Undergraduate courses in immunology are content-heavy and combined with a new, complex vocabulary, can be an overwhelming subject for students. In-class active learning approaches have been found to improve understanding of difficult concepts in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines; however, many undergraduate courses maintain a high dependence on lecture-style teaching because of time constraints, content demands and student resistance. We designed an online, out-of-class activity, the "Life and Death of a T cell", to complement a lecture on a complex immunological concept, T-cell development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne of the major challenges for health science students is the rapid acquisition of a new vocabulary in anatomy comprising several hundred new words. Research has shown that vocabulary learning can be improved when students are directed to vocabulary strategies. This paper reported a study with a formative intervention design inspired by Vygotsky's method of double stimulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVinpocetine is a readily available nutritional supplement claimed to improve memory and weight loss. However, it blocks the kr current essential for cardiac action potential repolarisation and Ikr inhibition can cause "torsade de pointes" arrhythmias and sudden death. Moreover, Ikr blockers have exhibited teratogenic effects in reproductive toxicology studies, leading to increased birth defects and embryonic mortality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVisuospatial skills are considered important attributes when learning anatomy and there is evidence suggesting that this ability can be improved with training techniques including drawing. The Mental Rotations Test (MRT) has been routinely used to assess visuospatial ability. This study aimed to introduce students to drawing as a learning strategy for anatomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: MotherSafe is a free telephone-based counseling service for Australian consumers and health-care providers concerned about drug exposures during pregnancy and breastfeeding. Anti-infectives are the most commonly prescribed drugs for pregnant women. This study aims to provide a descriptive analysis of prospectively collected calls received by MotherSafe regarding anti-infective exposures during pregnancy between 2000 and 2020.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhenytoin is a known human teratogen with unknown etiology. Several mechanisms have been proposed including disturbances in folate metabolism, induction of embryonic hypoxia following phenytoin-induced bradycardia, free radical formation following re-oxygenation and phenytoin-induced maternal hyperglycemia. Using high frequency ultrasound, we demonstrated that phenytoin induced a dramatic decrease in the heart rate of embryos.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCongenital heart disease (CHD) is the most common birth defect and brings with it significant mortality and morbidity. The application of exome and genome sequencing has greatly improved the rate of genetic diagnosis for CHD but the cause in the majority of cases remains uncertain. It is clear that genetics, as well as environmental influences, play roles in the aetiology of CHD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: MotherSafe is a free telephone counselling service for exposures during pregnancy and breastfeeding. As the last health professional seen prior to consumption of medicines, community pharmacists' opinions on the use of medications in pregnancy/breastfeeding is likely to be particularly sought by women presenting in pharmacies. However, a recent qualitative study revealed that community pharmacists feel unsupported in their role as medicine information providers to pregnant/breastfeeding women.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Phenytoin exposure during the first trimester of pregnancy increases the risk of maxillary hypoplasia and cleft lip. The etiology of phenytoin embryopathy is unknown. Interestingly, phenytoin is also known to induce hyperglycemia in humans as well as rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMotherSafe is a free telephone-based counseling service for Australian consumers and health care providers concerned about drug exposures during pregnancy and breastfeeding. Calls relating to breastfeeding are relatively common and a source of significant distress to the breastfeeding mother, particularly if there is a lack of clarity regarding possible adverse effects of drug exposure on the infant. This study seeks to identify the medication exposures of concern for breastfeeding mothers and the information available to address these concerns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNausea and vomiting of pregnancy (NVP) is the most common medical complaint during pregnancy affecting up to 70% of pregnant women worldwide. Some antiemetic medications (AEM) (droperidol, domperidone, granisetron, metoclopramide and trifluoperazine) used to treat NVP have the unwanted side effect of hERG blockade. The hERG potassium channel is essential for normal heart rhythm in both the adult human and the human and rat embryo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: When the human heart begins its earliest contractions from day 21, it lacks a functional autonomic nerve supply. Instead, contractions are generated by regular calcium transients later augmented by the funny current (I ) produced by sinoatrial-like cells. This study examined effects of blocking these currents in the early rat embryonic heart.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study evaluates a cooperative learning approach for teaching anatomy to health science students incorporating small group and peer instruction based on the jigsaw method first described in the 1970's. Fifty-three volunteers participated in abdominal anatomy workshops. Students were given time to become an "expert" in one of four segments of the topic (sub-topics) by allocating groups to work-stations with learning resources: axial computerized tomography (CT) of abdominal structures, axial CT of abdominal blood vessels, angiograms and venograms of abdominal blood vessels and structures located within abdominal quadrants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe potent hERG channel blocking drug ondansetron is used off-label for treatment of nausea and vomiting in early pregnancy. Some human epidemiological studies have associated ondansetron with fetal cardiovascular defects and orofacial clefts. This study investigated the effects of ondanestron on embryonic heart rhythm of gestational day (GD) 13 rat embryos in vitro and then integrated the results with published animal teratology, and animal and human pharmacokinetic studies to perform a risk evaluation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Safe use of medications during pregnancy requires a comprehensive understanding of risk-benefit profiles for individual treatments. Pharmacists are supported in this aspect by clinical information agencies (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA slow embryonic heart rate in early-mid gestation is associated with increased risk of embryonic death and malformation, however, the long-term consequences remain unknown. We administered Dofetilide (Dof, 2.5 mg/kg), a drug that produces embryo-specific bradycardia, to pregnant rats from gestational days 11-14.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypoxia is a normal and essential part of embryonic development. However, this state may leave the embryo vulnerable to damage when oxygen supply is disturbed. Embryofetal response to hypoxia is dependent on duration and depth of hypoxia, as well as developmental stage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEthylene glycol (EG) is a developmental toxicant in pregnant rats and mice. A suggested mechanism for this toxicity is that the EG metabolite, glycolic acid (GA), causes acidosis which may affect the embryonic heart rate (HR). This inhibition would cause periods of embryonic bradycardia and arrhythmia resulting in increased embryonic death and malformation in surviving embryos.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: MotherSafe is a free telephone-based counselling service for the general public and healthcare providers concerned about exposures during pregnancy and breastfeeding. Calls relating to paternal exposures are less common, but can cause distress to the person concerned. This review seeks to identify the key concerns and what information is available to address these concerns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Tranylcypromine is a non-selective inhibitor of monamine oxidase which also inhibits the reuptake of norepinephrine. Spontaneous hypertensive reactions to the drug have been reported. In sheep tranylcypromine has been shown to cause a dose-dependent reduction in uterine blood flow.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to gain insight into whether the first trimester embryo could control its own heart rate (HR) in response to hypoxia. The gestational day 13 rat embryo is a good model for the human embryo at 5-6 weeks gestation, as the heart is comparable in development and, like the human embryo, has no functional autonomic nerve supply at this stage. Utilizing a whole-embryo culture technique, we examined the effects of different pharmacological agents on HR under normoxic (95% oxygen) and hypoxic (20% oxygen) conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pharmacol Toxicol Methods
September 2015
Introduction: Although much reproductive toxicology research is performed in live animals there is increasing use of in vitro techniques primarily to identify potential hazards with human exposure. As many in vitro studies are undertaken using protein free media, the standard protocol is to compare the effect concentration determined in vitro with the predicted therapeutic free plasma concentration in humans. The aim of the present study was to test this rationale by comparing the effect of a small number of therapeutic drugs on heart rate of rodent embryos cultured in human sera or protein free serum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBirth Defects Res B Dev Reprod Toxicol
April 2013
Background: Dofetilide is an antiarrhythmic drug that blocks the cardiac repolarizing current IKr ((IKr, rapid component of the delayed rectifying potassium current). Previous studies have shown that (a) IKr is essential for normal cardiac function of the embryonic heart and (b) dofetilide is teratogenic in rodents. This study was undertaken to examine the mechanism by which dofetilide causes limb defects on gestational day 13 (GD 13) in the rat.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSolvent abuse during pregnancy results in a clinical pattern of adverse outcomes including deafness. The aim of this project was to determine whether high doses of toluene for a short duration during pregnancy produced adverse outcomes in the fetal rat. Pregnant rats were given either 1250 mg/kg of toluene or peanut oil by gavage from gestation day 16-19.
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