4 results match your criteria: "Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of Veteran's Affairs Medical Center[Affiliation]"
Microorganisms
October 2018
Research Service, Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of Veteran's Affairs Medical Center, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.
'Leaky gut' syndrome, long-associated with celiac disease, has attracted much attention in recent years and for decades, was widely known in complementary/alternative medicine circles. It is often described as an increase in the permeability of the intestinal mucosa, which could allow bacteria, toxic digestive metabolites, bacterial toxins, and small molecules to 'leak' into the bloodstream. Nervous system involvement with celiac disease is know to occur even at subclinical levels.
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October 2018
Psychiatry Service, Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, 44106, USA.
Aim: Co-metabolism between a human host and the gastrointestinal microbiota generates many small phenolic molecules such as 3-hydroxy-3-(3-hydroxyphenyl)propanoic acid (3,3-HPHPA), which are reported to be elevated in schizophrenia and autism. Characterization of these chemicals, however, has been limited by analytic challenges.
Methodology/results: We applied HPLC to separate and quantify over 50 analytes, including multiple structural isomers of 3,3-HPHPA in human cerebrospinal fluid, serum and urine.
Transplantation
December 2001
Department of Medicine, Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of Veteran's Affairs Medical Center, OH, USA.
Background: The effector mechanisms that ultimately destroy transplanted tissues are poorly understood. In particular, it is not clear how CD4+ T cells primed to donor-derived determinants expressed on recipient MHC molecules (the indirect pathway) can mediate graft destruction in the absence of cognate recognition of peptide: MHC on the graft cells themselves. Macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) inhibits macrophage movement and is a proinflammatory and regulatory cytokine known to be essential for development of delayed-type hypersensitivity reactions.
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