146 results match your criteria: "University of Missouri-Kansas City 64108[Affiliation]"

To characterize the lipid and lipoprotein abnormalities in patients with diabetes mellitus and evaluate the risks and benefits of marketed pharmacologic therapies, a MEDLINE search of the National Library of Medicine data base was performed of studies published from January 1966 to March 1994. Clinical trials assessing effects on lipids and lipoproteins, and adverse effects of marketed lipid-lowering agents were extracted. Reviews and other relevant articles were included if they provided information regarding lipid and lipoprotein metabolism or guidelines on the treatment of dyslipidemias in patients with diabetes mellitus.

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Glial-like cells in rat pituitary intermediate lobe were localized and characterized by immunohistochemistry with antisera against glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and S-100. Individual GFAP immunoreactive (IR) cells possessed several processes that often branched into secondary and tertiary processes, terminating with end-feet. The GFAP-immunopositive cell population was distributed in specific rostrocaudal and dorsoventral patterns.

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Studies show that peroxisome proliferators inhibit mitochondrial beta-oxidation of fatty acids. However, mechanism(s) of this inhibitory effect has not been identified. This study was undertaken to delineate such mechanism(s).

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A retrospective investigation of 257 patient records from a university-based facial pain center for patients with temporomandibular disorders examined the "natural history" of patients with temporomandibular disorders for consultation and treatment of their complaints. Data were obtained on a variety of demographic variables, referral patterns, types of providers seen for consultation, and the types of diagnostic tests ordered by these providers. Results showed that patients with temporomandibular disorders see more than three providers prior to their referral to a tertiary care center, that a considerable proportion of those providers are physicians, that patients reported undergoing a variety of diagnostic tests, and that patients reported receiving a variety of diagnoses for their condition.

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References were selected from a MEDLINE search from 1966-1993 for literature evaluating the drug therapy of diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN). The search was limited to studies evaluating symptomatic treatment, and methods were developed to include only well-designed clinical trials. Many recommendations for the symptomatic treatment of DPN appear in the medical literature, but are frequently based on case reports, information extrapolated from other neuropathic pain syndrome models, or treatment protocols lacking scientific methods.

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Eikenella corrodens is a gram-negative, human pathogen which exhibits colony morphology variation. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to examine large (non-corroding) and small (corroding) colony variants from the type strain (ATCC 23834) and two clinical isolates (strains VA1 and CM1). Large colonies were large, flatter, and appeared relatively featureless compared to small colonies and had even, smooth colony margins.

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The phosphodiesterase inhibitor, enoximone, was previously shown to cause paradoxical effects on cardiac lipid metabolism. The present study was undertaken to elucidate the effects of enoximone on the hepatic mitochondrial pathway of fatty acid oxidation. Results presented here show that in isolated rat liver mitochondria, palmitate oxidation was inhibited progressively by increasing concentrations of enoximone.

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An LC method for the analysis of m-hydroxymandelic acid (MHMA) and m-hydroxyphenylglycol (MHPG) and their conjugates in human plasma was developed and validated. The method for the quantitation involved extraction of acidified plasma (subject to hydrolysis with beta-glucuronidase for 120 min with 500 units of enzyme/0.25 ml of plasma at 37 degrees C for the conjugates) with an organic phase (methyl-tert-butyl ether).

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A 10-question survey was mailed to the deans of 74 schools and colleges of pharmacy to characterize family leave policies, child care, and job share opportunities. Data were tabulated as percentage response received, and analyzed by geographic region and by public compared with private institutions. Sixty-four surveys were completed (response rate 86%).

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Therapeutic camping for children with end-stage renal disease.

Pediatr Nephrol

June 1994

Section of Pediatric Nephrology, Children's Mercy Hospital, University of Missouri-Kansas City 64108.

Therapeutic camping experiences for children with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) have proliferated in the United States and abroad. This report is based on the results of a survey designed to accumulate data on the development and implementation of 20 such camps. Children attending camp ranged in age from 1 year to 19 years.

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Although septic shock may be the most common cause of distributive shock, to our knowledge, no studies have defined the likelihood and type of infection among patients with distributive shock. We performed a retrospective study of 100 consecutive patients who were admitted to a city-county hospital with hemodynamic evidence of distributive shock. Forty-nine of 100 patients with distributive shock had microbiological documentation of infection.

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Detecting premalignant cervical lesions. Contribution of screening colposcopy to cytology.

J Reprod Med

May 1994

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Truman Medical Center, School of Medicine, University of Missouri-Kansas City 64108.

The combination of parallel cytology and screening colposcopy was found to increase the detection of premalignant cervical lesions from 8.2% in a group of patients (based on cytology alone) to 15.3% in that group (based on the combination).

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Studies in the last decade demonstrated that in children tubular maximum phosphate reabsorption per glomerular filtration rate (TmP/GFR) is identical to TP/GFR; TP indicating tubular phosphate reabsorption under basal conditions, without phosphate load. TP/GFR is calculated from the formula TP/GFR = SP-UP x SCr:UCr, based on simultaneous urine and blood creatinine and phosphate concentrations, and is applicable in both the fasting and non-fasting child. These studies also demonstrated that the use of Walton and Bijvoet nomogram in children may result in overestimation of TmP/GFR compared with TP/GFR calculated from the above formula.

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Hepatotoxicity induced by various therapeutic agents, industrial chemicals and environmental pollutants is a well-recognized phenomenon. These chemicals are known to cause liver damage that is localized to either periportal or centrilobular regions of the liver lobule (1-3). Depending on dose, duration, and route of exposure, the resultant liver injury may regress or progress and becomes irreversible (1).

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Substance P- and opioid peptide-immunoreactive nerve terminals functionally interact in the spinal cord as two opposing systems in the regulation of the nociceptive pathway. In order to determine how SP-ergic system adapts to chronic opioid receptor blockade, the effects of naltrexone on SP level, SP receptor and the second messenger system coupled to the SP receptor were examined in the rat spinal cord. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were treated with naltrexone or vehicle for seven days by constant minipump infusion.

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The adult human pituitary lacks a well defined intermediate lobe, and it is uncertain whether the POMC cells that remain in the zona intermedia represent melanotropes or corticotropes. In the present study, we investigated whether the N-acetylated beta-endorphin- and alpha-MSH-related peptides that are characteristically produced by melanotropes in the rat and other species are localized in the human pituitary. Sequential gel filtration and ion exchange HPLC analysis revealed that small amounts of alpha-N-acetyl-beta-endorphin-(1-31), as well as beta-endorphin-(1-27) and beta-endorphin-(1-26), were detectable in human pituitary extracts, although beta-endorphin-(1-31) was clearly the major form.

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Neuropeptide Y (NPY), immunoreactive (IR), and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-IR nerve fibers were scarce at birth in rat heart, but increased rapidly during the first 2 postnatal weeks, reaching approximately adult levels by the third week. The sequence of development was: interatrial septum and atrial wall, free ventricular wall starting from the epicardium, and finally the atrial appendages and interventricular septum. In ventricles and atrial appendages both fiber types developed similarly.

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POMC-derived peptides and mRNA have been identified in heart tissue, although POMC processing has not been fully characterized. In the present study, we found that beta-lipotropin and ACTH were localized in rat heart, although they were almost entirely converted to beta-endorphin- and alpha-MSH-related peptides. Ion exchange HPLC analysis revealed that beta-endorphin(1-31) was further processed to alpha-N-acetyl-beta-endorphin(1-31), which comprised 35.

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Microbial growth and antimicrobial bacterial killing are both diminished in abscesses. It was postulated that zinc depletion in abscesses, perhaps secondary to a neutrophil protein resembling calprotectin, may be partly responsible for these effects. In a rabbit tissue-cage abscess model, pooled abscess supernatant concentration of zinc was < 1.

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The potential roles of the basement membrane proteins, laminin and fibronectin, and the cytoskeletal protein, tubulin, were assessed in the pathogenesis of Sjögren's Syndrome (SS) by comparing their expressions in SS with normal labial salivary gland (LSG) tissue. Laminin, fibronectin and tubulin expression were determined using well characterized monoclonal antibodies in the peroxidase anti-peroxidase technique on formalin-fixed LSG's from patients with SS and normal controls. Characteristic periductal staining for laminin occurred in the LSG's of 14/18 SS patients scored by one observer and 16/18 scored by the second observer.

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Chronic blockade of opioid receptors by naltrexone increases opioid peptides in the striatum, and up-regulates brain opioid receptors resulting in functional supersensitivity. Striatal SP content was increased 3.5-fold after 8 days of naltrexone treatment relative to control animals.

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The objective of this study was to determine whether glycyl-L-glutamine [beta-endorphin(30-31)] modulates the thermoregulatory actions of alpha-MSH. Microinjection of alpha-MSH (0.06 nmol) into PGE2-responsive thermogenic sites in the medial preoptic area of rats generated a hyperthermic response, inducing a 0.

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