0000000000008422

AUTHOR

Karl E. Arfors

showing 3 related works from this author

Vitamin C blocks inflammatory platelet-activating factor mimetics created by cigarette smoking.

1997

Cigarette smoking within minutes induces leukocyte adhesion to the vascular wall and formation of intravascular leukocyte-platelet aggregates. We find this is inhibited by platelet-activating factor (PAF) receptor antagonists, and correlates with the accumulation of PAF-like mediators in the blood of cigarette smoke-exposed hamsters. These mediators were PAF-like lipids, formed by nonenzymatic oxidative modification of existing phospholipids, that were distinct from biosynthetic PAF. These PAF-like lipids induced isolated human monocytes and platelets to aggregate, which greatly increased their secretion of IL-8 and macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha. Both events were blocked by a PAF r…

Blood PlateletsChemokineAntioxidantTime FactorsPlatelet Aggregationmedicine.drug_classNeutrophilsmedicine.medical_treatmentPhospholipidReceptors Cell SurfaceAscorbic AcidPlatelet Membrane GlycoproteinsPharmacologyAntioxidantsMonocytesReceptors G-Protein-Coupledchemistry.chemical_compoundReference ValuesCricetinaemedicineCell AdhesionAnimalsHumansPlateletPlatelet Activating FactorReceptorChemokine CCL4Cell AggregationLeukocyte aggregationbiologyPlatelet-activating factorChemistryInterleukin-8SmokingGeneral MedicineAzepinesMacrophage Inflammatory ProteinsTriazolesReceptor antagonistBiochemistrybiology.proteinlipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Platelet Aggregation InhibitorsResearch Article
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Do vitamin E supplements in diets for laboratory animals jeopardize findings in animal models of disease?

1999

Abstract Vitamin E has been supplemented to the diets of farm animals to improve fertility, health, growth rates and quality of animal products. Because of the positive experience obtained in farm animals, vitamin E has been added in increasing amounts to the diets of laboratory animals. Today, vitamin E levels in standard rodent maintenance diets range from 30 mg/kg (France, United States), 90–120 mg/kg (Netherlands, United Kingdom) to as much as 200 mg/kg (Germany). While increasing fertility and health of laboratory animals, these vitamin E supplements affect diverse pathophysiological conditions and thus the outcome of animal models of disease. Because of the large variability of vitami…

Veterinary medicinemedia_common.quotation_subjectVitamin Emedicine.medical_treatmentReproducibility of ResultsFertilityDiseaseBiologyBiochemistryDisease Models AnimalAnimal scienceAnimal modelPhysiology (medical)Animals LaboratoryDietary SupplementsmedicineAnimalsVitamin ETocopherolmedia_commonFree radical biologymedicine
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Polynitroxylated hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier: inhibition of free radical-induced microcirculatory dysfunction.

1999

Reactive oxygen species have been identified as key mediators of leukocyte/endothelial cell interaction under various pathological conditions and diseases such as ischemia/reperfusion injury, inflammation, and after exposure to cigarette smoke. Consequently, antioxidants have been shown to successfully prevent the sequelae of these conditions, ranging from tissue infarction to atherogenesis. In this study we investigated whether, via its established superoxide dismutase-like activity, a novel polynitroxyl hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier (PNH), could affect the stimulation of leukocyte rolling and adhesion to endothelial cells in response to cigarette smoke. Using the dorsal skin fold chambe…

EndotheliumFree RadicalsInflammationLeukocyte RollingPharmacologyBiochemistryMicrocirculationHemoglobinsDouble-Blind MethodPhysiology (medical)CricetinaemedicineCell AdhesionLeukocytesAnimalsPlateletchemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesMesocricetusChemistryMicrocirculationSmokingmedicine.diseaseEndothelial stem cellOxygenmedicine.anatomical_structureImmunologyFemaleEndothelium Vascularmedicine.symptomReperfusion injuryFree radical biologymedicine
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