Publications by authors named "Motyka R"

: The risk of depression during pregnancy and postpartum is high and has intensified during the COVID-19 pandemic. The aim of this study was to estimate the risk of depressive disorders and self-harm thoughts in the third trimester of pregnancy and the first week postpartum in the pandemic period. : This study involved a total of 317 pregnant and postpartum women.

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Background: We aimed to develop a tool for predicting HNF1B mutations in children with congenital abnormalities of the kidneys and urinary tract (CAKUT).

Methods: The clinical and laboratory data from 234 children and young adults with known HNF1B mutation status were collected and analyzed retrospectively. All subjects were randomly divided into a training (70%) and a validation set (30%).

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Fullerenes have been long investigated for application as singlet oxygen sources. Even though they possess high photosensitizing efficiency, their practical use is still limited, mostly because of insufficient absorption of visible and/or near-infrared light. This limitation can be overcome by introducing organic chromophores that absorb longer-wavelength light, either by covalent attachment to C or by its encapsulation in a polymeric matrix.

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Within the presented work, we propose a complex photoemission-based approach for the investigation of the CThSe dyad (CThSe)/indium-tin oxide (ITO) interface formation. For surface topography and basic morphology determination, atomic force microscopy was utilized, and the results showed that CThSe agglomerated into close-to-spherical crystallites and the island-like growth was the dominant type for fullerene growth on the ITO substrate. Further, detailed X-ray and UV-photoelectron spectroscopies (XPS, UPS) were used for thorough characterization of the chemical and electronic properties of the investigated structures.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study explores the relationship between hyperuricemia and nephropathy in children, specifically looking at those with and without mutations in the hepatocyte nuclear factor-1B gene.
  • - 108 pediatric patients were analyzed, revealing higher instances of hyperuricemia in those with the mutation, but no significant differences in other clinical characteristics between the two groups.
  • - While hyperuricemia is common in nephropathy, it is not a reliable predictor of genetic mutations due to its strong association with renal function, making it less useful as a diagnostic marker.
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BACKGROUND Maturity onset diabetes of the young (MODY) usually presents in patients under the age of 25 years and is an autosomal dominant condition associated with mutations in the hepatocyte nuclear factor 1 alpha gene, glucokinase gene, or hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 alpha gene. This report is of a series of 4 cases from Poland of MODY type 5 associated with mutations in the hepatocyte nuclear factor 1 beta (HNF1B) gene, including a 13-year-old boy and adult men aged 33, 34, and 35 years. CASE REPORT Three cases were diagnosed late, in patients in their mid-thirties.

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A series of novel donor-acceptor D-π-A-π-D compounds were synthesized and characterized in order to determine the influence of different acceptor units on their properties. The introduction of acceptor moieties had a direct impact on the HOMO and LUMO energy levels. Fluorescence spectra of compounds can be changed by the choice of an appropriate acceptor and were shifted from the green to the near-infrared part of spectra.

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Ice loss from the world's glaciers and ice sheets contributes to sea level rise, influences ocean circulation, and affects ecosystem productivity. Ongoing changes in glaciers and ice sheets are driven by submarine melting and iceberg calving from tidewater glacier margins. However, predictions of glacier change largely rest on unconstrained theory for submarine melting.

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It has been suggested that exposure to high temperature or hypoxia may confer tolerance to the other oxygen-limited stressor (i.e., 'cross-tolerance').

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Ocean warming and acidification are threatening marine ecosystems. In marine animals, acidification is thought to enhance ion regulatory costs and thereby baseline energy demand, while elevated temperature also increases baseline metabolic rate. Here we investigated standard metabolic rates (SMR) and plasma parameters of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) after 3-4 weeks of exposure to ambient and future PCO2 levels (550, 1200 and 2200 µatm) and at two temperatures (10, 18 °C).

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We present the synthesis and selected physicochemical properties of several novel symmetrical and unsymmetrical alpha,omega-nucleobase mono- and bis-amide conjugated systems containing aliphatic, aromatic or saccharidic linkages. The final stage of the synthesis involves condensation of a subunit bearing carboxylic group with an amine subunit. 4-(4,6-Dimethoxy-1,3,5-triazin-2-yl)-4-methylmorpholinium chloride (DMT-MM) was found to be a particularly effective condensing agent.

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Complex theoretical and experimental studies and quantum-chemical calculations were applied to study the UV-vis spectroscopic features of the novel compounds: three stereoisomers of 1,4-diethoxy-2,5-bis[2-(5-methylthien-2-yl)ethenyl]benzene (A-C) and E,E isomer of 1,4-diisopropoxy-2,5-bis[2-(thien-2-yl)ethenyl]benzene (D). These structures are the derivatives of 2,5-bis[2-(thien-2-yl)ethenyl]benzene, and belong to a group of thienyl-PPV family that are able to polymerize due to the presence of pi-conjugated bonding system. It was established that such compounds during electropolymerization are strongly dependent on their stereochemistry and on the eventual presence of substituents in alpha-positions of the tiophene ring.

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Ion suppression of drug response is a major source of imprecision for bioanalytical analysis using LC-MS/MS. Endogenous phospholipids cause ion suppression in both positive ESI and negative ESI modes and must be removed or resolved chromatographically. Three types of ion-exchange solid-phase extraction mediums were evaluated to determine their abilities to remove phospholipids.

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Cytotoxic lymphocyte maturation factor (CLMF) is a disulfide-bonded heterodimeric lymphokine that (i) acts as a growth factor for activated T cells independent of interleukin 2 and (ii) synergizes with suboptimal concentrations of interleukin 2 to induce lymphokine-activated killer cells. We now report the cloning and expression of both human CLMF subunit cDNAs from a lymphoblastoid B-cell line, NC-37. The two subunits represent two distinct and unrelated gene products whose mRNAs are coordinately induced upon activation of NC-37 cells.

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