the presence of EDTA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHexadecylphosphocholine (HePC, Miltefosine) is a representative of the group of alkyl-lysophosphocholines showing remarkable antitumoral activity in in vitro experiments and in experimental animal tumour models. The epidermoid tumour cell line KB, which is highly sensitive to HePC (half-maximal growth inhibiting concentration, IC50: 1.2 microM; half lethal concentration, LC50: 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHexadecylphosphocholine (HePC) is an analogue of the antiproliferative alkyllysophospholipids (ALP). As these lipid-like compounds interfere with membrane lipid metabolism at several sites, we studied the effects of HePC on uptake and metabolism of inositol and choline, two important phospholipid precursor molecules in two sensitive cell lines, Raji and KB, and in a resistant variant of KB cells, KBr. HePC substantially inhibited the membrane uptake of inositol and of choline in KB and Raji.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMonocytes and macrophages express a glycosyl phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored lipopolysaccharide (LPS) receptor on the cell surface which enables them to detect minute amounts of LPS released from Gram-negative bacteria. A soluble form of CD14 is also found free in serum, though its physiological function is unknown. the interaction of LPS with CD14 on the monocyte surface leads to an activation of the cells which is manifested in the sudden release of reactive oxygen species, a process referred to as an oxidative burst.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTissue macrophages and their precursors-the blood monocytes-respond rapidly to a bacterial infection with the release of inflammatory mediators. These mediators are involved in the recruitment of phagocytic cells, principally neutrophils, from the blood to the site of infection. To initiate this process macrophages and monocytes must be able to detect the presence of bacteria in a reliable, but nevertheless nonspecific, fashion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman monocytes bind lipopolysaccharides (LPS) complexed to LPS binding serum proteins (LBP; septin) via surface glycoprotein CD14. Flow cytometry was used for the measurement of endotoxin binding to monocytes using fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled LPS. LPS-FITC binding to bovine monocytes was mediated by calf serum.
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