Publications by authors named "Ruda Zorc-Pleskovic"

The risk factors that are the most significant for the development of most cardiovascular diseases are arterial hypertension (AH), type 2 diabetes (DM), and inflammation. However, for the development of aortic aneurysms, DM is not one of them. Our study aimed to evaluate the difference between inflammatory infiltration in three individual layers of the ascending aortic aneurysm within diabetic and hypertensive patients.

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Aortic aneurysms occur relatively frequently in the ascending thoracic aorta, but are rarely seen in patients with type 2 diabetes. Our aim was to evaluate inflammatory cell infiltration in the ascending aortic aneurysm wall in patients with diabetes without arterial hypertension (DM2 group, N=6) versus hypertensive non-diabetic patients (AH group, N=34). For histologic analysis, the sections were stained with hematoxylin-eosin and Movat pentachrome.

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The patency of the vein graft in coronary artery bypass grafting could be dependent on the conventional open (vsO) or endoscopic (vsE) harvesting and on the hypoxic damage of endothelial cells. We aimed to evaluate both surgical techniques according to endothelial loss that occurs in the time between harvesting and implantation. Twenty-six saphenous veins were divided into vsO (n = 16) and vsE (n = 10) group.

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Obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) is characterized by inflammation within the atherosclerotic coronary arteries. Infiltration of inflammatory cells into muscular media can lead to remodeling and weakening of the arterial wall. We examined the relationship between inflammatory infiltration in perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT), state of the external elastic membrane, and the intensity of inflammatory infiltration in the tunica media of coronary arteries obtained by endarterectomy from symptomatic patients with diffuse CAD.

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Atherosclerosis is a chronic inflammatory disease of arteries and it affects the structure and function of all three layers of the coronary artery wall. Current theories suggest that the dysfunction of endothelial cells is one of the initial steps in the development of atherosclerosis. The view that the tunica intima normally consists of a single layer of endothelial cells attached to the subendothelial layer and internal elastic membrane has been questioned in recent years.

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In coronary artery disease (CAD), the disruption of the tunica media immune privilege manifests as increased leukocyte infiltration and the formation of vasa vasorum. We aimed to characterize the immune privilege status of the tunica media in human coronary arteries (CAs) with atherosclerotic plaques, by comparing the abundance and composition of immune-cell infiltrates within the individual arterial-wall layers, and by evaluating vasa vasorum neovascularization of the tunica media. The tissue samples were obtained from 36 symptomatic patients with diffuse CAD (aged 60-72 years) who underwent coronary endarterectomy.

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Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a complication of diabetes characterized by vascular permeability, increased tissue ischemia, and angiogenesis. One of the most important proteins involved in angiogenesis is vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF, also known as VEGFA). A previous study demonstrated that two single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), rs6921438 and rs10738760, account for nearly half the variation in circulating VEGF levels.

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Background: Adhesion molecules are involved in the development of atherosclerosis. An increased level of the ICAM 1 molecule is associated with numerous inflammatory diseases including atherosclerosis of carotid arteries. The rs5498 (K469E) polymorphism of the ICAM-1 gene leads to an increase in the level of serum ICAM.

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In vivo visualization of kidney and liver damage by Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) may offer an advantage when there is a need for a simple, non-invasive and rapid method for screening of the effects of potential nephrotoxic and hepatotoxic substances in chronic experiments. Here, we used MRI for monitoring chronic intoxication with microcystins (MCs) in rat. Male adult Wistar rats were treated every other day for eight months, either with MC-LR (10 μg/kg i.

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Mitochondrial toxin 3-nitropropionic acid (3NPA) is a neurotoxin that inhibits the activity of succinate dehydrogenase, a key enzyme of oxidative energy production, and characteristically provokes neurodegeneration in the striatum, resembling Huntington's disease. 3NPA also affects the activity of glycogen-sinthase-kinase-3b (GSK-3b), an enzyme implicated in glycogen synthesis and in signal transduction. The aim of this study was to evaluate cardiac glycogen content and histopathological changes in the hearts of rats after subchronic treatment with 3NPA.

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Kidney transplantation (Ktx) is generally performed during end stage renal disease due to a loss of the kidneys' ability to filter wastes from the circulatory system. Acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after Ktx is a life-threatening complication that progresses to organ failure, systemic complications, and death. The current study evaluated the significance of histologic findings of GVHD as obtained from skin biopsies following Ktx in swine.

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Background: Type 2 diabetes is an important risk factor for the development of coronary artery disease (CAD). Focal or diffuse inflammation is often present in the vessels of patients with CAD. Mast cells are frequently present in the plaques as well as in the inflammatory infiltrates in the atherosclerotic vessel wall.

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Intestinal transplantation is being increasingly performed to treat patients with irreversible intestinal failure. The major cause of intestinal graft failure is graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) that represents a life-threatening complication after small bowel transplantation (Itx). The purpose of this study was to assess the diagnostic and prognostic value of skin biopsy histological changes for acute GVHD after Itx in pigs.

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In this study we investigated the association of the interleukin-1 receptor antagonist gene variable number tandem repeat (IL1RN VNTR) polymorphism and of the inhibitor of kappa B-like protein (IKBL) gene polymorphism with myocardial infarction (MI) in a group of patients with type 2 diabetes. The IL1RN VNTR and the IKBL+ 738T > C gene polymorphisms were tested in 374 Caucasians: 151 cases with MI and 223 subjects with no history of coronary artery disease. The IL1RN VNTR polymorphism was not a risk factor for MI in Caucasians with type 2 diabetes (genotype 22 vs.

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In this study we analyzed the contribution of genetic variability of the insertion/deletion (I/D) polymorphism of the angiotensin-I converting enzyme (ACE) gene to the predisposition for coronary artery disease (CAD) in a group of patients with type 2 diabetes. The I/D ACE gene polymorphism was tested in 366 Caucasians with type 2 diabetes: 148 cases with CAD and 218 subjects with no history of CAD. We failed to demonstrate that the ACE DD genotype was a risk factor for CAD in Caucasians with type 2 diabetes (OR 2.

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Background And Purpose:: To investigate the histopathologic characteristics of atherosclerotic lessions in diffuse coronary artery disease and to evaluate the possible inflammatory role of chronic infection with Chlamydia pneumoniae (CP).

Materials And Methods:: For 10 patients (males, mean age 61 years) who were surgically treated for grave diffuse coronary artery disease, histomorphological analyses of endarterectomized segments of the coronary arteries were performed. Serological analyses for the detection of CP antibodies in peripheral blood were done, preoperatively.

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In order to investigate the contribution of the atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) gene in pathogenesis of essential arterial hypertension (EAH), we analyzed the ScaI gene polymorphism of the ANF gene in a group of children with EAH. Fifty-eight children, aged 8-19 years, with the diagnosis of EAH were included in the association study and were compared to 57 subjects with normal blood pressure (the control group). Arterial hypertension was defined as systolic/diastolic blood pressure higher than the 95th age-gender-height percentile of the adopted reference values.

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The aim of the study was to prove the long-lasting and continuously harmful effect of chronic Chlamydia pneumoniae (CPn) infection on vessel walls in patients with diffuse coronary artery disease (CAD). In surgically obtained endarterectomized atherosclerotic plaques grade VI-VIII (Stary classification) from 10 patients with diffuse coronary artery disease and chronic (7) or past (3) CPn infection, signs of inflammatory response of the vessel wall on infectious agents were studied. In all 10 endarterectomized plaque step serial sections, immunologic signs of vessel wall response were present (positive T- and B-lymphocytes, macrophages, and capillarogenesis).

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The deleterious intracellular Ca(2+) overload in the ischemic-reperfusion injury of the heart can be even more expressed in subjects with acute renal failure in whom maintenance of intracellular Ca(2+) has already been disturbed in normoxia. To study the influence of acute renal failure in ischemic-reperfusion injury on the heart, we used isolated Langendorff's hearts of guinea pigs with gentamicin-induced acute renal failure. We examined arrhythmias, heart contractility and myocardial cell damage during reperfusion.

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Acute intoxication with MC-LR induces cytoskeletal alterations, apoptosis and necrosis of hepatocytes resulting in intrahepatic hemorrhage. Preliminary results have shown that chronic treatment of rats with intraperitoneal injections of sublethal doses of microcystins MC-LR and MC-YR could induce not only liver, but also kidney injuries. We aimed to investigate whether the induction of the cytoskeletal changes, apoptosis and necrosis could be the mechanisms involved in the injury of kidney cells in the chronic model of microcystin intoxication.

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Introduction: The aim of the study was to evaluate the role of apoptosis, proliferation markers, volume density of interstitium, and myofibril volume fraction for the prognosis in patients with end-stage dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM).

Methods: Endomyocardial biopsy was performed during open-heart surgery in 56 patients with end-stage DCM. Patients were divided into two groups, one group with shorter survival (24+/-9 months, mean+/-S.

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The aims of the study were to investigate the histopathologic characteristics of atherosclerotic lesions and to evaluate the role of apoptosis or programmed cell death in diffuse coronary atherosclerosis. The study included 59 patients who underwent coronary artery bypass grafting coupled with coronary endarterectomy because of diffuse coronary atherosclerosis. Histopathologic analysis of endarterectomy sequesters showed atheroma with confluent extracellular lipid core-type IV lesions in 13 cases (22%); atheroma with lipid core and a cap of fibromuscular layers-type V lesions in 9 cases (15.

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