134 results match your criteria: "The Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine[Affiliation]"

Background: BRCA1 and BRCA2 participate in cell cycle progression, apoptosis, and DNA repair pathways. The latter role may be mediated by interaction with DNA recombinase Rad51. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of genotoxic and other cytotoxic agents on expression of DNA damage-response genes (BRCA1, BRCA2, p300, and Rad51) in human prostate cancer cells.

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BRCA1 inhibition of estrogen receptor signaling in transfected cells.

Science

May 1999

Department of Radiation Oncology, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, The Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 270-05 76th Avenue, New Hyde Park, NY 11040, USA.

Mutations of the breast cancer susceptibility gene BRCA1 confer increased risk for breast, ovarian, and prostatic cancers, but it is not clear why the mutations are associated with these particular tumor types. In transient transfection assays, BRCA1 was found to inhibit signaling by the ligand-activated estrogen receptor (ER-alpha) through the estrogen-responsive enhancer element and to block the transcriptional activation function AF-2 of ER-alpha. These results raise the possibility that wild-type BRCA1 suppresses estrogen-dependent transcriptional pathways related to mammary epithelial cell proliferation and that loss of this ability contributes to tumorigenesis.

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Patients infected with HIV experience a spectrum of lymphoproliferative disorders, including generalized reactive lymphadenopathy to atypical lymphoproliferative lesions and lymphomas. Polymorphic B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders are rare and not well documented. We studied lung lesions from two children infected with HIV: an atypical polymorphic B-cell hyperplasia in a 14-year-old boy and a malignant polymorphic B-cell lymphoma in a 21-month-old girl.

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Ondansetron with propofol reduces the incidence of emesis in children following tonsillectomy.

Can J Anaesth

April 1999

Department of Anesthesiology, Schneider Children's Hospital, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, The Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, New York 11040, USA.

Purpose: This study tested the hypothesis that the antiemetic effects of a combination of ondansetron and propofol were superior to propofol alone in children undergoing tonsillectomy surgery.

Methods: A prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study design was employed. Young children underwent mask induction with halothane, nitrous oxide and oxygen and then had i.

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Purpose: To determine the prevalence of serologic reactivity, the 1-year incidence of seroconversion, and the frequency of multiple infections, and their associations with symptoms in a group of volunteers at high risk for tick-borne infections in New York state.

Methods: We performed a seroepidemiologic study of Lyme borreliosis, 2 of the ehrlichioses, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, and babesiosis among 671 participants who lived or worked in a high-risk area (mainly in eastern Long Island, New York) for tick-borne diseases. Sera were collected in the winters of 1994 and 1995.

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Seroprevalence of varicella antibodies among new house officers.

Ann Emerg Med

May 1999

Department of Emergency Medicine, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, NY 11040, USA.

Study Objective: Varicella, an illness common to children, can occur in nonimmune adults, often causing serious morbidity and mortality. House officers without protective titers to varicella are at risk of contracting the disease and may spread it to the patients they serve. They are also subject to significant losses in work time and wages.

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Purpose: To investigate the regulation of G1 cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21WAF1/CIP1 by ultraviolet (UV) radiation in human carcinoma cells.

Materials And Methods: Human cancer cell lines were irradiated with UV-C (254 nm) radiation, and their responses were characterized by Western blotting, Northern blotting, semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis, trypan blue staining and flow cytometric cell cycle analysis.

Results: At 24 h after UV irradiation, p21 expression was down-regulated in various cancer cell types (breast, prostrate, cervix, colon, glioma, squamous cancers), independently of their p53 genetic and functional status.

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Mechanisms of acute cardiovascular response to periodic apneas in sedated pigs.

J Appl Physiol (1985)

April 1999

Pulmonary and Critical Care Division, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, New York 11042, USA.

This study was designed to evaluate the importance of sympathoadrenal activation in the acute cardiovascular response to apneas and the role of hypoxemia in this response. In addition, we evaluated the contribution of the vagus nerve to apnea responses after chemical sympathectomy. In six pigs preinstrumented with an electromagnetic flow probe and five nonpreinstrumented pigs, effects of periodic nonobstructive apneas were tested under the following six conditions: room air breathing, 100% O2 supplementation, both repeated after administration of hexamethonium (Hex), and both repeated again after bilateral vagotomy in addition to Hex.

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A serpin was identified in normal mammary gland by differential cDNA sequencing. In situ hybridization has detected this serpin exclusively in the myoepithelial cells on the normal and noninvasive mammary epithelial side of the basement membrane and thus was named myoepithelium-derived serine proteinase inhibitor (MEPI). No MEPI expression was detected in the malignant breast carcinomas.

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Reduced capacity to inhibit elastase in abdominal aortic aneurysm.

J Surg Res

March 1999

Department of Surgery, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, New York, 11042, USA.

Background: Loss of elastin in the aortic wall is an early event in abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA). An imbalance in the protease-antiprotease system is proposed to be one of the factors that promote connective tissue destruction. We hypothesize that plasma from AAA patients will have a reduced inhibitory capacity in comparison to normal controls.

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Laryngeal papillomas are benign tumors caused by human papillomaviruses types 6 and 11. This study addressed alterations in levels of signal transduction from the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) in papillomas and cultured papilloma cells compared to normal tissue and cells. Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) was activated to a greater extent, phosphotyrosine was more abundant, and EGFR was overexpressed in laryngeal papillomas compared to normal laryngeal epithelium by Western blot analysis.

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Adult-onset MELAS presenting as herpes encephalitis.

Arch Neurol

February 1999

Department of Neurology, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, NY 11042, USA.

Objective: To report an unusual presentation of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) manifested in late life with a clinical picture of herpes simplex encephalitis.

Design: Case report.

Setting: Clinical neurology department in a tertiary care hospital.

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Stimulation of breast cancer invasion and metastasis by synuclein gamma.

Cancer Res

February 1999

Department of Pediatrics, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, The Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, New York 11040, USA.

We recently identified and cloned novel breast cancer-specific gene BCSG1 by direct differential cDNA sequencing. BCSG1 has a great sequence homology with the Alzheimer's disease related neural protein synuclein (SNC); thus, it was also named SNC-gamma. Overexpression of SNC-gamma in breast cancer cells leads to a significant increase in motility and invasiveness in vitro and a profound augmentation of metastasis in vivo.

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Chronic intermittent hypoxia increases sympathetic responsiveness to hypoxia and hypercapnia.

J Appl Physiol (1985)

January 1999

Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, New York 11040, USA.

We sought to determine whether chronic exposure to intermittent hypoxia (CIH) increases sympathetic responsiveness to subsequent chemoreflex stimulation. Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to 30 days of CIH: exposure chamber %O2 [fractional concentration of chamber O2 (FcO2)] nadir 6.5-7% with return to 21% each minute for 8 h/day during the diurnal sleep period (Exp group).

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Background: Oxygen radicals are believed to play a significant role in glomerular disease. In part this may be due to oxidation of lipids, but protein oxidation may play a contributory role as well. We have demonstrated that the mesangial extracellular matrix is susceptible to metal-catalyzed oxidation and that this increases scavenger receptor-mediated adhesion of macrophages, cells which appear to be important participants in glomerular injury via their secretory products.

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Fluoroscopically placed percutaneous gastrostomies in the head and neck patient.

Laryngoscope

October 1998

Department of Otolaryngology and Communicative Disorders, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, The Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, New York 11040, USA.

Objective: At our institution, percutaneous gastrostomy tubes have been inserted under fluoroscopic guidance (fluoroscopic cutaneous gastrostomy [FPG]), thereby avoiding the need to traverse the pharynx and esophagus with a large-bore esophagoscope. For this reason, placement in the postoperative patient does not jeopardize the surgical reconstruction.

Methods: Thirty-five patients underwent percutaneous gastrostomy placement under fluoroscopic guidance.

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Ancient and contemporary papers report that acupuncture and its variations have a considerable effect on psychological state and behavior. Evidence from experimental and clinical studies suggests that acupuncture and its variations exert a strong influence on endogenous opioids in the brain, and that the endogenous opioid system is involved in various mental functions. The author suggests that the endogenous opioid system can play the key role in the mediation of the effects of acupuncture and its variations on mood, behavior, learning, and memory.

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The role of the endogenous opioid system in the pathogenesis of anxiety disorders.

Med Hypotheses

June 1998

Hillside Hospital of Long Island Jewish Medical Center, The Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Glen Oaks, NY 11004, USA.

The author suggests that anxiety disorders are related to a deficiency in the endogenous opioid system. The author classifies deficiencies of the endogenous opioid system as congenital or acquired, and also as real or relative. Individuals with 'real deficiency' cannot function adequately in any situations, including situations which are natural for human beings.

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Germ-line mutations of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes predispose women to develop cancers of the breast and ovary, but the biologic functions of these genes remains unclear. We have investigated the responses of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene products to cytotoxic agents in 3 human ovarian cancer cell lines: SK-OV-3 (which contains a p53 deletion mutation), CAOV-3 (which over-expresses a mutant p53) and PA-1 (which expresses wild-type p53). In screening studies, we determined the effects of 7 different agents on BRCA1 and BRCA2 expression.

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Scatter factor (SF) (hepatocyte growth factor) is a cytokine that may play a role in human breast cancer invasiveness and angiogenesis. We now report that SF can block the induction of apoptosis by various DNA damaging-agents, including cytotoxic agents used in breast cancer therapy. SF protected MDA-MB-453 human breast cancer cells, EMT6 mouse mammary tumor cells and MDCK renal epithelial cells against apoptosis induced by adriamycin (ADR), X-rays, ultraviolet radiation, and other agents.

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Efficacy of DHE photodynamic therapy for respiratory papillomatosis: immediate and long-term results.

Laryngoscope

July 1998

Department of Otolaryngology and Communicative Disorders, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, The Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, New York 11040, USA.

Objectives/hypothesis: Recurrent respiratory papillomatosis is a potentially life-threatening disease that affects both children and adults and can result in complete respiratory obstruction. Conventional therapies cannot prevent multiple recurrences. The authors have been evaluating photodynamic therapy (PDT) to treat this disease since 1988.

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In addition to breast and ovarian cancer in women, recent evidence suggests that germ-line mutations of the breast cancer susceptibility gene-1 (BRCA1) also confer an increased life-time risk for prostate cancer in male probands. However, it is not known if and how BRCA1 functions in prostate cancer. We stably expressed wild-type (wt) and tumor-associated mutant BRCA1 transgenes in DU-145, a human prostate cancer cell line with low endogenous expression of BRCA1.

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Low level chromosome mosaicism found at amniocentesis is problematic for clinicians and patients. We report prenatal diagnosis of a fetus with a rare karyotype of 47,XX, + 15/46,XX. Second trimester amniocentesis was performed for advanced maternal age.

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Pseudotumor cerebri in Lyme disease: a case report and literature review.

Pediatr Neurol

May 1998

Division of Pediatric Neurology, Schneider Children's Hospital, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, New York 11040, USA.

Pseudotumor cerebri is an unusual presentation of Lyme disease. The case of an 8-year-old girl with pseudotumor cerebri secondary to acute neuroborreliosis is reported. She presented with acute onset of headache, papilledema, sixth nerve palsy, increased intracranial pressure, and cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis.

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