Publications by authors named "Latta H"

This paper gives a comparative overview of the current clinical care of patients experiencing pain in the musculoskeletal system in Austria and in Germany. The questionnaire used in this study was modified from one used in a survey carried out in Germany in 2002. In our version we asked specifically about pain in the musculoskeletal system.

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We present evidence of 2 distinct glomerular abnormalities in cyanotic congenital heart disease--vascular and nonvascular--each believed to reflect a distinct pathogenesis. Glomeruli from both kidneys were studied with light microscopy in 13 necropsied cyanotic patients and in 8 controls. The vascular study characterized hilar arteriolar dilatation, capillary diameter, glomerular diameter, and capillary engorgement with red blood cells.

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The mesangium of the glomerulus is a connective tissue tree arising at the vascular pole of the glomerulus and supporting the glomerular capillaries. It is partly covered by a basement membrane that follows the epithelial cells from the peripheral glomerular capillary wall over the supporting tissue. The capillary endothelium does not normally have a separate basement membrane.

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While primary and secondary malignant lymphomas have been well-documented in the CNS of patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), only one case of lymphomatoid granulomatosis (LG) involving the CNS has been reported. We present three AIDS patients with multiple grossly evident foci of necrosis in the cerebral hemispheres which, on histologic evaluation, were seen to contain angiocentric mixed chronic inflammatory infiltrates with atypical mononuclear cells, luminal thrombosis, and infarction, which is typical of LG. LG was also identified in sections of the lung in one case.

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Small tracers in the circulation enter the rat mesangium rapidly and in large amounts that indicate a sizable plasma flow into the mesangium. Entrance is effected through mesangial fenestrations with a mean width in scanning electron microscopy of 376 A, a size similar to fenestrations in peripheral glomerular capillary walls. This is considerably smaller than the mean size of 678 A found with transmission electron microscopy, but the difference is probably due largely to the anionic surface coat on endothelial cells.

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Sheep T-cell growth factor (TCGF) was prepared from concanavalin A-activated sheep peripheral blood cells and subsequently characterized by ammonium sulfate precipitation, gel exclusion chromatography, and isoelectric focussing. The TCGF was found in the 60-80% ammonium sulfate fraction and was shown to have an apparent molecular weight of 32,500 and an isoelectric point in the range pI 5.2-5.

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To clarify the functions of the agranular cells in the polar cushion of the juxtaglomerular apparatus, the effects of drinking 1% NaCl or eating a diet containing 8% NaCl were examined on the numbers of granular and agranular cells in the polar cushions, the kidney weights, and the blood pressures of male Sprague-Dawley rats after uninephrectomy. Only 11.8% of the cells in the polar cushions of control rats in this study were granular; hence, 88.

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Counts were made of granular and agranular cells in the juxtaglomerular apparatuses of rats with unilateral renovascular hypertension, using light and electron microscopy. Both granular and agranular cells may appear binucleated; therefore, nuclear counts need to be corrected by 4 to 8 per cent to get true cell counts. The polar cushion (Polkissen) corresponds to the cells included in the juxtaglomerular cell count, which is really a nuclear count.

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Injection of approximately 10(6) to 10(9) Escherichia coli into the renal arteries of rabbits resulted in retention of sufficient numbers of organisms in renal vessels to permit study of the mechanism of localization by electron microscopy. After injection of the bacterial suspension, perfusion fixation was used to maintain open vascular contours. Individual organisms were found to adhere to the endothelium of glomerular and intertubular capillaries, and ruthenium red staining demonstrated a close interaction between the largely polysaccharide bacterial microcapsule and the sialoglycoprotein endothelial surface coat.

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The purpose of these experiments was to define changes in glomeruli of rats kidneys which could account for a marked reduction of blood flow immediately following temporary ischemia. After the renal artery had been clamped for 60 minutes, mesangial and endothelial cellular swelling was sufficiently severe to compress and trap intracapillary erythrocytes, obstruct capillary lumens, and prevent reflow of an isotonic carbon suspension. Perfusion of saline solution before the renal arteries were clamped washed blood from the kidney, and the resulting cellular swelling alone was not sufficient to block capillary lumens.

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To produce hypertension, the left renal artery was clipped in 20 rats. Six rats had a sham operation. After 4 months, some of the rats showed only a moderate increase in blood pressure, and a second clipping of the same artery was performed.

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