Publications by authors named "Kinsky R"

Article Synopsis
  • The study analyzed e-scooter accidents in Vienna from 2018 to 2021, revealing a significant rise in injuries, with over 1,300 recorded incidents.
  • Most injuries occurred while riding, mostly affecting males with an average age of about 32, and many patients sustained serious injuries like fractures and concussions.
  • Helmet use was notably low among riders, but it effectively reduced head injuries, highlighting the need for better safety measures and protective gear usage while riding e-scooters.
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Background: In the last years, there has been increasing use of shoulder arthroplasty. As a result, an increasing incidence of periprosthetic humerus fractures (PPHF) is expected. Therefore, this retrospective, multicenter analysis aimed to collect demographic data from patients with PPHF, their treatment strategies, and associated complications.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study evaluated the accuracy of magnetic resonance arthrography (MRA) in detecting intraarticular injuries after primary shoulder dislocation by comparing its results to findings from arthroscopic surgery on 74 patients over nearly two decades.
  • Key injuries identified included Hill-Sachs lesions, Bankart lesions, and SLAP lesions, with a strong correlation noted between MRA and arthroscopic results.
  • Postoperative assessments indicated that factors like age and level of sport played a role in functional recovery, supporting the use of MRA as a reliable diagnostic tool for preoperative planning.
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Introduction: With the help of a J-shaped bicortical iliac crest bone graft, the morphology of the glenoid can be augmented without having to use screws to achieve glenohumeral stability. The aim of this retrospective clinical study was to evaluate the clinical stability and function of the shoulder joint as well as the radiological remodelling process and arthropathic outcomes following the J-bone graft technique.

Materials And Methods: 34 patients with recurrent shoulder dislocations and bony glenoid defects were treated with the J-bone graft technique between 2010 and 2018 at our level-I trauma centre.

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Problem: Allogeneic pregnancies have a survival advantage over syngeneic pregnancies, and paternal Class I MHC antigens have been implicated. In humans, HLA-C and HLA-G and E are expressed by subpopulations of fetal trophoblast. In mice, Qa-2, a Class Ib antigen, and classical H-2K antigens have been described.

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Objective: To test the hypothesis of relationship between sperm pathology and elevated humoral and/or cell-mediated antisperm autoimmunity in male partners from infertile couples.

Design: Analytic study.

Setting: Department of Immunobiology, Institute for the Care of Mother and Child, Prague.

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Problem: Ovine trophoblastin protein, be it natural or recombinant (oTP,r.oTP), a member of the tau interferon family (r.oIFN-tau), has been shown to possess immunosuppressive properties in vitro.

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Method: It is possible to induce increased fetal resorption in a number of inbred murine matings by injecting Poly (I) Poly (C12U) 3.5 days postconception, a maneuver associated with natural killer-mediated damage to the feto placental unit such as occurs in spontaneous fetal resorptions.

Results: We show here that alloimmunization can block this effect.

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The effect of sperm specific lactate dehydrogenase-C4 (LDH-C4) alone or with muramyl dipeptide (MDP) and Freund's complete adjuvant (FCA) on immune responses and breeding capacity have been studied in isogeneic C57 BI/Ks (H-2d) mice. Results per se suggested that LDH-C4 generates isoantibodies even in absence of adjuvant. Though MDP could be substituted for FCA as adjuvant, amplification by MDP of the antibody levels is reduced to half that obtained with FCA.

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To investigate whether cell-mediated immunity (CMI) against sperm and/or antisperm circulating antibodies are associated with poor semen quality, a leukocyte migration inhibition factor (LMIF) assay and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) were performed in groups of men from infertile couples, men from fertile couples and sperm donors. Twenty-five of 102 men (25%) revealed positive CMI against sperm and 10 (10%) had positive antisperm antibody titers in their sera. Fifteen of 28 asthenozoospermic men (53%) from infertile couples revealed positive antisperm CMI.

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Graft versus host reaction (GVHR) and host versus graft reactivity during pregnancy share at least some cellular pathways. Immunosuppression mediated by placental suppressor factors may actively contribute to the survival of the conceptus in the immunocompetent mother. We have previously reported that supernatants from human choriocarcinoma cell lines inhibit mitogen-activated and antigen-activated proliferation of lymphoid cells.

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The role of sperm specific lactate dehydrogenase-C4 (LDH-C4) in allo-immune responses using mixed lymphocyte cultures (MLC) and cytotoxic T cell (CTL) generation in vitro and local graft versus host (LGVH) reaction and allograft enhancement in vivo has been ascertained. LDH was purified from testes (LDH-C4) and kidney (LDH-B4) of C57Bl/Ks mice. MLC and CTL were performed using C57Bl/Ks-anti A/J lymphocytes in presence of 10(-3)-1 micrograms LDH-B4 or LDH-C4 per culture.

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Besides the pathological anti-sperm humoral immunity, pathological anti-sperm cell-mediated immunity is considered as a crucial facet of the disturbances of human reproduction (male and female infertility, recurrent abortions, endometriosis, late EPH gestosis, fetal hypotrophy). A precise and objective method is designed, based on a one-step agarose Leukocyte Migration Inhibition Factor assay. The migration areas are evaluated by a computer-assisted image analysis system.

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Anti-sperm cell-mediated immunity (CMI) is considered as a crucial facet of infertility in patients of both sexes. A precise and objective method is designed, based on a one-step agarose leukocyte migration inhibition factor (LMIF) assay. The migration areas are evaluated by a computer-assisted image analysis system.

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Problem: Emerging evidences suggest that immunoendocrine interactions play definitive roles during development and regression of the human menstrual corpus luteum (hmCL). We have studied the distribution of immune cells within individual structures of hmCL during various stages of its development.

Method: Immunoperoxidase-stained ultra-thin frozen sections were evaluated using light microscopy fitted with an image analysis system.

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The purpose of the present work was to establish whether the placenta is producing factors favoring an increased synthesis of asymmetric IgG antibodies which are known to assume a protective effect upon paternal antigens to which they largely are specific. In this way they can contribute to fetal survival in the maternal uterine environment. The hybridoma cell lines OKT8 (anti-CD8) and 112B4 (anti-DNP) were used in this respect since they synthesized both symmetric and asymmetric molecules of the IgG2a and IgG1 subclasses, respectively, murine isotypes in which anti-paternal antibodies have been detected.

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Immune responses to a well-defined sperm-specific isogenic lactate dehydrogenase-C4 (LDH-C4) have been studied in C57Bl/Ks (H-2d) mice after immunization through intra-rectal route. Presence of anti-LDH-C4-antibodies in the sera of females immunized in presence or absence of adjuvant suggested that the immune system of mice becomes exposed to sperm antigens following intrarectal insemination. LDH-C4 primed lymphocytes from both males and females, when transferred in F1 hybrids, suppressed stimulation index of local graft versus host reaction.

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This review is dealing with the roles of the immune system in the development and functions of the male and female reproductive systems. Further, it describes the topical views on the roles of immunopathologic events and mechanisms involved in the male and female infertility, recurrent abortions, endometriosis, EPH gestosis and disorders of fetal development. Particular attention is paid to the complicated immunological cross-talk and interplay between the mother and its offspring, including the active role played by the placenta and mainly the trophoblast tissue, in the course of gestation.

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We studied the in vivo antibody responses of three H-2b strains, BALB/b, C57BL/6 and BALB/B x C57BL/6 F1 to various lysozymes, REL and HEL, after priming with HEL, REL or the HEL N-terminal peptide. It was confirmed that C57BL/6 is a non-responder strain to HEL and that BALB/b is responder strain. The C57BL/6 non-responder trait was associated with HEL or peptide induction of suppressor cells, as shown by adoptive transfer experiments.

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We have shown in previous reports that human placental supernatants (HPS) display a variety of immunoregulatory properties in vitro. Here we report that these supernatants are able to suppress the ability of murine splenocytes to evoke an allogeneic reaction in the popliteal lymph node (PLN) assay, as well as their capacity to induce both local (popliteal lymph node swelling) as well as systemic chronic or lethal graft-versus-host reactions. Those results are discussed in the light of the potential use of HPS in the control of transplantation immune reactions as well as in the regulation of xenogeneic pregnancies, as the murine system that was used proved that the material exerted an effect across a species barrier.

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Treatment of pregnant CBA/J females with CFA at day 0.5 and 7.5 of pregnancy significantly reduced the fetal resorption rates from 45% to 29% (P less than 0.

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Transfer of spleen cells from poly (I)-poly(C12U)-treated Balb/c mice to 6.5-days-pregnant Balb/c mice significantly increased the resorption rate (P less than 0.01) from 11% to 48%.

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