7 results match your criteria: "University of Tennessee Medical Center-Knoxville 37920.[Affiliation]"
Pediatr Pulmonol
September 1999
Department of Pediatrics, University of Tennessee Medical Center-Knoxville 37920-6999, USA.
We describe the rare complication of necrotizing pneumonia and invasive pneumococcal infection in 3 previously healthy pediatric patients. Lobar consolidation and pleural effusions appeared initially, followed within several days by the appearance of multiple small lucencies in the area of consolidation. In one case, necrosis progressed to a large abscess cavity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBlood Coagul Fibrinolysis
April 1996
Department of Medical Biology, University of Tennessee Medical Center/Knoxville 37920, USA.
Intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH) in premature infants may be related to the immaturity of the vascular bed in the germinal matrix. We measured six hemostatic parameters whose alterations may represent an additional risk factor for IVH in preterm infants. On postnatal day 1 there were differences between plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) activity and antigen, of both full-term and preterm infants with and without IVH (P < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRapid Commun Mass Spectrom
October 1995
Department of Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Tennessee Medical Center/Knoxville 37920, USA.
The most common mutation of the cystic fibrosis gene is characterized by the deletion of three nucleotides that code phenylalanine in the 508 position of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator. We report the first measurements by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) time-of-flight mass spectrometry for the delta F508 mutation in cystic fibrosis carriers and patients. Furthermore, in a blind test, results from the normal and delta F508 mutant alleles in 30 clinical samples based on MALDI mass spectrometry and on conventional gel analysis of the DNA were in total agreement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlcohol Clin Exp Res
December 1994
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Tennessee Medical Center-Knoxville 37920.
Analysis of clinical data has implicated ethanol (EtOH) as an embryotoxic agent and as an agent that disrupts normal placental structure and function. Because epidermal growth factor (EGF) is an important regulator of placental function, we have studied the effects of EtOH on EGF-induced hormone secretion using JEG-3 choriocarcinoma cells that serve as a model for trophoblast cells. EtOH at physiological (5-100 mM) concentrations modulated effects of EGF in a time and dose-dependent manner.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Pharmacol
September 1994
Department of Medical Biology, University of Tennessee Medical Center/Knoxville 37920.
Multidrug resistance (MDR) in neoplastic cells is usually due to decreased cellular retention of drugs such as vincristine or doxorubicin. An ATP-dependent drug efflux pump has been detected in MDR-1-phenotypic cells; inhibition of the MDR pump is probably the primary mechanism for reversal of MDR. Although quinine (SQ1) and quinidine are reversal agents and inhibitors of the MDR pump, the results from in vivo experiments and in vitro experiments with these diastereomers are contradictory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlcohol Clin Exp Res
April 1993
Department of Obstetrics/Gynecology, University of Tennessee Medical Center-Knoxville 37920.
To extend further our previous observations on the inhibition of luteinizing hormone (LH)-induced increases in steroid secretion by ethanol (EtOH) (Alcohol. Clin. Exp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBlood Coagul Fibrinolysis
February 1993
Department of Medical Biology, University of Tennessee Medical Center/Knoxville 37920.
Pichinde virus infection of inbred guinea-pigs is a model for arenaviral infections in humans. Infected animals experience reduced levels of multiple coagulation factors caused by either consumption coagulopathy or impaired factor synthesis. A radioimmunoassay (RIA) of guinea-pig fibrinopeptide A (gFPA) has been developed to measure the degree of thrombin action in vivo.
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