Search results for "ANSM"

showing 10 items of 3078 documents

Muscarinic Receptor Activation Increases Efflux of Choline from Isolated Heart and Rat Cortex in Vivo. Interactions with Forskolin and IBMX

1986

Muscarinic receptor activation modulates functions of the heart and neurotransmission in the peripheral and central nervous system. Moreover, muscarinic agonists produce changes in the metabolism of, for example, heart tissue, such as inhibition of beta-adrenoceptor-mediated cAMP accumulation, glycogenolysis and lipase activation.

medicine.medical_specialtyIBMXGlycogenolysisForskolinCentral nervous systemMuscarinic acetylcholine receptor M2NeurotransmissionPharmacologychemistry.chemical_compoundEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryInternal medicineMuscarinic acetylcholine receptormedicineCholine
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Neurological impairment in experimental antiphospholipid syndrome is associated with increased ligand binding to hippocampal and cortical serotonergi…

2013

The antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) is an autoimmune disease where the presence of high titers of circulating autoantibodies causes thrombosis with consecutive infarcts. In experimental APS (eAPS), a mouse model of APS, behavioral abnormalities develop in the absence of vessel occlusion or infarcts. Using brain hemispheres of control and eAPS mice with documented neurological and cognitive deficits, we checked for lymphocytic infiltration, activation of glia and macrophages, as well as alterations of ligand binding densities of various neurotransmitter receptors to unravel the molecular basis of this abnormal behavior. Lymphocytic infiltrates were immunohistochemically characterized using a…

medicine.medical_specialtyImmunologyHippocampusAMPA receptorBiologySerotonergicHippocampusMiceNeurotransmitter receptorInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsImmunology and AllergyLymphocytesReceptor5-HT receptorAutoantibodiesBehavior AnimalMicrogliaGABAA receptorMacrophagesSomatosensory CortexHematologyAntiphospholipid SyndromeAntigens DifferentiationUp-RegulationDisease Models Animalmedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologynervous systemAstrocytesReceptor Serotonin 5-HT1ANervous System DiseasesImmunobiology
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Is respiratory protection appropriate in the Ebola response?

2014

medicine.medical_specialtyInfectious Disease Transmission Patient-to-ProfessionalText miningProtective Clothingbusiness.industrymedicineHumansGeneral MedicineHemorrhagic Fever EbolaRespiratory systemIntensive care medicinebusinessThe Lancet
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The First THROMKID-Plus Inter-laboratory Survey - Standardization and Quality Management of Platelet Light Transmission Aggregometry for the Diagnosi…

2019

medicine.medical_specialtyLight transmissionQuality managementStandardizationbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectlanguage.human_languageGermanlanguagemedicinePlateletInter-laboratoryFunction (engineering)Intensive care medicinebusinessmedia_commonScience meets clinical practice
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Pathogen safety of long-term treatments for bleeding disorders: (un)predictable risks and evolving threats.

2013

Substantial improvements in the safety of blood and plasma products for the management of bleeding disorders have been achieved in recent decades. This has led some clinicians to believe that the infectious threat is over and that inhibitor formation is the foremost complication of hemophilia therapy. On the contrary, elimination of all microbes from blood is difficult, potentially impossible, and there are always threats from emerging pathogens. The risk of infection transmission is also increasing due to greater exposure to products, increasing prophylaxis and high-dose regimens for immune tolerance, and longevity of hemophilia patients. Current products can be considered "reasonably safe…

medicine.medical_specialtyLong term treatmentContext (language use)Hemophilia AInfectionsEmerging infectionsSAFERHumans; Blood Coagulation Disorders; Hemophilia A; Blood Transfusion; InfectionmedicineHumansBlood TransfusionIntensive care medicinePathogenTransmission (medicine)business.industryRisk of infectionTransfusion ReactionHematologyBlood Coagulation Disordersmedicine.diseaseSettore MED/07 - Microbiologia e Microbiologia ClinicaThrombosisSurgeryHemostasisPlasma productsBlood safetyCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessInfectionSeminars in thrombosis and hemostasis
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Optical quality of intraocular lenses after several years in the human eye

2013

The optical quality of explanted intraocular lenses (IOLs) was analysed to verify if their quality is maintained after having been in the human eye for several years. Twenty-five explanted IOLs were studied, 10 because of intraocular luxation and 15 from corneal donors. The dioptric power and modulation transfer function (MTF) were determined to discover the image quality of the IOLs. The spectral transmission was also established to ascertain whether the filter against ultraviolet (UV) radiation was still effective. The results show that the MTF of implanted IOLs is maintained and therefore so is the image quality they provide. Only decay in the MTF of some of the explanted IOLs was observ…

medicine.medical_specialtyMaterials sciencegenetic structuresImage qualitybusiness.industrySpectral transmissionequipment and supplieseye diseasesAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsOptical qualityOpticsmedicine.anatomical_structureIntraocular lensesOphthalmologymedicineHuman eyesense organsbusinessJournal of Modern Optics
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Broad-beam transmission data for new brachytherapy sources, Tm-170 and Yb-169

2005

The characteristics of the radionuclides (170)Tm and (169)Yb are highly interesting for their use as high dose-rate brachytherapy sources. The introduction of brachytherapy equipment containing these sources will lead to smaller required thicknesses of the materials used in radiation protection barriers compared with the use of conventional sources such as (192)Ir and (137)Cs. The purpose of this study is to determine the required thicknesses of protection material for the design of the protecting walls. Using the Monte Carlo method, transmission data were derived for broad-beam geometries through lead and concrete barriers, from which the first half value layer and tenth value layer are ob…

medicine.medical_specialtyMaterials sciencemedicine.medical_treatmentBrachytherapyBrachytherapyMonte Carlo methodOpticsmedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingMedical physicsYtterbiumRadioisotopesRadiationRadiological and Ultrasound Technologybusiness.industryPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthRadiotherapy DosageGeneral MedicineBeam transmissionIridium RadioisotopesTransmission (telecommunications)Cesium RadioisotopesThuliumCalibrationDose reductionRadiation protectionbusinessMonte Carlo MethodHalf-value layerRadiation Protection Dosimetry
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ICP- and IOP-Effects of Deliberate Hypotension Using Urapidil

1989

Deliberate hypotension is an accepted method to facilitate certain neurosurgical and intraocular procedures. The rationale is to reduce transmural pressure on arterial vessels and thus to facilitate preparation of cerebrovascular aneurysms and malfunctions — or in ophthalmology to reduce the risk of expulsive bleeding (Jantzen and Earnshaw 1988).

medicine.medical_specialtyMean arterial pressureTransmural pressurebusiness.industryInternal medicinemedicineCardiologyCentral venous pressureCerebral perfusion pressureUrapidilbusinessArterial vessel
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Glucose plus choline improve passive avoidance behaviour and increase hippocampal acetylcholine release in mice.

2001

The present study tests the effects of glucose and choline, the biosynthetic precursors of acetylcholine, on passive avoidance behaviour and hippocampal acetylcholine release measured by microdialysis in awake mice. Glucose (10 and 30mg/kg) or choline chloride (6-60mg/kg), given by i.p. injection immediately after training, dose-dependently enhanced retention in an inhibitory avoidance task. Combinations of low doses of glucose (10mg/kg) and choline chloride (20mg/kg) which alone were submaximally effective significantly increased retention latencies in a synergistic manner, an effect which was sensitive to atropine (0.5mg/kg). This beneficial effect vanished when higher doses of glucose or…

medicine.medical_specialtyMicrodialysisMicrodialysisHippocampal formationHippocampusSynaptic TransmissionCholinechemistry.chemical_compoundMiceMemoryInternal medicinemedicineAvoidance LearningCholineAnimalsNeurotransmitterNootropic AgentsMice Inbred BALB CGeneral NeuroscienceAcetylcholineAtropineEndocrinologyGlucosechemistryExploratory BehaviorCholinergicFemaleAcetylcholinemedicine.drugCholine chlorideNeuroscience
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The pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease derive from compensatory responses to NMDA receptor insufficiency

2018

AbstractAlzheimer’s disease is characterized by intracellular aggregates of hyperphosphorylated tau protein and extracellular plaques of amyloid β peptide, a product of APP processing. The origin of these pathological hallmarks has remained elusive. Here, we have tested the idea that both alterations, at the onset of the disease, may constitute compensatory responses to the same causative and initial trigger, namely NMDA receptor insufficiency. Treatment of rat cortical neurons with the specific NMDA receptor antagonist AP5 within 4 h caused a significant increase in tau phosphorylation at the AT8 and S404 epitopes as well as an increase in APP expression and Aβ 40 secretion. Single intrape…

medicine.medical_specialtyMutationbiologybusiness.industryTau proteinNeurotransmissionmedicine.disease_causeEndocrinologyInternal medicineExtracellularbiology.proteinExcitatory postsynaptic potentialNMDA receptorMedicineSecretionbusinessIntracellular
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