Publications by authors named "Michal Tarnawski"

Multimodal imaging, including 3D modalities, is increasingly being applied in orthodontics, both as a diagnostic tool and especially for the design of intraoral appliances, where geometric accuracy is very important. Laser scanners and other precision 3D-imaging devices are expensive and cumbersome, which limits their use in medical practice. Photogrammetry, using ordinary 2D photographs or video recordings to create 3D imagery, offers a cheaper and more convenient alternative, replacing the specialised equipment with handy consumer cameras.

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Background: Cord blood (CB) is a widely accepted stem cell source and its clinical utilization depends, to a great extent, on its cell content. Birth-to-clamping (BTC) time of umbilical cord determines placental transfusion to the newborn, and the remaining blood that can be collected and banked. The 2017 Committee Opinion of the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecologists (ACOG) recommends a delay of "at least 30-60 seconds" before clamping the cord for all newborns to ensure adequate iron stores.

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Background: The low incidence of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in neonates decreases the risk of viral transmission with cord blood transplantation. Cord blood donors are screened by testing the maternal sample for total antibodies to CMV. Some cord blood banks also screen cord blood for CMV-DNA.

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Background: The determination of blood group antigens in patients and donors is of primary importance in transfusion medicine. Blood group antigens are inherited and are polymorphic in nature. The majority of polymorphic blood group antigens arise from single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the blood group genes.

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Quantitative immunogold procedure was used to study the distribution of molecular components of interendothelial junctions in blood-brain barrier (BBB) microvessels of scrapie infected SJL/J hyperglycemic mice showing obesity and reduced glucose tolerance. Samples of brain (fronto-parietal cerebral cortex and thalamo-hypothalamic region) obtained from hyperglycemic (diabetic) mice and from non- infected, normoglycemic (non-diabetic) SJL/J mice, were processed for immunocytochemical examination. The localization of the following tight junction (TJ)-associated proteins was studied: occludin as an integral membrane (transmembrane) protein, and zonula occludens one (ZO-1) as a peripheral protein.

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Plasmodium falciparum dramatically modifies the structure and function of the membrane of the parasitized host erythrocyte. Altered membrane properties are the consequence of the interaction of a group of exported malaria proteins with host cell membrane proteins. KAHRP (the knob-associated histidine-rich protein), a member of this group, has been shown to interact with erythrocyte membrane skeletal protein spectrin.

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A morphometric study of amyloid-beta-positive plaques in the neocortex of eight non-demented people from 68 to 82 years of age and 17 subjects with late-stage Alzheimer disease (GDS stage 7/FAST stages 7a-f) from 73 to 93 years of age shows a shift from prevalence of fibrillar plaques to prevalence of nonfibrillar plaques. In the aged, non-demented subjects, about 4/mm^2 plaques are detectable in the neocortex, and the majority are fibrillar plaques. Specifically, 64% found to be classical fibrillar and Thioflavin-S-positive bright primitive plaques.

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