Background: Currently, all of the studies that focus on the relationship between paranoia and criminal offenses exclusively concern subjects suffering from a delusional paranoid disorder. However, subjects with single paranoid personality disorder, without any associated delusional disorder, are not uncommon in forensic practice.
Objectives: This study aims to describe the offenses committed by subjects suffering from a single paranoid personality disorder and to compare them with the offenses committed by the subjects affected by a paranoid delusional disorder associated with paranoid personality disorder.
Excessive alcohol consumption has a modulating effect on immune functions that may contribute to decreased immunity and host defense. It is associated with increased intestinal permeability to endotoxins that is normalized after 14 d of abstinence. Whether and how blood monocyte subsets are impaired in patients with an AUD and what their evolution is after alcohol withdrawal are the paper's objectives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNMO-IgG is a specific biomarker of neuromyelitis optica (NMO) that targets the aquaporin-4 (AQP4) water channel protein. The current gold standard for NMO-IgG identification is indirect immunofluorescence (IIF). Our aim in this study was to develop a new quantitative cell-based assay (CBA) and to propose a rational strategy for anti-AQP4 Ab identification and quantification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInflammation of the airways is a major feature of the inherited disease cystic fibrosis. Previous studies have shown that the pro-inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor alpha and interferon gamma reduce the expression of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene (CFTR) in HT-29 and T84 cells by acting post-transcriptionally. We have investigated the effect of the pro-inflammatory peptide interleukin 1beta (IL-1beta) on the expression of the CFTR in Calu-3 cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNaCl reabsorption across the thick ascending limb of Henle's loop (TAL) is stimulated by several hormones, in particular vasopressin acting through V2 receptors and cyclic AMP production. This study used suspensions of medullary TAL (mTAL) tubules from the mouse nephron to investigate the possibility that, besides activating adenylyl cyclase, vasopressin also stimulates phospholipase C via V1 receptor occupancy. Two different methods, phosphoinositide labelling and inositol trisphosphate (InsP3) radioimmunoassay, were used to show that [arginine]vasopressin (AVP) rapidly stimulated the formation of InsP3, which peaked at 200%-250% of control within the first minute of incubation with 10 nmol/l vasopressin at 37 degrees C, and declined to basal level after 5-10 min.
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