Publications by authors named "Loro Kujjo"

This study presents the routine prosection findings of a 73-year-old male cadaver, with the cause of death reported to be hypertension and respiratory failure. Deep thorax and abdomen dissection exposed profound external and internal anatomical abnormalities. Externally, the body exhibited the following: pectus excavatum; short-limbed dwarfism; and abnormalities of the head, face, and external genitalia.

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Context: Well-established human anatomy labs with access to expert faculty are exceedingly valuable tools to medical student education. In this manuscript, we detail an infero-lateral subclavicular lipoma which was discovered as a result of the utilization of both those labs and expert faculty. This lipoma may have caused brachial plexopathy or may serve as an unusual cause of neurologic thoracic outlet syndrome (NTOS) due to the location of the mass.

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In women as well as in mice, oocytes exhibit decreased developmental potential (oocyte quality) with advanced age. Our current data implicate alterations in the levels of oocyte ceramide and associated changes in mitochondrial function and structure as being prominent elements contributing to reduced oocyte quality. Both ROS levels and ATP content were significantly reduced in aged oocytes.

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Reproductive health of humans and animals exposed to daily irradiants from solar/cosmic particles remains largely understudied. We evaluated the sensitivities of bovine and mouse oocytes to bombardment by krypton-78 (1 Gy) or ultraviolet B (UV-B; 100 microjoules). Mouse oocytes responded to irradiation by undergoing massive activation of caspases, rapid loss of energy without cytochrome-c release, and subsequent necrotic death.

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Maternal aging adversely affects oocyte quality (function and developmental potential) and consequently lowers pregnancy rates while increasing spontaneous abortions. Substantial evidence, especially from egg donation studies, implicates the decreased quality of an aging oocyte as a major factor in the etiology of female infertility. Nevertheless, the cellular and molecular mechanisms responsible for the decreased oocyte quality with advanced maternal aging are not fully characterized.

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To our knowledge, there is no report on long-term reproductive and developmental side effects in the offspring of mothers treated with a widely used chemotherapeutic drug such as doxorubicin (DXR), and neither is there information on transmission of any detrimental effects to several filial generations. Therefore, the purpose of the present paper was to examine the long-term effects of a single intraperitoneal injection of DXR on the reproductive and behavioral performance of adult female mice and their progeny. C57BL/6 female mice (generation zero; G0) were treated with either a single intraperitoneal injection of DXR (G0-DXR) or saline (G0-CON).

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Background: Therapeutic approaches to preserve fertility in females undergoing cancer treatments are currently ineffective. This is partly due to limited knowledge of the molecular mechanisms that injured germ cells elicit to repair damage and survive or to abort repair and activate biochemical pathways leading to death. So far, we know that following spontaneously occurring or drug-induced DNA damage, the efficiency of DNA repair is a critical determinant of the cell's fate.

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An experiment was conducted to measure the changes in serum cortisol and luteinising hormone (LH) concentrations in heifers during the luteal phase of the oestrous cycle after the administration of lipid X and Gram-negative endotoxin. Nine heifers whose oestrous cycles were synchronised with prostaglandin F2 alpha were assigned at random on day 10 after the second prostaglandin injection to one of the following groups. Group 1 heifers (n = 3) received 5 micrograms kg-1 bodyweight of Escherichia coli endotoxin as an intrauterine infusion and one hour later received an intravenous injection of lipid X (5 micrograms kg-1 bodyweight).

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