Spatially firing "place cells" within the hippocampal CA1 region form internal maps of the environment necessary for navigation and memory. In rodents, these neurons have been almost exclusively studied in small environments (<4 m). It remains unclear how place cells encode a very large open 2D environment that is commensurate with the natural environments experienced by rodents and other mammals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProblem: Non-fatal type II violence experienced by hospital workers (patient/visitor-on-worker violence) is not well described.
Methods: Hospital administration data (2004-2009) were examined for purposes of calculating rates of type II violent events experienced by workers. We also conducted a review of the hospital-based literature (2000-2010) and summarized findings associated with type II violence.
Breast Care (Basel)
December 2010
SUMMARY: BACKGROUND: Patients presenting with symptoms from unknown metastatic breast carcinoma are becoming increasingly uncommon. Perforated appendicitis from metastatic breast carcinoma is a rare entity with only a few published reports in the literature. CASE REPORT: The case of a 76-year-old female patient who developed perforated appendicitis from previously unknown metastatic breast cancer is presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLipoyl synthase (LipA) catalyzes the formation of the lipoyl cofactor, which is employed by several multienzyme complexes for the oxidative decarboxylation of various alpha-keto acids, as well as the cleavage of glycine into CO(2) and NH(3), with concomitant transfer of its alpha-carbon to tetrahydrofolate, generating N(5),N(10)-methylenetetrahydrofolate. In each case, the lipoyl cofactor is tethered covalently in an amide linkage to a conserved lysine residue located on a designated lipoyl-bearing subunit of the complex. Genetic and biochemical studies suggest that lipoyl synthase is a member of a newly established class of metalloenzymes that use S-adenosyl-l-methionine (AdoMet) as a source of a 5'-deoxyadenosyl radical (5'-dA(*)), which is an obligate intermediate in each reaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Dev Brain Res
November 1999
Prenatal ethanol exposure can cause a number of physiological deficits known as fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS). Because protein kinase C (PKC) regulates the cell cycle and has been linked to growth, we examined the effect of ethanol on PKC isoform expression in a developing chick brain. Ethanol exposure causes decreased head weight in chickens at day 5 in a dose-dependent manner and a decreased brain weight at days 7 and 10 at an ethanol concentration of 1.
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