Publications by authors named "Tange J"

The A1 domain in Von Willebrand Factor (VWF) initiates coagulation through binding to platelet glycoprotein GPIbα receptors. Von Willebrand Disease (VWD)-Mutations in A1 that either impair (type 2M) or enhance (type 2B) platelet adhesion to VWF can locally destabilize and even misfold the domain. We leveraged misfolding in the gain-of-function type 2B VWD phenotype as a target, distinct from the normal conformation.

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Objectives: Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based ADAMTS13 activity assays are critical for the diagnosis of thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. However, these assays are susceptible to interference. As iodide has been suggested to interfere in laboratory testing via fluorophore quenching or promotion, we aimed to determine whether iodinated contrast (Omnipaque) interferes with the ATS-13 ADAMTS13 Activity Assay 2.

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Objectives: To determine the impact of residual platelets on dilute Russell's viper venom time (DRVVT) assay in frozen-thawed plasma submitted for lupus anticoagulant (LAC) testing.

Methods: We measured platelet counts in frozen-thawed samples submitted for LAC testing and evaluated the association between platelet count and the DRVVT screening time and ratios. We also spiked platelets into a LAC-positive sample to observe the effect on the DRVVT.

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Background: COVID-19-associated coagulopathy is incompletely understood.

Objectives: To characterize thrombin generation, Von Willebrand Factor (VWF), neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), and their role in COVID-19 risk stratification in the emergency department (ED).

Patients/methods: Plasma samples from 67 ED COVID-19 patients were compared to 38 healthy volunteers (HVs).

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Glutamate delta (GluD) receptors belong to the ionotropic glutamate receptor family, yet they don't bind glutamate and are considered orphan. Progress in defining the ion channel function of GluDs in neurons has been hindered by a lack of pharmacological tools. Here, we used a chemo-genetic approach to engineer specific and photo-reversible pharmacology in GluD2 receptor.

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Objectives: Despite more than 40 years of experience performing the Bethesda assay (BA), poor intra- and interlaboratory precision remains the biggest laboratory challenge to date.

Methods: The BA procedure was modeled using stochastic simulation techniques to determine the precision of the BA up to dilutions of 1:4,096, to estimate the minimum significant relative change at various inhibitor titers, and to understand the laboratory procedural variables that could significantly affect the performance of the BA at high dilutions.

Results: Selecting the lowest dilution tube with a residual activity closest to 25% for calculating the reported Bethesda titer (BT), using a factor activity assay with a coefficient of variation less than or equal to 7.

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Warfarin dosing relies on accurate measurements of international normalized ratio (INR), which is calculated from the prothrombin time (PT), International Sensitivity Index international sensitivity index (ISI) of the thromboplastin, and the geometric mean of normal PT (MNPT). However, ISI assignments of certain reagent/instrument combinations are frequently unavailable, especially when the reagent and instrument are not from the same manufacturer. The effort to be in compliance with widely endorsed Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) guidelines by locally verifying or assigning an ISI to an unsupported reagent/instrument combination is further hindered by the lack of US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved certified plasmas designated for a particular reagent/instrument combination.

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As part of a long-term strategy toward renewable feedstock, a feasibility study into options for the production of bioethylene by integrating the sugar beet-to-ethanol-to-ethylene value chain. Seven business cases were studied and tested for actual economic feasibility of alternative sugar-to-ethanol-to-ethylene routes in comparison to fossil-fuel alternatives. An elaborate model was developed to assess the relevant operational and financial aspects of each business case.

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Objective: Left atrial blood stasis is associated with increased risk for left atrial appendage thrombus (LAAT) and stroke in atrial fibrillation (AF). Von Willebrand factor (VWF) is associated with thromboembolism in AF. VWF thrombogenic activity is proportional to multimer size, which is regulated by VWF-cleaving protease (ADAMTS13).

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Background: Laboratory diagnosis of von Willebrand disease (VWD) requires accurate measurement of plasma von Willebrand factor (VWF) activity.

Objectives: To evaluate laboratory characteristics, diagnostic accuracy and testing utilities of an automated latex particle-enhanced immunoturbidimetric VWF assay (VWF:Lx) based on a monoclonal antibody recognizing the VWF-platelet glycoprotein (GP) Ib binding domain.

Methods: Laboratory characteristics including lower detection limit, linearity, precision, sample stability, and method comparison between VWF:Lx and VWF ristocetin cofactor activity by platelet aggregometry (VWF:RCo) were examined.

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Article Synopsis
  • A 57-year-old left-handed woman experienced jargonagraphia, severe aphasia, and unilateral spatial neglect following a cerebral infarction in her left hemisphere, leading to sudden right hemiplegia and various language impairments.
  • Neuropsychological tests showed she had non-fluent speech with significant difficulties in repetition, reading, auditory comprehension, and writing, presenting as jargonagraphia (meaningless writing) along with right-sided spatial neglect and buccofacial apraxia.
  • The case suggests that her language processing differs from typical right-handed individuals, potentially because the motor engrams for character writing are being activated by the right hemisphere, contributing to her jargonagraphia.
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1. The p-aminophenol (pAP) model of tubular necrosis displays elevated tubular pressures equivalent to 'stop-flow', with low glomerular filtration rate (GFR) but maintained blood flow and urine output. Renal function, micropuncture, and morphological studies were performed in anaesthetized rats to examine the causes of filtration failure.

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Spontaneous papillary necrosis develops in aging heterozygous non-jaundiced Gunn rats. The lesion is situated in the subapical or mid papilla and in its earliest stages is manifest by the appearance of amorphous material in the interstitial space. This is seen in plastic-embedded sections taken from rats 6 months old.

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1. The distribution of morphological injury was assessed qualitatively and quantitatively in the perfused rat kidney in vitro at controlled rates of oxygen delivery in the presence of low concentrations of erythrocytes. 2.

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Renal papillary necrosis is a frequent complication of unsuccessful renal transplantation in rats, occurring in both isografts and allografts. Papillary necrosis does not occur alone, but only and inevitably in association with severe cortical damage. The pattern of the lesion is different from other forms of papillary necrosis in that the least severe lesions occur in the outer medulla and the more severe lesions involve both medulla and papilla.

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1. A model of controlled hypoxia in the isolated perfused rat kidney has been used to compare the extent of reduction in the steady-state level of adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) from that initially observed with alterations in renal function and with the development of tubular cell injury. 2.

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In rats, single intravenous doses of folic acid induce damage to renal tubular epithelium, deposition of folic acid in tubular lumens, increase in wet kidney weight, oliguria and interstitial connective tissue proliferation. Separation of the nephrotoxic and obstructive effects of folic acid was attempted by pretreatment with NH4Cl or NaHCO3. These effects of folic acid were unaltered by pretreatment with NH4Cl and there was, in addition, accumulation of eosinophilic droplets in papillary collecting duct epithelium.

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Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) was measured by radioimmunoassay in atrial and plasma extracts from normal Long-Evans (LE) rats and Brattleboro-strain diabetes insipidus (DI) rats. LE rats, dehydrated for 72 hours, had an increased plasma osmolality and plasma vasopressin. They also demonstrated a higher atrial immunoreactive ANP (IR-ANP) content than hydrated animals (72 hr dehydration: 178.

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The acute nephrotoxic effects of paracetamol in the uninephrectomized homozygous Gunn rat are different from those of aspirin. Both compounds induce renal papillary necrosis but paracetamol produces accumulation of non-cellular material in the interstitial space, less damage to interstitial cells, more damage to tubular epithelium, and more severe necrosis of proximal convoluted tubules. In both cortex and papilla only a small fraction of the cells at risk are affected.

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Visceral glomerular epithelial cell lesions--microvillus formation, loss of foot processes, osmiophilic inclusion droplets, balloon-like malformation of cell processes, degeneration, necrosis, and loss of cell processes from capillary basement membranes--are found in rat renal isografts 1 mth after transplantation. The lesions, which are most readily recognized in perfusion-fixed material, are essentially focal, affecting neither all glomeruli, nor all cells in any glomerulus, bear no relation to the degree of interstitial nephritis in the graft, and are associated with albuminuria and with focal capillary sclerosis in some glomeruli. They are not restricted to renal isografts but are found in aging rats, in different experimental models of glomerular disease and in clinical glomerular disorders, again in association with proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis.

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Increased glomerular permeability to protein occurs during isolated rat kidney perfusion in the absence of ultrastructural changes in the glomerular capillary wall. The increase is greater with age, varies with strain and is reduced by amino acid supplementation of the perfusate. Glomerular permeability to protein is thus perceptibly influenced by non-pathogenic stimuli.

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Severe proteinuria occurs during isolated organ perfusion of kidneys removed from SD and DA rats and subjected to 24-hr cold preservation. In both strains increased glomerular permeability was associated with changes in glomerular visceral epithelial cells, particularly cytoplasmic edema and detachment of cells from capillary basement membranes. Foot processes were intact and staining for sialoglycoprotein was retained.

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