Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health
January 2006
Five elementary ("prototypic") schools located in five districts in central Java were selected and the children examined for helminth infections (Ascaris, Trichuris, hookworm). They were de-wormed with a course of mebendazole and provided with 6-7 months of "behavioral remediation instruction" (BRI). In other ("control") schools, children were treated with mebendazole but were not provided BRI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFive schools in central Java that enroll more than 500 students in grades one through six were chosen for a study of the prevalence of parasitic geohelminths and selected protozoan infections. The schools are located in regions that differ in geological features, density of vegetation and cultural and economic attributes. The prevalence of soil-transmitted helminths among children in the five schools ranged from 8.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOlfactory neuroepithelial cells (ONC) grown from biopsies of human donors are a novel cell culture system that may facilitate studies into normal and disease-related human neurobiology. We further characterized the expression of cell surface markers and intermediate filaments, and responses to neurotrophic factors by ONC. ONC are positive for cell surface markers N-CAM, PSA-N-CAM, neutral endopeptidase, N-aminopeptidase, NGF low-affinity receptor homologue (CD40), and transferrin receptor by flow cytometry for the intermediate filament proteins peripherin, vimentin, and NF-H by immunocytochemistry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe apolipoprotein E isozyme, apolipoprotein E4, has been implicated as a risk factor for Alzheimer's disease. One reason for the increased risk may be that apolipoprotein E binds to the A beta peptide, but there may be other factors as well. We show that apolipoprotein E is a potent regulator of the secretion of amyloid precursor protein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDefinitive diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is made by pathologic examination of postmortem brain tissue in conjunction with a clinical history of dementia. To date, there are no good biological markers for a positive diagnosis of AD in the living patient. In an effort to identify biological markers useful both in the clinical and pathologic diagnosis of AD, we have investigated disease-specific protein alterations in cultured olfactory neurons.
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