A supernumerary ovary is an exceedingly rare disorder, in which the structure containing ovarian tissue is located at some distance from the normally placed ovary. 16 cases of endometriosis or tumors originating in a supernumerary ovary have been published in the English literature, but no case of coexisting endometriosis and a tumor has been published. We present the case of a 40-year-old female with cystic endometrioma with coexisting fibroma originating in a supernumerary ovary in the rectovaginal pouch.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStructures and phase behavior of multilamellar vesicles of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-L-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) containing various amount of ganglioside GM3 with a C18:1 sphingoid base and a 24:0 acyl chain (GM3(18,24)) were investigated by small-angle X-ray diffraction. Below 3.5 mol% GM3 content, the phase behavior was similar to that of pure DPPC except for a slight increase of lamellar repeat distance in the L(beta'), the P(beta') and the L(alpha) phases and a decrease of the pretransition temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe a 74-year-old patient with multicentric Castleman's disease (MCD) whose serum macrophage colony-stimulating factor level was elevated. Serum levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin 6 were also elevated at presentation, and they returned to normal levels after chemotherapy. Although the total serum cholesterol level was below normal on admission, it increased after chemotherapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNihon Igaku Hoshasen Gakkai Zasshi
November 1995
99mTc-galactosyl human serum albumin (99mTc-GSA) is a newly developed receptor-binding agent specific for the asialoglycoprotein receptor, which resides exclusively on the plasma membrane of mammalian hepatocytes. Liver scintigraphy using 99mTc-GSA was performed on 13 patients with liver disease. Dynamic data were obtained by gamma camera during 40 min after the intravenous injection of 3 mg (185 MBq) of 99mTc-GSA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ripple structure was studied as a function of temperature in fully hydrated dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC)/cholesterol multibilayers using synchrotron x-ray small-angle diffraction and freeze-fracture electron microscopy. In the presence of cholesterol, the ripple structure appears below the pretransition temperature of pure DMPC multibilayers. In this temperature range the ripple periodicity is relatively large (25-30 nm) and rapidly decreases with increasing temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Phys Lipids
February 1994
Model membranes of diacylphosphatidylcholines (CnPC), with saturated linear acyl chains of n > 12 carbons, show a single sharp phase transition (known as the main transition) between the gel phase P beta' and the liquid crystalline phase L alpha with differential scanning calorimetry. However, C12PC (dilauroylphosphatidylcholine) shows, as well as the sharp transition at -2 degrees C, a broad peak at 5 degrees C, originally observed by S. Mabrey and J.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the ripple phase of fully hydrated multilamellar vesicles of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), two kinds of small-angle x-ray diffraction profiles are observed on cooling through the main transition. One is a seemingly normal profile similar to that observed on heating and the other is the superposition of the diffraction profiles for the primary (normal) and the secondary ripple structures. We found that the profile obtained depended on the cooling rate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo pediatric cases of inflammatory pseudotumor of liver were reported and compared with seven previously reported cases. Clinical presentation was variable but often consisted of fever and vague abdominal symptoms. These two cases were considered to be clinically malignant because angiographically one showed hypervascularity and the other showed the portal vein draining into the lesion to be occluded.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
September 1992
The effects of poly(L-lysine) on the structural and thermotropic properties of dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) bilayers were studied with differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), X-ray diffraction and freeze-fracture electron microscopy. For thermal behavior, in the DPPG/poly(L-lysine) system the main transition temperature rises to 45.7 degrees C and the pretransition disappears in opposition to pure DPPG vesicles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
November 1991
Structure of dipalmitoylphosphatidic acid (DPPA) bilayers in the presence of poly(L-lysine) is proposed from the results of X-ray diffraction obtained by a storage phosphor detector with a high resolution called an imaging plate. The small-angle X-ray diffraction pattern exhibits that DPPA/poly(L-lysine) complex forms a highly ordered multilamellar structure. The electron density profile of the DPPA/poly(L-lysine) complex draws that only one poly(L-lysine) layer is intercalated between the neighboring DPPA bilayers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFully hydrated dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) undergoes liquid crystalline to metastable P(beta), phase transition in cooling. A small angle x-ray scattering study has been performed for obtaining further evidence about the structure of this phase. From a high-resolution observation of x-ray diffraction profiles, a distinct multipeak pattern has become obvious.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ripple structure of 1,2-dimyristoyl-L-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) multibilayer containing excess water (60 wt%) was studied by synchrotron X-ray small-angle diffraction. The (0,1) spacing which corresponds to the ripple repeat distance depends on temperature: At 13 degrees C the (0,1) spacing is 14.15 nm, the spacing decreases at higher temperatures and reaches 12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrimary photochemical behaviors of cattle rhodopsin analogues (Rh5 and Rh7) having cyclopenta- and cycloheptatrienylidene 11-cis-locked retinals (Ret5 and Ret7, respectively) were studied by excitation with a picosecond laser pulse (wavelength 532 nm; duration 21 ps). Picosecond absorption and fluorescence measurements of Rh5 showed formation of only a long-lived excited singlet state (tau l/e = 85 ps). The excited state of the retinal analogue having a five-membered ring was stabilized in protein (Rh5) more than in solvent (protonated Schiff base of Ret5; PSB5).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotochem Photobiol
February 1989
The primary photochemical reactions of cattle rhodopsin suspended in H2O or D2O were compared between excitation with both a weak and an intense picosecond laser pulse (wavelength, 532 nm; duration, 25 ps) at room temperature. The time-dependent change of absorbance at about 575 nm demonstrated that photohodopsin, a precursor of bathorhodopsin, was produced immediately after the excitation with a weak picosecond laser pulse. It decayed to bathorhodopsin with a time constant of 45 ps which is close to the value reported previously [Shichida et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
April 1984
Excitation of squid rhodopsin with a single laser pulse (532 nm, 25 ps) at 18 degrees C yielded photorhodopsin, a precursor of bathorhodopsin. In the linear region, no relation between amount of photorhodopsin and excitation-energy hypsorhodopsin was detected, while in a photon saturation region this was observed. The time constant of hypsorhodopsin to bathorhodopsin decay was about 125 ps.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe primary photochemical processes of rhodopsin studied by low temperature spectrophotometry and picosecond laser spectroscopy in our group was summarized. Low temperature spectroscopic experiments demonstrated that the retinylidene chromophores of hypso- and bathorhodopsins are in a twisted all-trans forms. Excitation of rhodopsin with 532 nm laser pulse (width: 25 psec) yielded a new bathochromic photoproduct "photorhodopsin"; its spectrum was located at longer wavelengths than that of bathorhodopsin.
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