Publications by authors named "Yuri Carmazzi"

Objectives: Microparticles are membrane vesicles shed by cells upon activation and apoptosis. Agonists capable of inducing microparticle generation include cytokines, bacterial products, P-selectin, histamine. Cigarette smoke extract has also been recognized as an agonist involved in microparticle generation with an apoptosis-dependent mechanism.

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Introduction: Microparticles are small vesicles shed by cells upon activation and during apoptosis which participate in physiologically relevant phenomena, including blood coagulation. Intracellular calcium mobilization is one of the mechanisms of microparticle generation during cell activation. Because the renin-angiotensin system has been proposed as a link between hypertension and increased thrombotic risk, we investigated whether angiotensin II upregulates the generation of procoagulant microparticles by human mononuclear cells.

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Aims: Microparticles are membrane vesicles shed by cells upon activation and/or apoptosis. Microparticles are involved in several processes, including blood coagulation and thrombosis. In addition to their role in the regulation of lipid metabolism, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ (PPAR-γ) agonists exert other effects, both dependent on and independent of PPAR-γ activation.

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