6 results match your criteria: "Duke Univ School of Medicine[Affiliation]"

Red blood cell phenotype fidelity following glycerol cryopreservation optimized for research purposes.

PLoS One

May 2019

Department of Pediatrics, Divisions of Critical Care Medicine, Washington University in Saint Louis, School of Medicine, Saint Louis, MO, United States of America.

Intact red blood cells (RBCs) are required for phenotypic analyses. In order to allow separation (time and location) between subject encounter and sample analysis, we developed a research-specific RBC cryopreservation protocol and assessed its impact on data fidelity for key biochemical and physiological assays. RBCs drawn from healthy volunteers were aliquotted for immediate analysis or following glycerol-based cryopreservation, thawing, and deglycerolization.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study looked at kids aged 6-17 who had trouble breathing even after taking medicine to help them, called bronchodilators.
  • 582 kids were examined, most of them had asthma, and many also had allergies, were overweight, or were born early.
  • The findings suggest that kids with asthma and no allergies had worse breathing, and it highlights that these kids might face long-term breathing issues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Central Core Laboratory versus Site Interpretation of Coronary CT Angiography: Agreement and Association with Cardiovascular Events in the PROMISE Trial.

Radiology

April 2018

From the Cardiac PET MR CT Program, Massachusetts General Hosp and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass (M.T.L., N.M.M., T.M., D.O.B., H.E., S.B.P., B.B.G., B.F., M.E.M., M.F., U.H.); School of Business Studies, Stralsund Univ of Applied Sciences, Stralsund, Germany (T.M.); Dept of Internal Medicine (Cardiology), Friedrich Alexander Univ Hosp, Erlangen, Germany (D.O.B., S.A.); Dept of Angiography and Interventional Radiology, Medical Univ Vienna, Vienna, Austria (S.B.P.); Delmarva Health LLC, Salisbury, Md (S.H.); Dept of Radiology, Univ of Connecticut Health Ctr, Farmington, Conn (C.Y.); Dalio Institute of Cardiovascular Imaging, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY (Q.A.T.); Duke Clinical Research Inst, Duke Univ School of Medicine, Durham, NC (M.R.P., P.S.D.); and Knight Cardiovascular Inst, Oregon Health & Science Univ, Portland, Ore (M.F.).

Purpose To assess concordance and relative prognostic utility between central core laboratory and local site interpretation for significant coronary artery disease (CAD) and cardiovascular events. Materials and Methods In the Prospective Multicenter Imaging Study for Evaluation of Chest Pain (PROMISE) trial, readers at 193 North American sites interpreted coronary computed tomographic (CT) angiography as part of the clinical evaluation of stable chest pain. Readers at a central core laboratory also interpreted CT angiography blinded to clinical data, site interpretation, and outcomes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

CC chemokine ligand-2 (CCL2)/monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP)-1 expression is upregulated during pulmonary inflammation, and the CCL2-CCR2 axis plays a critical role in leukocyte recruitment and promotion of host defense against infection. The role of CCL2 in mediating macrophage subpopulations in the pathobiology of noninfectious lung injury is unknown. The goal of this study was to examine the role of CCL2 in noninfectious acute lung injury.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Elevated intraocular pressure arising from impaired aqueous humor drainage through the trabecular pathway is a major risk factor for glaucoma. To understand the molecular basis for Rho GTPase-mediated resistance to aqueous humor drainage, we investigated the possible interrelationship between actomyosin contractile properties and extracellular matrix (ECM) synthesis in human trabecular meshwork (TM) cells expressing a constitutively active form of RhoA (RhoAV14). TM cells expressing RhoAV14 exhibited significant increases in fibronectin, tenascin C, laminin, alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA) levels, and matrix assembly in association with increased actin stress fibers and myosin light-chain phosphorylation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Impaired drainage of aqueous humor through the trabecular meshwork (TM) culminating in increased intraocular pressure is a major risk factor for glaucoma, a leading cause of blindness worldwide. Regulation of aqueous humor drainage through the TM, however, is poorly understood. The role of RhoA GTPase-mediated actomyosin organization, cell adhesive interactions, and gene expression in regulation of aqueous humor outflow was investigated using adenoviral vector-driven expression of constitutively active mutant of RhoA (RhoAV14).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF