Publications by authors named "Riesenfeld G"

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) remains a major public health problem globally. In the United States the incidence of closed head injuries admitted to hospitals is conservatively estimated to be 200 per 100,000 population, and the incidence of penetrating head injury is estimated to be 12 per 100,000, the highest of any developed country in the world. This yields an approximate number of 500,000 new cases each year, a sizeable proportion of which demonstrate significant long-term disabilities.

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The present study describes the use of a new polyacrolein microsphere (acrobead) protein A column. This method enables immunomodulation by the perfusion of whole blood. The efficacy of the column and its adverse effects following perfusion of blood of patients with immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) or malignancies were investigated.

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A short-term bacterial mutation test, the SOS Chromotest, has been used to detect the excretion in urine of genotoxic metabolites of antineoplastic drugs administered to cancer patients. In this test, the damage to the DNA of the test bacteria is expressed by the production of beta-galactosidase, which can be quantitatively assessed and is proportional to the concentration of the drug. Kinetic curves of excretion for adriamycin, bleomycin, dacarbazine, cis-platinum and vincristine and their mixtures have been constructed from standard curves relating the intensity of the beta-galactosidase response to the concentration of drugs dissolved in normal urine.

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A new method for the detection and quantitation of aflatoxin B1 in liquids is described. The method is based on the SOS Chromotest, in which damage caused by aflatoxin B1 to the DNA of suitably engineered E. coli induces beta-galactosidase.

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The system that regulates plasma calcium in the bird has been formalized into a model based on a series of differential equations and solved by computer simulation. Bone, kidney, and intestine have been considered as the control subsystems, with parathyroid hormone and 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol as the regulating hormones. The parameters used in the simulation model have been computed either from published results or by specifically designed experiments described here.

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Sodium and water turnover rates were measured in young turkeys fed diets with three concentrations of NaCl and kept at 12, 18 or 30 degrees C. Sodium absorption averaged approximately 60% and was unaffected by temperature. Water and sodium pools were affected by temperature and sodium intake.

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Plasma glucose level and glucose turnover rate were studied in chicks (Gallus domesticus) fed isocaloric diets containing glucose, fructose or soybean oil as the main energy supplement. Plasma glucose level and body weight gain were not affected by glucose intake. Glucose turnover rate decreased from 15.

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Starch digestion and glucose absorption were determined in vivo along the chick's (Gallus domesticus) intestine, using 91Y and 51Cr-EDTA as unabsorbed reference substances. About 65% of the ingested starch was digested up to the end of the duodenum, 85% up to the end of the jejunum and about 97% at the terminal ileum. A fraction of about 97% of the glucose, ingested or released from ingested starch, was absorbed.

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