Publications by authors named "Peggy S Bowman"

Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a dangerous neurological event with a very short time window for early diagnosis. Clinical diagnoses performed in a lab seek to quantify bilirubin in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) as a biomarker for SAHs; however laboratory assays suffer from lengthy protocols, interference from hemoglobin, and the availability of expertise. Substantial improvements in the determination of bilirubin concentration in the presence of hemoglobin in CSF are demonstrated in this work.

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In North America, an estimated 30,000 patients annually experience an aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). In approximately five percent of these patients, the hemorrhage is not visible on computerized tomography scans due to the inability to image blood at time intervals greater than 12 h post symptom onset. For these patients (many of which have experienced a sentinel hemorrhage that is a precursor to a more significant rupture), a method is needed for accurately analyzing cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) for evidence of SAH.

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Steady state diffuse reflectance spectroscopy is a nondestructive method for obtaining biochemical and physiological information from skin tissue. In medical conditions such as neonatal jaundice excess bilirubin in the blood stream diffuses into the surrounding tissue leading to a yellowing of the skin. Diffuse reflectance measurement of the skin tissue can provide real time assessment of the progression of a disease or a medical condition.

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The Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase (NKA) can affect intracellular Ca(2+) concentration regulation via coupling to the Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchanger and may be important in myogenic tone. We previously reported that in mice carrying a transgene for the NKA alpha(2)-isoform in smooth muscle (alpha(2sm+)), the alpha(2)-isoform protein as well as the alpha(1)-isoform (not contained in the transgene) increased to similar degrees (2-7-fold). Aortas from alpha(2sm+) mice relaxed faster from a KCl-induced contraction, hypothesized to be related to more rapid Ca(2+) clearance.

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We reported that estrogen treatment of ovariectomized rats increased uterine smooth muscle contractility and the ratio of the COOH-terminal myosin heavy chain isoform SM1 (204 kDa) and SM2 [200 kDa; Hewett TE, Martin AF, Paul RJ. J Physiol (Lond) 460: 351-364, 1993]. We extended this model to study sex and estrogen effects on vascular contractility.

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