Publications by authors named "Gwendolyn M P Diepenhorst"

Bacterial translocation (BT) is suspected to play a major role in the development of infections in surgical patients. However, the clinical association between intestinal barrier dysfunction, BT, and septic morbidity has remained unconfirmed. The objective of this study was to study BT in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery and the effects of probiotics, selective decontamination of the digestive tract (SDD), and standard treatment on intestinal barrier function.

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Ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury provides a substantial limitation to further improvements in the development of therapeutic strategies for ischemia-related diseases. Studies in animal I/R models, including intestinal, hindlimb, kidney, and myocardial I/R models, have established a key role of the complement system in mediation of I/R injury using complement inhibitors and knock-out animal models. As complement activation has been shown to be an early event in I/R injury, inhibiting its activation or its components may offer tissue protection after reperfusion.

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In order to identify pathogenic correlates of refractory rheumatoid arthritis (RA), antibodies against anti-cyclic citrullinated protein (ACPAs) were investigated in RA patients in whom the dysregulated immune system had been ablated by high-dose chemotherapy (HDC) and autologous haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Six patients with refractory RA were extensively characterized in terms of levels of total immunoglobulins, RA-specific autoantibodies (ACPAs and rheumatoid factor) and antibodies against rubella, tetanus toxoid (TT) and phosphorylcholine before and after HDC plus HSCT. Additionally, the avidity of ACPAs was measured before and after treatment and compared with the avidity of TT antibodies following repeated immunizations.

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