9 results match your criteria: "Case Western Reserve University and the University Hospitals of Cleveland[Affiliation]"
Genetics
March 2004
Department of Genetics and the Center for Human Genetics, Case Western Reserve University and the University Hospitals of Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio 44106-4955, USA.
Inversion heterozygosity has long been noted for its ability to suppress the transmission of recombinant chromosomes, as well as for altering the frequency and location of recombination events. In our search for meiotic situations with enrichment for nonexchange and/or single distal-exchange chromosome pairs, exchange configurations that are at higher risk for nondisjunction in humans and other organisms, we examined both exchange and segregation patterns in 2728 oocytes from mice heterozygous for paracentric inversions, as well as controls. We found dramatic alterations in exchange position in the heterozygotes, including an increased frequency of distal exchanges for two of the inversions studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCatheter Cardiovasc Interv
September 2003
Department of Cardiology, St. Vincent Charity Hospital, Case Western Reserve University and the University Hospitals of Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio 44195, USA.
Mega-aneurysms of saphenous vein grafts (SVGs) to coronary arteries are rare complications of bypass surgery. We report the development of superior vena cava syndrome secondary to an SVG mega-aneurysm with concomitant fistulous communication to the right atrium. Successful treatment was achieved by coil embolization and chronic anticoagulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenetics
November 2002
Department of Genetics and the Center for Human Genetics, Case Western Reserve University and the University Hospitals of Cleveland, Ohio 44106-4955, USA.
The meiotic properties of paracentric inversion heterozygotes have been well studied in insects and plants, but not in mammalian species. In essence, a single meiotic recombination event within the inverted region results in the formation of a dicentric chromatid, which usually breaks or is stretched between the two daughter nuclei during the first meiotic anaphase. Here, we provide evidence that this is not the predominant mode of exchange resolution in female mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFN Engl J Med
June 2001
Division of Clinical and Molecular Endocrinology, Case Western Reserve University and the University Hospitals of Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.
Background: Women with hypothyroidism that is being treated with thyroxine often need higher doses when they are pregnant. Whether this need can be attributed solely to estrogen-induced increases in serum thyroxine-binding globulin or whether other factors are involved is not known.
Methods: In 11 postmenopausal women with normal thyroid function and 25 postmenopausal women with hypothyroidism treated with thyroxine, I assessed thyroid function before they started estrogen therapy and every 6 weeks for 48 weeks thereafter.
Lung Cancer
May 2001
Division of Hematology/Oncology and the Ireland Cancer Center at Case Western Reserve University and the University Hospitals of Cleveland, Cleveland, OH, USA.
Obtaining a complete response (CR) is the most powerful predictor of survival in extensive-stage small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Improvements in long-term survival in extensive-stage SCLC can be made if the proportion of complete responders to induction therapy can be increased. We performed a phase II trial of the feasibility of adding paclitaxel to standard cisplatin/etoposide (EP regimen) in extensive-stage SCLC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
April 2001
Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University and the University Hospitals of Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio 41106, USA.
A line of block between the vena cava and the crista terminalis (CT) region is important for atrial flutter (AFL), but whether it is fixed or functional is controversial. To test the hypothesis that conduction across the CT normally occurs, but when block occurs in this region it is functional, we analyzed atrial activation during right and left atrial pacing (cycle lengths of 500--130 ms), AFL, and atrial fibrillation in 15 dogs with sterile pericarditis and 7 normal dogs. Electrograms from 396 right, left, and septal atrial sites were simultaneously recorded.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Coll Cardiol
September 2000
Department of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University and the University Hospitals of Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
Objectives: To test the hypothesis that when activation of Bachmann's bundle (BB) is critical to the unstable reentrant circuits that maintain atrial fibrillation (AF) in the sterile pericarditis canine model, a lesion in BB would prevent induction of stable AF.
Background: One mechanism of induced AF in this model is multiple unstable reentrant circuits, which frequently include BB as part of the reentrant pathway.
Methods: Simultaneous multisite mapping studies during AF and after ablation of BB were performed by recording (384 to 396 electrodes) from both atria and the atrial septum during six induced AF episodes in six dogs with sterile pericarditis.
Pediatr Infect Dis J
October 1998
Department of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University and the University Hospitals of Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.
J Magn Reson Imaging
April 1998
Department of Radiology, Case Western Reserve University and the University Hospitals of Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.
Clinical requirements for interventional MRI (I-MRI) monitoring of needle placement or thermal ablation demand rapid (near-real-time) image acquisition rates, high spatial resolution, and T2 weighting. Experimental analysis performed earlier suggests that many sequences used for either rapid scanning or T2 weighting at high fields fail to meet both the speed (conventional spin echo [SE], turbo SE) or contrast (ie, fast low-angle shot [FLASH], fast imaging with steady state precession [FISP]) requirements when used at .2 T.
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