Purpose Of Review: Although dyspnea is the most common and distressing symptom in patients with chronic interstitial lung disease, chronic cough, a potentially debilitating symptom that impairs health-related quality of life, has been described as another common symptom in these patients.
Recent Findings: Many patients with interstitial lung disease have their chronic cough mistakenly attributed to that condition when, in fact, the cough is due to more common disorders such as asthma, upper airway cough syndrome (previously referred to as postnasal drip syndrome), or gastroesophageal reflux disease. This article presents new data on a select group of patients and shows that more than 50% of patients with interstitial lung disease who are referred to a cough clinic for evaluation can have cough caused by these other more common causes of chronic cough.
Study Objectives: To determine whether the health-related quality of life (HRQOL) of women and men is adversely affected by acute cough (AC), affected differently by AC, or affected differently by AC and chronic cough (CC).
Design: Analysis of consecutively and prospectively collected AC data from two time periods, and previously prospectively and consecutively collected CC data that had not been previously analyzed. When no differences were found in the two cohorts of acute coughers, as was the case in the greatest majority of comparisons, the two samples were pooled, treated as one sample of acute coughers, and compared with chronic coughers.
Background: The carotid artery is frequently patched after carotid endarterectomy (CEA) to minimize the risks of early postoperative thrombosis and late recurrent stenosis. The small intestinal submucosa (SIS) patch is a biologic vascular patch derived from porcine small intestine. It is composed primarily of cell-free collagen and other extracellular matrix constituents that act as a scaffold for host cell deposition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnvironmental synchronization of the endogenous mammalian circadian rhythm involves glutamatergic and GABAergic neurotransmission within the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). The neuropeptide nociceptin/orphanin FQ (N/OFQ) inhibits light-induced phase shifts, evokes K(+)-currents and reduces the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration in SCN neurons. Since these effects are consistent with a modulatory role for N/OFQ on synaptic transmission in the SCN, we examined the effects of N/OFQ on evoked and spontaneous excitatory and inhibitory currents in the SCN.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is increasing use of transcriptional profiling in hepatotoxicity studies in the rat. Understanding hepatic gene expression changes over time is critical, since tissue collection may occur throughout the day. Furthermore, when comparing results from different data sets, times of dosing and tissue collection may vary.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree methods were applied to determine which decision model best accounted for same-different judgments about the amplitude of acoustic sinusoids. The methods were (1) analysis of the shape of the receiver operating characteristic; (2) analysis of an observer's decision space; and (3) a correlation method based on the conditional-on-single-stimulus procedure. In one experiment, observers rated their confidence that a pair of 1-kHz sinusoids was drawn from the same or from different sets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe liver is a common organ for transcriptional profiling because of its role in xenobiotic metabolism and because hepatotoxicity is a common response to chemical exposure. To explore the impact that sampling different lobes may have on transcriptional profiling experiments we have examined and compared gene expression profiles of the left and median lobes of livers from male F344 rats exposed to toxic and nontoxic doses of acetaminophen. Transcript profiling using micorarrays revealed clear differences in the response of the left and median liver lobes of F344 rats to acetaminophen exposure both at low doses as well as doses that caused hepatotoxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new tool beginning to have wider application in toxicology studies is transcript profiling using microarrays. Microarrays provide an opportunity to directly compare transcript populations in the tissues of chemical-exposed and unexposed animals. While several studies have addressed variation between microarray platforms and between different laboratories, much less effort has been directed toward individual animal differences especially among control animals where RNA samples are usually pooled.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe carcinogenic activities of anthraquinone and six derivatives were compared and contrasted. Studies included representatives of amino, alkyl, nitro, hydroxy, or halogen-containing anthraquinones, with the purpose of uncovering general structure-activity relationships. Anthraquinone, 2-aminoanthraquinone, 1-amino-2-methylanthraquinone, 2-methyl-1-nitroanthraquinone,1-amino-2,4-dibromoanthraquinone, 1,4,5,8-tetraaminoanthraquinone, and 1,3,8-trihydroxy-6-methylanthraquinone (of varying purities) were administered via feed to Fischer 344/N rats and B6C3F, mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvolutionary ecologists are fundamentally interested in how species interactions affect evolutionary change. We tested the degree to which plant-pollinator interactions affect the frequency of flower color morphs of Raphanus sativus. Petal color in R.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Surg Orthop Adv
April 2005
Recent studies have shown that not all lumbar disc herniations are symptomatic and that when followed longitudinally, these patients develop back pain independent of the previous imaging study. This is a case report of two patients with radicular symptoms and lumbar disc herniations that underwent diagnostic injections to locate their pain generator. Both patients failed to respond to transforaminal epidural steroid injections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
December 2004
The human enterprise is flooding Earth's ecosystems with exotic species. Human population size is often correlated with species introductions, whereas more proximate mechanisms, such as economic activities, are frequently overlooked. Here we present a hypothesis that links ecology and economics to provide a causal framework for the distribution of exotic plants in the United States.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHepatocyte growth factor (HGF) is a growth factor that promotes angiogenesis (tissue vascularization), cell motility, and cell differentiation, making it a potentially beneficial coating for bone implants. However, very little is known about maximizing HGF attachment to surfaces of tissue-engineered scaffolds. Here, we examine methods and kinetics of HGF adsorption onto a dense hydroxyapatite (HA) surface (used in bone implants) and determine the influence of HGF coating on osteoblast phenotype/differentiation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFToxicology and the practice of pathology are rapidly evolving in the postgenomic era. Observable treatment related changes have been the hallmark of toxicology studies. Toxicogenomics is a powerful new tool that may show gene and protein changes earlier and at treatment levels below the limits of detection of traditional measures of toxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBone loss is a consequence of skeletal unloading as seen in bed rest and space flight. Unloading decreases oxygenation and osteoblast differentiation/function in bone. Previously we demonstrated that simulation of unloading in vitro, by culturing differentiating mouse osteoblasts in a horizontal rotating wall vessel (RWV), results in suppressed expression of runx2, a master transcriptional regulator of osteoblast differentiation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study tested the hypothesis that gene expression profiling can reveal indicators of subtle injury to the liver induced by a low dose of a substance that does not cause overt toxicity as defined by conventional criteria of toxicology (e.g., abnormal clinical chemistry and histopathology).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy objectives were to evaluate the 1-hour decision point for discharge or admission for acute asthma; to compare this decision point to the admission recommendations of the Expert Panel Report 2 (EPR-2) guidelines; to develop a model for predicting need for admission in acute asthma. The design used was a prospective preinterventional and postinterventional comparison. The setting was a university hospital emergency department.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy Objectives: To confirm that more women than men who complain of chronic cough seek medical attention, to determine whether the health-related quality of life (HRQOL) of these women is more adversely affected than men, and to determine whether there are gender differences in the ways that chronic cough adversely affects HRQOL.
Design: Analysis of previously, prospectively collected data, but not previously analyzed or reported data, plus additional prospectively collected data to enrich the database to make meaningful gender comparisons.
Setting: Cough clinic in an academic, tertiary care medical center.
The present study characterized the immunohistochemical localization of beta-catenin protein in hepatocellular neoplasms and hepatoblastomas in B6C3F(1) mice exposed to diethanolamine (DEA) for 2 years and evaluated genetic alterations in the Catnb and H-ras genes which are known to play important roles in the pathogenesis of liver malignancies. Genomic DNA was isolated from paraffin sections of each liver tumor. Catnb exon 2 (corresponds to exon 3 in human) genetic alterations were identified in 18/18 (100%) hepatoblastomas from DEA exposed mice.
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