Publications by authors named "Tadikonda P"

Background: Non insertional Achilles tendinopathy [AT] is a degenerative condition that is prevalent in runners. 30% have no preceding history and many runners do not develop AT. Overuse, pronation, and compromised blood supply are hypothesised as causal.

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Introduction: First Ray Instability (FRI) and especially hypermobility leads to the collapse of the medial longitudinal arch's structural framework, which reduces the foot's ability to become a rigid lever for propulsion, resulting in progressive foot deformities. Early detection of FRI with prompt intervention helps prevent degenerative foot deformities. Various manual, device-based and radiographic diagnostic tests for FRI quantification have been described in the literature.

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Background: Calcaneal fractures can be high energy intra-articular injuries associated with joint depression. Challenges to fracture reduction include lateral wall blow out, medial wall overlap, comminution and central bone loss. Secondary deformity such as hindfoot varus alters foot biomechanics.

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Background: Calcaneal fractures can be high energy intra-articular injuries associated with joint depression. Challenges to fracture reduction include lateral wall blow out, medial wall overlap, comminution and central bone loss. Secondary deformity such as hindfoot varus alters foot biomechanics.

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Osteosarcoma (OS) is an aggressive malignancy of bone affecting children, adolescents and young adults. Understanding vitamin D metabolism and vitamin D regulated genes in OS is an important aspect of vitamin D/cancer paradigm, and in evaluating vitamin D as adjuvant therapy for human OS. Vitamin D treatment of 143B OS cells induced significant and novel changes in the expression of genes that regulate: (a) inflammation and immunity; (b) formation of reactive oxygen species, metabolism of cyclic nucleotides, sterols, vitamins and mineral (calcium), quantity of gap junctions and skeletogenesis; (c) bone mineral density; and (d) cell viability of skeletal cells, aggregation of bone cancer cells and exocytosis of secretory vesicles.

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Postconcussive syndrome is an increasingly recognized outcome of sports-related concussion (SRC), characterized by a constellation of poorly defined symptoms. Treatment of PCS is significantly different from that of SRC alone. Primary care physicians often are the first to evaluate these patients, but some are unfamiliar with the available therapeutic approaches.

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Incomplete clearance of apoptotic cells and reactive oxygen species (ROS) release are known to trigger inflammasome activation causing severe inflammation in acute lung injury and various metabolic and autoimmune diseases. Moreover, it has been reported that apoptotic cell clearance and ROS-mediated apoptosis critically depend on mitochondrial uncoupling protein-2 (UCP2). However, the relationship between UCP2 and inflammasome activation has not been studied.

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Drug design efforts in the emerging 2-aminothiazole-4-carboxamide class of CHK1 inhibitors have uncovered specific combinations of key substructures within the molecule; resulting in significant improvements in cell-based activity while retaining a greater than one hundred-fold selectivity against CDK2. The X-ray crystal structure of a complex between compound 39 and the CHK1 protein detailing a 'U-shaped' topology and key interactions with the protein surface at the ATP site is also reported.

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A small molecule nonpeptide inhibitor of beta-secretase has been developed, and its binding has been defined through crystallographic determination of the enzyme-inhibitor complex. The molecule is shown to bind to the catalytic aspartate residues in an unprecedented manner in the field of aspartyl protease inhibition. Additionally, the complex reveals a heretofore unknown S(3) subpocket that is created by the inhibitor.

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In vitro incubation of all-trans-retinol (atROL) with kidney homogenate from vitamin A-deficient and retinoic acid-supplemented (VAD-RAS) female rats produces a new retinol metabolite. Reverse-phase (RP) and normal-phase (NP) high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis showed that this metabolite coelutes with the unknown all-trans-retinol (atROL) metabolite previously found in the day 10 conceptus and kidneys of vitamin A-deficient rats maintained on all-trans-retinoic acid (VAD-RA) and given 2 microg of [3H]atROL. Normal-phase (NP) HPLC purification of the metabolite collected from a RP HPLC column further separated the radiolabeled material into two components.

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All-trans 3,4-didehydroretinoic acid (at-ddRA) has been identified as a biologically important retinoid in avian, but not mammalian, embryonic development. In this report, we show that at-ddRA, like all-trans retinoic acid (atRA), supports the survival and differentiation of sympathetic neurons of the embryonic chick. Furthermore, the expression of the retinoid-responsive gene RARbeta2 is increased in neurons exposed to either at-ddRA or atRA.

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Human 25-hydroxyvitamin D-24-hydroxylase has been expressed in Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf21) insect cells using the previously cloned cDNA in baculovirus (AcNPV-P450cc24). The activity of recombinant h-P450cc24 required adrenodoxin, adrenodoxin reductase, and NADPH. Incubation of this reconstituted system with 25-OH-[26,27-(3)H]D3 substrate produced several metabolites that were resolved on a normal-phase cyano HPLC system.

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