G Ital Dermatol Venereol
December 2019
Alopecia areata (AA) is an organ-specific autoimmune disorder that targets anagen phase hair follicles. The course is unpredictable and current available treatments have variable efficacy. Nowadays, there is relatively little evidence on treatment of AA from well-designed clinical trials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVitamin D plays an important role in maintaining the homeostasis of various biological systems. Beside its well-known function in calcium and phosphate metabolism, it plays a major role in pathophysiology of skin and adnexa. Indeed, vitamin D, through its receptor (VDR), decreases keratinocyte proliferation, improves their differentiation and modulates both cutaneous innate (antimicrobial activity and antigen presentation) and adaptative immunity (T and B lymphocyte function).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPityriasis versicolor is one of the most frequent epidermal mycotic infections in the world, but its atrophic variant is rarely described. The aetiology of the atrophy is still unknown, and two main hypotheses have been formulated, one suggesting a correlation with long-term use of topical steroids and the other a delayed type hypersensitivity to epicutaneous antigens derived from components of the fungus. Atrophic pityriasis versicolor is a benign disease, but needs to be distinguished from other more severe skin diseases manifesting with cutaneous atrophy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: There is a need to improve the quality of communication between clinicians and parents of young patients with atopic eczema (AE).
Objective: To create a tool to measure the suffering that caregivers experience in association with their child's AE (Caregiver Pictorial Representation of Illness and Self-Measure, Caregiver-PRISM), assess the validity and reliability, and identify factors associated with caregiver suffering.
Methods: Caregiver-PRISM was administered to 45 parents of patients from an AE outpatient service (Padua, Italy).
Darier's disease (DD) is an autosomal dominant inherited genodermatosis which is often under- or misdiagnosed. In the majority of cases, the disease manifests in adolescents or young adults with small brownish-yellow, warty, hyperkeratotic papules in multiple seborrheic areas of the body. Localized DD (LDD) is a clinical variant, first described by Kreibich in 1906; only a few cases are reported in the literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIncreasing data suggests that there is a connection between stress and the appearance of psoriasis symptoms. We therefore performed a clinical trial enrolling 40 participants who were randomly allocated to either an 8-week cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) (treatment group) plus narrow-band UVB phototherapy or to an 8-week course of only narrow-band UVB phototherapy (control group). We evaluated the clinical severity of psoriasis (PASI), General Health Questionnaire (GHQ)-12, Skindex-29 and State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) at baseline and by the end of the study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report acute radiation dermatitis on a patient's back and left arm, which developed 4 weeks after endovascular embolisation of a spinal arteriovenous malformation. Vesciculation and erosions were followed by a gradual re-epithelisation of the skin resulting in rectangular hyperpigmented patches that resolved almost completely within 1 month. Fluoroscopic radiodermatitis has been reported with more frequency over the past decades because of the rise in duration and number of procedures performed under fluoroscopic guidance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCetuximab is a monoclonal antibody that competitively inhibits the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). It is used for the treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer after first-line therapy. We report the first case of a pustular psoriasiform drug eruption induced by cetuximab in a patient with colorectal cancer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFXanthinuria is a rare autosomal recessive disorder associated with a deficiency of xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR), which normally catalyzes the conversion of hypoxanthine to uric acid. The effects of this deficit are an elevated concentration of hypoxanthine and xanthine in the blood and urine, hypouricemia, and hypouricuria. The deficit in XOR can be isolated (type I xanthinuria) or associated with a deficit in aldehyde oxidase (type II xanthinuria) and sulfite oxidase (type III xanthinuria).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMucuna pruriens has been used by native Nigerians as a prophylactic for snakebite. The protective effects of M. pruriens seed extract (MPE) were investigated against the pharmacological actions of N.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEthnopharmacological Relevance: The seed, leaf and root of Mucuna pruriens have been used in traditional medicine for treatments of various diseases. In Nigeria, the seed is used as oral prophylactics for snakebite.
Aim Of The Study: To study the protective effects of Mucuna pruriens seed extract against the lethalities of various snake venoms.
Nucleosides Nucleotides Nucleic Acids
March 2009
We investigated the mechanism of action of uricase, which oxidizes uric acid to allantoin, in the rat. Allantoin may decompose chemically to urea and hydantoin, containing the carbons in positions 2 and 8 of the purine ring, respectively. These carbons are derived by formylation, catalyzed by formyltransferase, in two reactions of de novo synthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Pharmacother
November 2009
B-CLL is the most frequent type of leukemia in the Western countries. The disease, common among the elderly, follows a variable course in terms of survival time and symptoms. There is evidence that the accumulation of lymphocytes in peripheral blood and bone marrow is due to a cell resistance to apoptosis rather than to highly proliferative cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrude rat liver extract showed AMP-AMP phosphotransferase activity which, on purification, was ascribed to a novel interaction between adenylate kinase, also known as myokinase (EC 2.7.4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleosides Nucleotides Nucleic Acids
June 2008
Adenosine kinase is an enzyme catalyzing the reaction: adenosine + ATP --> AMP + ADP. We studied some biochemical properties not hitherto investigated and demonstrated that the reaction can be easily reversed when coupled with adenosine deaminase, which transforms adenosine into inosine and ammonia. The overall reaction is: AMP + ADP --> ATP + inosine + NH(3).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleosides Nucleotides Nucleic Acids
June 2008
Free radical excess and oxidative stress are implicated in the formation and progression of atherosclerotic plaque through actions on susceptible vascular cells, such as by activating xanthine oxidase. Purine bases and other antioxidant compounds could play important protective roles in atherogenesis, as could nonenzymatic low molecular weight thiol defenses, not previously evaluated in carotid artery plaque. Therefore, we measured purine catabolites (hypoxanthine, xanthine, uric acid, allantoin) and antioxidant compounds (total sulphydryl groups, homocysteine, cysteine, and glutathione) in advanced carotid artery plaque and found a high ratio of allantoin to uric acid, suggesting a ongoing local oxidative stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPreviously, we reported the antisnake venom properties of a Mucuna pruriens seed extract (MPE) and tested its in vivo efficacy against Echis carinatus venom (EV) in short- (1 injection) and long-term (three weekly injections) treatments. The aim of the present study was to investigate plasma proteome changes associated with MPE treatments and identify proteins responsible for survival of envenomated mice (CHALLENGED mice). Six treatment groups were studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNitric oxide (NO), an unstable derived of nitrogen, is released by endothelium in response to physiological stimulus. Indeed, the endothelium is not only a barrier between the lumen and the inner side of the vessel wall but also a metabolically active organ with endocrine, paracrine and autocrine functions. Endothelial vascular cells play an important role in the regulating vasomotor tone, local homeostasis and vascular bed proliferation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtherosclerosis is a complex disease that affects medium and large arteries, leading to the formation and progression of plaque. In this process the proteins play an essential role and as a consequence, proteomic-based strategies examining the protein content of cells or tissues could offer a useful approach for the study of plaque proteins. Due to the heterogeneous cell composition of plaque, proteome analysis of whole lesions is difficult, besides being also complicated by the presence of plasma proteins that cannot be completely eliminated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrgan dysfunction secondary to ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury still represents a major problem in liver transplantation. Apoptosis has been observed in hepatocytes and sinusoidal endothelial cell, following I/R injury and it has been postulated as a contributing factor in ischemia-reperfusion graft dysfunction, involving a complex series of events, as changes of protein tyrosine-kinase phosphorylation. We evaluated hepatic purine metabolites, protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs), nitrate plus nitrite levels (NOx), caspase-3 (C-3) activity and DNA fragmentation in the time course of twelve pig orthotopic liver transplantation.
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