113 results match your criteria: "San Francisco General Hospital 94110.[Affiliation]"

To determine whether cytosolic free calcium ([Ca2+]i) rises during low-flow ischemia and to determine the mechanisms responsible for contractile dysfunction, isolated rat hearts were studied during graded reductions of coronary flow. Indo1 fluorescence at 385- and 456-nm wave-lengths (F385/456) was used as an index of [Ca2+]i. 31P-magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) was used to measure free energy of ATP hydrolysis (delta GATP), intracellular pH (pHi), and Pi in parallel experiments to determine whether these factors may be responsible for increasing diastolic [Ca2+]i or altering the [Ca2+]i-pressure relationship.

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Brain glucose concentration during and after hypoxia-ischemia may be one of the variables affecting outcome of asphyxial insults. Glucose given before global ischemic forebrain injury to adult rats increases morphologic brain damage, and postischemic insulin administration reduces selective neuronal necrosis and cortical infarction. Because glucose infusions are routinely used in the clinical management of perinatal asphyxia, we evaluated the role of glucose administration after ischemic neuronal damage to neonatal rat brain.

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Blisters following minor trauma characterize epidermolysis bullosa, a group of hereditary diseases of the skin. In the simplex type, epidermal basal cells are fragile, and mutations of genes encoding keratin intermediate filament proteins underlie that fragility. In the dystrophic types, the causative mutation appears to be in the gene encoding type VII collagen, which is the major component of anchoring fibrils.

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The intracellular activities of clarithromycin and erythromycin, alone and in combination with other antimicrobial agents, were tested against Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) strains inside mouse J774 cells and inside alveolar macrophages obtained from human immunodeficiency type 1-infected individuals. Clarithromycin alone had greater intracellular activity than erythromycin alone, and drug combinations that included clarithromycin were usually more active than combinations that included erythromycin.

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The development of techniques for isolating hepatic lipocytes (Ito, stellate or fat-storing cells) from rodents has been instrumental in defining their role in hepatic vitamin A storage and fibrogenesis. In this study, we developed a method for the purification of lipocytes and Kupffer cell from wedge sections of normal human liver and examined their properties in primary culture. Sections of donor liver (400 to 600 gm) harvested but not used for transplantation were perfused in situ with University of Wisconsin solution and used for lipocyte isolation within 48 hr.

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The true incidence of thromboembolic complications following multiple trauma is unknown, and no method of prophylaxis has been shown to be both safe and effective in managing seriously injured patients. In this prospective study, 113 trauma patients were assigned on admission to receive either low-dose heparin (LDH), (5,000 U subcutaneously every 12 hours) or to wear sequential compression devices (SCDs) as prophylaxis against the development of deep venous thrombosis (DVT). Both groups of patients were serially studied with duplex venous ultrasound imaging to detect thrombus in the veins of the thigh.

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Effect of protein binding of daptomycin on MIC and antibacterial activity.

Antimicrob Agents Chemother

December 1991

Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco General Hospital 94110.

A higher rate of clinical failures in patients treated with daptomycin (2 mg/kg of body weight, given once daily) compared with rates in patients treated with conventional regimens caused early termination of this comparative clinical trial. One explanation for these failures could be that daptomycin is highly protein bound and that the concentration of the unbound active drug is too low for antibacterial activity. To assess this explanation, we studied the binding of daptomycin to proteins by using an ultrafiltration method.

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Ethanol enhances growth factor-induced neurite formation in PC12 cells.

Brain Res

November 1991

Department of Neurology, Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center, University of California, San Francisco General Hospital 94110.

Ethanol can injure the nervous system by disturbing the growth of neural processes. PC12 cells, which form neurites in response to nerve growth factor (NGF), fibroblast growth factor (FGF), and cAMP analogues, were used to study mechanisms by which ethanol alters process outgrowth. Ethanol potentiated NGF-induced neurite outgrowth in cells cultured on different substrata and in serum-containing or defined medium.

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Catecholamines appear to be involved in behavioral responses to acute and chronic ethanol consumption. Since tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) is the rate-limiting enzyme for catecholamine biosynthesis and is regulated by second messenger systems known to be modulated by ethanol, we studied ethanol-induced changes in TH gene expression. In the N1E-115 neural cell line, Northern and Western blot analyses showed that treatment with 25-200 mM ethanol for 3 days caused a dose-dependent increase in TH mRNA and protein levels.

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A patient with HIV-related immune thrombocytopenic purpura (HIV-ITP) had a rapid rise in platelet count when treated with interferon-alpha 2b, 3 million units three times weekly. There were no significant toxicities with therapy. His platelet count fell to pretreatment levels when therapy was discontinued, then increased again when therapy was reinstituted at 1.

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To facilitate studies of the biology of Cryptosporidium parvum, we have developed an in vitro culture system using Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells as the host cell. Oocysts or free sporozoites were incubated 37 degrees C with monolayers of MDCK cells in supplemented RPMI 1640 medium and the cells were examined at various time intervals after initiation of the culture. High rates of infection (up to 90% of MDCK cells) were achievable.

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Maldistribution of local anesthetic administered through a subarachnoid catheter recently has been implicated as a possible cause of sacral root injury. To examine subarachnoid distribution of catheter-injected local anesthetic, we constructed a model of the subarachnoid space and administered solutions containing lidocaine and methylene blue through sacrally directed catheters. We studied three catheters: a 28-G endport, a 20-G endport, and a 20-G multiple sideport.

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Protein kinase C (PKC) isozymes comprise a family of cytosolic enzymes that translocate to different intracellular sites on activation. We have recently characterized at least two intracellular receptor proteins for PKC (termed RACKs for receptors for activated C-kinase) in the Triton-insoluble material of the particulate fraction from neonatal rat heart. Here, we identify a sequence that appears to resemble the PKC binding site on these RACKs.

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Zum Grünen Glas.

AJR Am J Roentgenol

August 1991

Department of Radiology, University of California Medical Center, San Francisco General Hospital 94110.

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To elucidate parameters diagnostic of chronic ischemia, the fluorescence of skin on the foot, leg, arm, and forehead of six chronically ischemic patients and six normal subjects injected with fluorescein was measured serially using a surface-measurement fluorometer (dermofluorometer). Simultaneously collected plasma samples were assayed spectrofluorometrically for unmetabolized fluorescein. The time courses of plasma fluorescein content and dermofluorometer readings were jointly analyzed by combining a standard pharmacokinetic model, a model predicting skin site from plasma concentrations of fluorescein, and a model predicting the dermofluorometer response to those skin concentrations.

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Hemoglobin (Hb) Constant Spring is an alpha-thalassemic hemoglobinopathy that is a major cause of severe alpha-thalassemia in Southeast Asians. The difficulty of diagnosing Hb Constant Spring using standard electrophoretic methods has led to interest in DNA-dependent diagnostic methods. The methods developed have had to contend with the high degree of homology of the alpha 2-globin gene (the site of the Hb Constant Spring mutation) and the alpha 1-globin gene.

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Protein kinase C (PKC) translocates from the cytosol to the particulate fraction on activation. This activation-induced translocation of PKC is thought to reflect PKC binding to the membrane lipids. However, immunological and biochemical data suggest that PKC may bind to proteins in the cytoskeletal elements in the particulate fraction and in the nuclei.

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The gas chromatographic (GC) quantification of underivatized antiepileptic drugs such as carbamazepine, phenytoin, phenobarbital and primidone in fused-silica capillary columns was compared with that in packed columns. Excellent correlation was demonstrated between the two column methods by slopes of 0.99 to 1.

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Acute exposure to ethanol in culture inhibits adenosine uptake into cells, thereby increasing the concentration of extracellular adenosine. Extracellular adenosine then reacts with adenosine A2 receptors to stimulate intracellular cAMP production. During prolonged exposure to ethanol, the increase in cAMP is followed by the development of heterologous desensitization of receptors coupled to adenylyl cyclase via Gs, the stimulatory GTP-binding protein.

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The AIDS epidemic has dramatically affected drug treatment programs, creating both an epidemiological crisis and a psychological one. A paramount question for treatment program staff is how to prevent patients from acquiring or spreading HIV. The health belief model has been useful in generating prevention approaches, including programs that raise the threat of infection, provide alternative behaviors, and build social support.

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