244 results match your criteria: "Hebrew University Hadassah School of Medicine[Affiliation]"
Neurology
June 1994
Department of Neurology, Hebrew University--Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Late-onset muscle weakness is rare in glycolytic disorders. There are two reports in the literature of phosphofructokinase (PFK)-deficient Ashkenazi Jews with severe vacuolar myopathy manifesting in late adulthood. The genetic abnormality in these patients is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Neurosci
June 1994
Department of Physiology, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Intracellular recordings in rat hippocampal slices were used to examine how exogenous and endogenous cholinergic agonists modulate the firing pattern of intrinsically burst-firing pyramidal cells. About 24% of CA1 pyramidal cells generated all-or-none, high-frequency bursts of fast action potentials in response to intracellular injection of long positive current pulses. Application of carbachol (5 microM) converted burst firing in these neurons into regular trains of independent spikes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Care
February 1994
Program in Medical Sociology, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
This study is a retrospective evaluation of the Soviet health care system by 1,100 Jewish physicians who immigrated to Israel in 1990, but were professionally active in the former Soviet Union before and during the Gorbachev era. Medical education and the process of specialization; gender differences within the medical profession; sources of work satisfaction and dissatisfaction; self-evaluations of professional behavior; and assessments of patient behavior are included in this empirical study. Although high levels of dissatisfaction were found regarding instrumental aspects of work, the physicians reported high levels of satisfaction with their relationships with colleagues and patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
September 1993
Department of Membrane Biochemistry and Neurochemistry, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Inflammation
June 1993
Department of Oral Biology, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
51Chromium-labeled rat pulmonary artery endothelial cells (EC) cultivated in MEM medium were killed, in a synergistic manner, by mixtures of subtoxic amounts of glucose oxidase-generated H2O2 and subtoxic amounts of the following agents: the cationic substances, nuclear histone, defensins, lysozyme, poly-L-arginine, spermine, pancreatic ribonuclease, polymyxin B, chlorhexidine, cetyltrimethyl ammonium bromide, as well as by the membrane-damaging agents phospholipases A2 (PLA2) and C (PLC), lysolecithin (LL), and by streptolysin S (SLS) of group A streptococci. Cytotoxicity induced by such mixtures was further enhanced by subtoxic amounts either of trypsin or of elastase. Glucose-oxidase cationized by complexing to poly-L-histidine proved an excellent deliverer of membrane-directed H2O2 capable of enhancing EC killing by other agonists.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurophysiol
March 1993
Department of Physiology, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
1. The effects of raising the concentration of extracellular potassium ([K+]o) on gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA)-mediated inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) were investigated in adult rat hippocampal slices using intracellular recording techniques. IPSPs were evoked in CA1 pyramidal neurons by direct activation of inhibitory interneurons in slices treated with glutamatergic antagonists to block excitatory synaptic transmission.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
February 1993
Department of Cellular Biochemistry, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Direct evidence for substantial mobilization of copper in the coronary flow immediately following prolonged, but not short, cardiac ischemia is presented. In the first coronary flow fraction (CFF) of reperfusion (0.15 ml), after 35 min of ischemia, the level of copper (as well as of iron) was 8- to 9-fold higher than the preischemic value.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFree Radic Res Commun
September 1993
Department of Cellular Biochemistry, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Allopurinol, a potent inhibitor of xanthine oxidase, is known to effectively protect the heart against damage in patients undergoing cardiac bypass surgery. There is still an ambiguity concerning the presence of xanthine oxidase in the human heart. Thus, the mechanism underlying the protective effect of allopurinol is unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHum Gene Ther
December 1992
Department of Membrane Biochemistry and Neurochemistry, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
The neurologic (type A) and nonneurologic (type B) forms of Niemann-Pick disease (NPD) both result from deficiencies of acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) activity leading to the accumulation of sphingomyelin and other related lipids within lysosomes. Recently, the full-length cDNA and genomic sequences encoding ASM have been isolated and the nature of the molecular lesions causing NPD has been investigated. Although these developments have facilitated diagnosis for this debilitating disease, no effective treatment is currently available.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Anat (Basel)
November 1992
Laboratory of Teratology, Hebrew University Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Glucocorticoids may induce osteopenia in experimental animals and in man. In order to study the possible effects of vitamin D metabolites in the prevention of glucocorticoid-induced osteopenia in rats, we administered 1 alpha(OH)-vitamin D3, 24,25(OH)2-vitamin D3 or a combination of both metabolites, by intragastric intubation, to rats treated daily by intramuscular injections of 10 mg/kg cortisone acetate. Treatment with the vitamin D metabolites started after 1 month of glucocorticoid therapy, at the time osteopenia was already present.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsy Res Suppl
March 1993
Department of Physiology, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
J Nucl Med
December 1990
Department of Pharmacology, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Technetium-99m-(99mTc) phosphates are extensively used for detection of bone formation and resorption. The present is a study of 99mTc incorporation during bone remodeling. Uptake of 99mTc-labeled phosphate was studied in an animal model of primary osteogenesis following tibial marrow injury and incorporation was correlated to that of calcium-47 (47Ca), phosphorus-32 (32P), and with matrix vesicle calcification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
November 1990
Department of Physiology, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Neuronal activity was extracellularly recorded in the cortex of an awake monkey (Macaca fascicularis). Single units displaying oscillatory firing patterns were found in the upper bank of the lateral sulcus in a region where most of the neurons responded to somatosensory stimuli. The spectral energies of the oscillating activity were distributed in a trimodal fashion--0-15, 15-50, and 80-250 Hz--with the most common frequencies around 30 Hz.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Lett
April 1990
Department of Medical Ecology, School of Public Health, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
N-nitrosodiethanolamine (NDELA) is a carcinogenic, non-volatile nitrosamine that has been shown to pass readily through the skin of animals and humans. It has often been found as a contaminant in cosmetics. Twenty different suntan lotions, available in Israel, both liquids and creams, were analyzed for NDELA content.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn N Y Acad Sci
February 1991
Unit for Environmental and Occupational Medicine, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Biochim Biophys Acta
September 1988
Department of Membrane Biochemistry and Neurochemistry, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Pyrene dodecanoic acid (P12), a medium-chain fatty acid to which the fluorescent probe pyrene is covalently linked, showed a considerable increase in fluorescence when the probe was introduced into a hydrophobic environment. Also, when closely packed in an aggregate, an energy transfer between two adjacent molecules of pyrene occurred, resulting in a shift of the peak of the emission spectrum from 378 nm ('monomeric') to 475 nm ('excimeric'). These two respective properties were utilized for the following: (a) A spectrofluorometric measurement of the critical micellar concentration (CMC) of the pyrene fatty acid, defined as the concentration at which the 475 nm emission peak appeared as a consequence of the aggregation of P12 molecules in aqueous solution to form micelles; the CMC of P12 was found to be in the range of 1 to 2 microM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem J
July 1988
Department of Membrane Biochemistry and Neurochemistry, Hebrew University--Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Aqueous dispersions of 12-(1-pyrene)-dodecanoic acid (P12), a medium-chain fatty acid to which the fluorescent probe pyrene has been covalently linked, shows a considerable increase in fluorescence when the probe is introduced into a hydrophobic environment. This enables the uptake of P12 by liposomes and cells to be followed directly in a spectrofluorometer, without separating the cells from the P12-containing medium. In the present study, we show that complexing P12 to albumin produced a very high fluorescence emission intensity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
January 1988
Department of Membrane Biochemistry and Neurochemistry, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Pyrenedodecanoyl-CoA was beta-oxidized by isolated rat liver peroxisomes at a rate which was about 50% of that observed with palmitoyl-CoA. Measurement of the quantity of NADH formed from a limiting amount of pyrenedodecanoyl-CoA suggested that it was subjected to two to three cycles of beta-oxidation. Pyrenedodecanoyl-CoA was a very poor substrate for carnitine palmitoyltransferase, exhibiting less than 1% of the rate obtained with palmitoyl-CoA; it also was a strong inhibitor of this enzyme.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Prev Med
August 1988
Department of Medical Ecology, Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
A workshop on the evaluation of health and welfare services in an Israeli development town was conducted by the Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Public Health and Community Medicine in the town of Beit Shemesh. The extensive field study by the second-year M.P.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF