Publications by authors named "I Nitz"

Introduction: In the early 2000s when Tactical Combat Casualty Care was developed, the adoption of prophylactic antibiotic use was not mainstream. Back then, guidelines were derivative of civilian trauma guidelines which did not include widespread prophylactic antibiotic use. Current protocols across the DoD have embraced the use of prophylactic antibiotic use before reaching a military treatment facility as evidenced by Tactical Combat Casualty Care guidelines and several Joint Trauma System Clinical Practice Guidelines.

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Until final completion of maturation processes at the age of approximately 18 years, determination of the skeletal age of the hand plays a central role in forensic age diagnostics in living persons in criminal proceedings. In this process, assessment of hand radiographs relies primarily on the stage of development of the epiphyseal nuclei, the increase in size of the individual bones and of the hand skeleton as a whole, changes in the shape of the various skeletal elements and ossification of the epiphyseal plates. To achieve this, there are a variety of methodological approaches based on two different fundamental principles.

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Seven isoforms of the multifunctional human Acyl-coenzyme A binding protein (ACBP) have been characterized so far. Through ab initio analysis of expressed sequence tag (ESTs), we identified a novel high-abundant ACBP splice variant ACBP1e encoding an ACBP isoform with a unique C-terminus of 81 amino acid residues. Bioinformatic analysis shows that this domain is evolutionary conserved and shares no significant homology with other known proteins, and its function is not known.

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Understanding the function of fat metabolism during differentiation of human preadipocytes to fully developed fat tissue has been the aim of various studies in the past decades. Due to the lack of suitable human cell culture lines, experimental research predominantly focused on rodent models and nonhuman cell culture systems. Here, we demonstrate that a human preadipocyte cell line SGBS is well suited to examine differential expression of the Acyl-CoA binding protein (ACBP) during adipogenesis.

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The human Acyl-CoA binding protein (ACBP) is a structural and functional highly conserved protein. As an intracellular pool former and carrier of acyl-CoAs, ACBP influences overall lipid metabolism. Its nuclear abundance and physical interaction with hepatocyte nuclear factor 4alpha suggested a gene regulatory function of ACBP.

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