Publications by authors named "Lane K"

Cathinone is the principal psychoactive constituent in leaves of the khat shrub. In some parts of the world, khat leaves are commonly chewed for their stimulant effects. While it has been demonstrated that rhesus monkeys will self-administer cathinone, there has been no demonstration of cathinone self-administration in rats.

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Laparoscopic surgery frequently requires tattooing of endoscopically identified sites for localization during surgery. Some tattooing agents cause serious tissue injury, which must be recognized in pathologic examination. Seven surgically resected colons were reviewed after injection with methylene blue or India ink at intervals of 1 day to 7 weeks before surgery.

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The Met protein is a receptor tyrosine kinase for hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF), a multifunctional growth factor with mitogenic, motogenic and morphogenic properties. A morphologically altered variant of the MDCK cell line, MDCK-1, spontaneously exhibits a number of features associated with a partial HGF/SF-Met induced phenotype (less adhesive colonies in culture, enhanced invasion and motility, nascent tubule formation), but paradoxically does not respond to HGF/SF treatment. Although the overall cell surface expression and distribution of Met were found to be similar in parental MDCK cells and the MDCK-1 cell line, p145met autophosphorylation (+/ HGF/SF) was significantly reduced in MDCK-1 cells in vitro and in vivo when compared with parental MDCK cells.

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We asked whether the well known starvation-induced impairment of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) seen in isolated rat pancreas preparations also applies in vivo. Accordingly, fed and 18-24-h-fasted rats were subjected to an intravenous glucose challenge followed by a hyperglycemic clamp protocol, during which the plasma-insulin concentration was measured. Surprisingly, the acute (5 min) insulin response was equally robust in the two groups.

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The imaging findings in a case of panamebic meningoencephalitis and in a case of granulomatous amebic encephalitis, two rare infections of the central nervous system caused by amebae, are presented and the world literature is reviewed. The brain CT findings in panamebic meningoencephalitis are nonspecific; our case showed diffuse edema. In the case of granulomatous amebic encephalitis, there was evidence of large arterial occlusions and MR demonstration of spinal cord infarctions.

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The effects of the microtubular drugs colcemid and taxol on the morphological changes induced by hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) in MDCK cells were studied. Dynamic changes in the area and shape of individual cells were assessed by morphometric methods whereas alterations of the cytoskeleton were assessed by immunomorphological methods. The results suggest that there are two components in the response to HGF/SF: (a) activation of the extension of lamellae leading to cell spreading; and (b) reorganization of microtubules leading to polarization of cell shape.

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An experiment was performed to determine the relationship between saccharin preference and the self-administration of morphine via the oral and intravenous routes. On the basis of voluntary intake of a saccharin solution by male rats, low and high preference groups were formed. Rats selected for high saccharin preference self-administered more morphine intravenously than rats selected for low preference.

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A 28-year-old woman with prior neurosurgery involving the placement of a cadaveric dural graft developed a rapidly progressive neurodegenerative disorder with prominent cerebellar dysfunction that was proven at autopsy to be Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. She represents the second American to develop Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in association with a dural graft. The unusual features of the case include the patient's initial clinical presentation with cerebellar ataxia in the absence of dementia, the widespread presence of kuru-type amyloid plaques on a histological examination of the brain, the development of clinical symptoms during pregnancy, and the subsequent delivery of a child who remains healthy at the age of 3 years.

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To investigate possible associations of nodular regenerative hyperplasia (NRH) with antitumor chemotherapy, we reviewed 72 partial hepatic resections (55 with metastatic tumor, 12 hepatocellular carcinomas, and five benign neoplasms). Thirty autopsy livers from adults without malignancies served as controls. Studies included hematoxylin and eosin, reticulin, and trichrome stains and immunostaining for proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA).

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This paper discusses results of a study in which mortality rates and APACHE II severity of illness scores of Intensive Care Unit (ICU) patients were monitored for a five-year period (1986-1990) using statistical quality control charts. The purpose of the study was to determine whether severity of illness of patients and mortality rates had changed significantly over this time horizon. The results show that the Intensive Care Unit process is stable and in statistical control.

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HGF-SF is a cytokine independently isolated and characterized for its activities as a mitogen for liver cells in culture (hepatocyte growth factor, HGF) and as a factor which enhances the movement and induces the dissociation of epithelial colonies (scatter factor, SF). The factor is composed of two subunits (A and B) with a M(r) of approximately 57 K and approximately 30 K produced by proteolytic cleavage of a polypeptide precursor. Based on the complete conservation of critical cysteine residues, the domain structure of HGF-SF appears to be remarkably similar to the domain structures of plasminogen, (a blood protease involved in fibrinolysis) and the HGF-like protein (the translation product of a gene recently isolated and which shares extensive sequence identity with HGF-SF).

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Hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) is a multifunctional protein produced by fibroblasts and other mesenchymal cells and active on epithelial and endothelial cells. The factor shares the basic domain organization of plasminogen and other blood proteases and is produced as a single-chain high molecular weight precursor which is subsequently cleaved to produce a biologically active heterodimer. HGF/SF acts on target cells through binding to a cell surface, high-affinity receptor with tyrosine kinase activity encoded by the c-met proto-oncogene.

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A 41-year-old white man with facial pain and diplopia was found to have an invasive lesion of the clivus. The final pathological diagnosis was eosinophilic granuloma. The patient's symptoms resolved completely after transsphenoidal resection of the lesion.

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Pentobarbital stimulus control of rotational behavior was investigated in rats with unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine lesions of substantia nigra. In conditioning trials, lesioned rats were injected simultaneously with 10 mg/kg pentobarbital and 0.05 mg/kg apomorphine and their rotational (circling) behavior observed and counted.

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We describe a method using a semi-dry gel electro-blotter to transfer RNA from standard agarose-formaldehyde denaturing gels in less than 30 min. The method requires equilibrating the gel in a low ionic strength buffer. The transfer is done under high-current and low-voltage conditions.

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We report a case of an 18-month-old male, born to a woman with third trimester febrile illness, who had a history of congestive heart failure and respiratory distress, cardiomegaly, and electrocardiographic (ECG) findings suggestive of cardiomyopathy and myocarditis. After gradual improvement in heart size and function with pharmacologic therapy, he developed a terminal episode of respiratory distress and cardiogenic shock, with ECG findings of an anterolateral infarct. At autopsy it was found that endocardial fibroelastosis with mural thrombi in the left ventricle had been complicated by thromboembolism to the left anterior descending coronary artery, resulting in transmural infarction of the anteroseptal region of the left ventricle.

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Satellite bacteriophage P4 requires the products of the late genes of a helper such as P2 in order to grow lytically. The Escherichia coli rpoA109 mutation, which alters the alpha subunit of RNA polymerase, prevents transcription of the late genes of bacteriophage P2. Suppressor mutations that define the P2 ogr gene overcome this block.

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