108 results match your criteria: "and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children[Affiliation]"
J Neurosci Res
October 2003
Department of Pediatrics, Drexel University College of Medicine, and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Previous studies have shown that hypoxia results in increased Ca2+ influx in neuronal nuclei and generation of nitric oxide (NO) free radicals in the cerebral cortical tissue of newborn piglets. The present study tests the hypothesis that hypoxia results in modification of the inositol triphosphate (IP3) receptor characteristics in neuronal nuclei and that the hypoxia-induced modification of the IP3 receptor is NO mediated. Studies were performed in piglets, 3-5 days old, divided into normoxic (n = 5), hypoxic (n = 5), and NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor N-nitro-L-arginine (NNLA)-treated hypoxic (n = 5) groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Med Genet A
August 2003
Department of Pediatrics, Section of Clinical Genetics, Drexel University College of Medicine and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19134, USA.
This is a report of a trisomy 18 patient who developed Wilms tumor in conjunction with perilobar nephroblastomatosis (NB) at 9 years and 5 months of age. Review of the literature revealed that most patients with trisomy 18 who develop Wilms tumor, do so at a later than expected age for a tumor related to NB, and are females. In this case, no chromosome 11 WT1 mutation was detected by PCR/SSCP analysis, but the tumor had in addition to the trisomy, an isochromosome 7q and loss of heterozygosity at 16q, two mutations that have been linked independently to Wilms tumorigenesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroscience
September 2003
Department of Pediatrics, Room 701, 7th Floor Heritage Building, Neonatal Research Laboratory, Drexel University College of Medicine and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, 3300 Henry Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19129, USA.
Previous studies have shown that poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and DNA polymerase beta, nuclear enzymes, are associated with cell replication and DNA repair. The present study tests the hypothesis that hypoxia results in increased PARP and DNA polymerase activity in cerebral cortical neuronal nuclei to repair the hypoxia-induced damage to genomic DNA. Studies were conducted in 13 anesthetized and ventilated newborn piglets (age 3-5 days) divided into normoxic (n=5) and hypoxic (n=8) groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Transplant
June 2003
Department of Pediatrics and Surgery, Surgical Clinic of Central Arkansas, and St Christopher's Hospital for Children, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, AR, USA.
A 3-yr-old boy with posterior urethral valves underwent cadaveric renal transplant. On the ninth day after transplantation the patient developed a urinary leak, with complete ureteral necrosis. There was insufficient length of undamaged ureter to permit ureteroneocystostomy, unavailability of a native ureter to permit ureteroureterostomy, and an inability to mobilize the transplant kidney or bladder sufficiently to permit direct pyelovesicostomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurosci Lett
May 2003
Department of Pediatrics, Drexel University College of Medicine and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
The present study was designed to investigate the effect of hypoxia on nuclear calcium-influx in the cerebral cortex of newborn piglets. Anesthetized and ventilated newborn piglets divided into normoxic (n=4) and hypoxic groups with varying degrees of tissue hypoxia (n=10) were studied. Nuclear Ca(2+)-influx was determined using (45)Ca(2+) and plotted against ATP and phosphocreatine levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroscience
April 2003
Department of Pediatrics, MCP Hahnemann University and St Christopher's Hospital for Children, Room 701, 3300 Henry Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19129, USA.
Previous studies have shown that hypoxia results in increased phosphorylation of CREB protein that mediates gene expression including that of the pro-apoptotic gene bax. We also have shown that hypoxia-induced expression of Bax protein is prevented by blocking nitric oxide synthase (NOS). The present study tests the hypothesis that inhibition of NOS by N-nitro-L-arginine (NNLA) will prevent the hypoxia-induced increased phosphorylation of CREB protein in neuronal nuclei of newborn piglets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res
November 2002
Department of Pediatrics, MCP Hahnemann University and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Front Street at Erie Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19134, USA.
The present study tests the hypothesis that nitric oxide mediates the hypoxia-induced increase in expression of Bax and in DNA fragmentation in the cerebral cortex of newborn piglets, and that administration of N-nitro-L-arginine (NNLA), a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, will prevent a change in hypoxia-induced expression of apoptotic genes and DNA damage. Piglets were assigned to normoxic, hypoxic, or NNLA-pretreated hypoxic groups. Cerebral tissue hypoxia was documented biochemically by measuring ATP and phosphocreatine (PCr) levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurochem Res
December 2001
Department of Pediatrics, MCP Hahnemann University and St Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, PA 19129, USA.
Previous studies have shown that nuclear calcium signals control a variety of nuclear functions including gene transcription, DNA synthesis, DNA repair and nuclear envelope breakdown. The present study tested the hypothesis that the activity of the neuronal nuclear high affinity Ca2+-ATPase increases as a function of decreased energy metabolism in the cerebral cortex. Studies were performed in 11 ventilated newborn piglets, age 3-5 days, divided into normoxic (Nx, n = 4) and hypoxic (Hx, n = 7) groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Dev Pathol
March 2002
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, MCP Hahnemann University School of Medicine and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Erie Avenue at Front Street, Philadelphia, PA 19134, USA.
The goal of this study was to verify the existence and prevalence of large vessel lesions outside the central nervous system in young patients with sickle cell disease. Thus, 17 spleens resected because of episodes of sequestration or infarction and 41 controls were studied. Anomalies of arteries and veins were detected in all spleens from sickle cell disease patients, but no definite correlation with age, sex, type of sickle hemoglobin, or frequency of sequestration episodes could be established.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Dev Pathol
March 2002
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine. (Anatomical Pathology, Cytogenetics), MCP Hahnemann University School of Medicine and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Erie Avenue at Front Street, Philadelphia, PA 19134, USA.
We have identified a constitutional inversion in chromosome 5 associated with familial adenomatous polyposis in three generations of a Mexican family. Two of three siblings developed hepatic neoplasia in infancy. The gene truncation assay failed to demonstrate a truncated protein in the segment harboring the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) genes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Dev Pathol
March 2002
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, MCP Hannemann University School of Medicine and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Front Street at Erie Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19134, USA.
Rhabdomyomas are the most common primary cardiac tumors in children, and have been shown to undergo spontaneous regression. The aim of our study was to investigate morphologically and immunohistochemically some mechanisms that may explain this clinical phenomenon. Eleven tumors from three term newborn girls who had physical and radiographic features pathognomonic of tuberous sclerosis were evaluated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMent Retard Dev Disabil Res Rev
March 2002
Department of Pediatrics, MCP Hahnemann University and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
The NMDA-type glutamate receptor is a predominant mediator of excitotoxicity in the immature brain due to overexpression of the receptor in the developing brain. Within the development period however, the extent of NMDA receptor mediated processes including hypoxia-induced excitotoxicity may depend on the ontogeny of the NMDA receptor recognition and modulation sites, and subunits leading to altered function of the ion-channel comples. The function of the receptor may be modified by intracellular mechanisms such as phosphorylation/dephosphorylation, nitration, and generation of free radicals including nitric oxide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Dev Pathol
September 2001
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, MCP Hahnemann University School of Medicine, and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Front Street at Erie Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19134, USA.
Studies of the ubiquitin-proteasome system in alpha1-antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency have been performed using only biochemical and molecular biology techniques on human cells as well as on AAT-deficient transduced cell lines. The objective of our study was to assess the immunohistochemical and topographic features of ubiquitin in the livers of AAT-deficient children with and without active liver disease. Fourteen cases of AAT deficiency were retrieved from our archives, along with 10 control liver specimens obtained from autopsies of age-matched children with no clinical, gross anatomic, or histologic evidence of liver disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Dev Pathol
September 2001
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, MCP Hahnemann University and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Front Street at Erie Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19134, USA.
Omphalomesenteric duct remnants (ODR) including Meckel diverticula often present with symptoms of bowel obstruction. Their histologic features are varied and include heterotopic gastrointestinal mucosa and/or pancreatic tissue within the wall. Abnormalities of the submucosal plexus of Meissner, however, have not been documented in the literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurochem Res
January 2001
Department of Pediatrics, MCP Hahnemann University and St Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, PA 19129, USA.
Studies indicate that phosphorylated Bcl-2 cannot form a heterodimer with Bax and thus may lose its antiapoptotic potential. The present study tests the hypothesis that graded hypoxia in cerebral tissue induces the phosphorylation of Bcl-2, thus altering the heterodimerization of Bcl-2 with Bax and subsequently leading to apoptosis. Anesthetized, ventilated newborn piglets were assigned to a normoxic and a graded hypoxic group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Neonate
July 2001
Department of Pediatrics, MCP Hahnemann University and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, PA 19129, USA.
Previous studies have shown that hypoxia is associated with modification of the cerebral cortical nuclear membrane, leading to increased intranuclear calcium. The increased intranuclear calcium activates calcium-dependent endonucleases, resulting in DNA fragmentation. The present study tests the hypothesis that the fragmentation of neuronal genomic DNA increases with an increase in the degree of cerebral tissue hypoxia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res
December 2000
Department of Pediatrics/Neonatology, MCP Hahnemann University and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, 3300 Henry Avenue, 7th Floor, Room #701, Philadelphia, PA 19129, USA.
Previous studies have shown that during hypoxia, neuronal nuclear high affinity Ca(2+)-ATPase activity is increased in the cerebral cortex of newborn piglets. The present study tests the hypothesis that pretreatment with N-nitro-L-arginine (NNLA) will prevent the hypoxia-induced increase in high affinity Ca(2+)-ATPase activity in cortical neuronal nuclear membrane of newborn piglets. We also tested the hypothesis that nitration is a mechanism of elevation of the high affinity Ca(2+)-ATPase activity during hypoxia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurosci Lett
December 2000
Department of Pediatrics, Medical College of Pennsylvania, Hahnemann University and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, PA 19129, USA.
The present study tests the hypothesis that nitration is a potential mechanism of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor modification, by assessing the effect of peroxynitrite in vitro on the glutamate and ion-channel sites of the NMDA receptor in the fetal guinea pig. Nitration of NMDA receptor subunits was confirmed by Western blot. Following peroxynitrite exposure, (3)H-MK-801 bindings show an increase in the B(max) and a decrease in the K(d), while (3)H-glutamate bindings show a decrease in the K(d) with no change in the B(max).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurosci
October 2000
Department of Pediatrics, MCP Hahnemann University and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19134,
The objective of the present study was to examine the effect of antenatal or postnatal treatment with corticosteroids on the NMDA receptor, one of the mediators of both normal brain development and hypoxic-ischemic injury, by determining the characteristics of the receptor MK-801 binding site in untreated and corticosteroid-treated fetal and newborn lambs. (3)H-MK-801 binding was performed in cerebral cortical cell membranes from fetal sheep at 88, 120, and 136 d gestation (term = 150 d), and from 5-d-old lambs and adult ewes. Animals were randomized to receive dexamethasone [fetuses: 6 mg, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res
January 2000
Department of Pediatrics, MCP Hahnemann School of Medicine and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, PA 19134, USA.
This study tests the hypothesis that brain tissue hypoxia results in modification of spermine-dependent activation of the cerebral N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor ion-channel in newborn piglet brains and that pretreatment with N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine (NNLA), an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase, will reduce the hypoxia-induced modification of the spermine-dependent activation of the receptor. Piglets were assigned to one of four groups; normoxia or hypoxia with or without NNLA. The infusion of NNLA or vehicle lasted for 60 min while the animals were ventilated under either hypoxic or normoxic conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Med Genet
January 2000
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, MCP Hahnemann University School of Medicine, and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, PA 19134, USA.
An infant girl of 36 weeks gestational age was found to have cardiovascular and other lethal internal anomalies in addition to characteristic external abnormalities of focal dermal hypoplasia (Goltz syndrome). The internal anomalies included truncus arteriosus type II with truncal origin of hypoplastic pulmonary arteries, cardiac ventricular septal defect, severe hypoplasia of lungs and pulmonary veins, massive diaphragmatic hernia, and absence of the right kidney. Such a combination of severe anomalies has not been reported previously in Goltz syndrome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Microbiol
October 1999
Departments of Pediatrics and Microbiology/Immunology, MCP Hahnemann University and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19129, USA.
PCR assays targeting rRNA genes were developed to identify species (genomovars) within the Burkholderia cepacia complex. Each assay was tested with 177 bacterial isolates that also underwent taxonomic analysis by whole-cell protein profile. These isolates were from clinical and environmental sources and included 107 B.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroscience
September 1999
Allegheny University of the Health Sciences, Department of Pediatrics, Medical College of Pennsylvania, and St Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia 19129, USA.
The present study tests the hypothesis that Mg2+ modification of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor ion channel opening is altered during hypoxia and correlates with the progressive decrease in cerebral energy metabolism induced by hypoxia. Studies were performed in five normoxic and nine hypoxic ventilated piglets. In the hypoxic group, varying degrees of cerebral energy metabolism were achieved by administration of different fractions of inspired oxygen (FiO2) (5-9%) for varying durations of time and were documented by cortical tissue phosphocreatine levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Radiol
July 1999
Departments of Diagnostic Radiology, Hahnemann University Hospitals and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Mail Stop 206, Broad and Vine Streets, Philadelphia, PA 19102, USA.
A 12-year-old boy presented with the classic CT and MRI findings of medulloblastoma and the unusual finding of increased signal on diffusion MRI. The small-cell histology of medulloblastoma may account for the increased signal seen on diffusion MRI. Diffusion MRI with echoplanar technique may be useful in evaluation of these tumors and metastatic disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Bull
February 1999
Department of Pediatrics, MCP-Hahnemann School of Medicine and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
The susceptibility of the developing brain to hypoxia should depend on the lipid composition of the brain cell membrane; the rate of lipid peroxidation; the presence of antioxidant defenses; and the development and modulation of the excitatory neurotransmitter receptors such as the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor, the intracellular Ca++ and intranuclear Ca++-dependent mechanisms. In addition to the developmental status of these cellular components, the response of these potential mechanisms to hypoxia determines the fate of the hypoxic brain cell in the developing brain. In the fetal guinea pig and newborn piglet models, studies have demonstrated that brain tissue hypoxia results in brain cell membrane damage as evidenced by increased membrane lipid peroxidation and decreased Na+,K+-ATPase activity.
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