Search results for "Biochemical"

showing 10 items of 870 documents

Cardiorenal syndrome: the role of new biochemical markers

2012

Cardiorenal syndrome is a pathophysiological heart and kidney disorder, in which acute or chronic dysfunction of one organ induces a damage in the other. It's a syndrome more and more often encountered in clinical practice and this implies the need to recognize the syndrome through biochemical markers with a good sensitivity and specificity, since its earliest stages in order to optimize therapy. In addition to widely validated biomarkers, such as BNP, pro BNP, creatinine, GFR and cystatin C, other promising molecules are available, like NGAL (neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, KIM-1 (kidney injury molecule-1), MCP-1 (monocyte chemotactic peptide), Netrin-1, interleuchin 18 and NAG…

Cardiorenal syndrome biochemical markers
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Innovative Non-Thermal Technologies for Recovery and Valorization of Value-Added Products from Crustacean Processing By-Products—An Opportunity for a…

2021

The crustacean processing industry has experienced significant growth over recent decades resulting in the production of a great number of by-products. Crustacean by-products contain several valuable components such as proteins, lipids, and carotenoids, especially astaxanthin and chitin. When isolated, these valuable compounds are characterized by bioactivities such as anti-microbial, antioxidant, and anti-cancer ones, and that could be used as nutraceutical ingredients or additives in the food, pharmaceutical, and cosmetic industries. Different innovative non-thermal technologies have appeared as promising, safe, and efficient tools to recover these valuable compounds. This review aims at …

CarotenoidNon-thermal technologieHealth (social science)Circular economyChemical technologySeafood industrycarotenoidsnon-thermal technologiesPlant ScienceReviewTP1-1185ReuseHealth Professions (miscellaneous)MicrobiologyastaxanthinNutraceuticalSustainabilityvaluable compoundsBiochemical engineeringBusinessValue addedchitosanFood ScienceFoods
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Physical Activity Is Related with Cartilage Quality in Women with Knee Osteoarthritis

2017

Purpose To study the relationship between 12-month leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) level and changes in estimated biochemical composition of tibiofemoral cartilage in postmenopausal women with mild knee osteoarthritis (OA). Methods Originally, 87 volunteer postmenopausal women, age 60 to 68 yr, with mild knee OA (Kellgren Lawrence I/II and knee pain) participated in a randomized controlled, 4-month aquatic training trial (RCT), after which 76 completed the 12-month postintervention follow-up period. Self-reported LTPA was collected along the 12-month period using a diary from which MET task hours per month were calculated. Participants were divided into MET task hour tertiles: 1, lowe…

Cartilage ArticularSelf-Assessmentmedicine.medical_specialtynivelrikkoKnee Jointpolvetquantitative magnetic resonance imagingPhysical activitypostmenopausal womenPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationrustoOsteoarthritisKnee Jointleisure-time physical activity03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineBiochemical compositionHumansOrthopedics and Sports Medicineta315ExerciseVolunteerGlycosaminoglycans030203 arthritis & rheumatologyPostmenopausal womenbusiness.industryCartilageta3141Cardiorespiratory fitnessfollow-up study030229 sport sciencesMiddle AgedOsteoarthritis Kneemedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance Imagingcartilage compositionmedicine.anatomical_structureCardiorespiratory FitnessPhysical therapyMETFemaleseurantatutkimusbusinesshuman activitiesfyysinen aktiivisuusFollow-Up Studies
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Antimicrobial susceptibility of nine udder pathogens recovered from bovine clinical mastitis milk in Europe 2015–2016: VetPath results

2020

International audience; VetPath is an ongoing pan-European antimicrobial susceptibility monitoring programme collecting pathogens from diseased cattle, pigs and poultry not recently treated with antibiotics. Non-duplicate isolates (n = 1244) were obtained from cows with acute clinical mastitis in eight countries during 2015-2016 for centrally antimicrobial susceptibility testing according CLSI standards. Among Escherichia coli (n = 225), resistance was high to ampicillin and tetracycline, moderate to kanamycin and low to amoxicillin/clavulanic acid and cefazolin. The MIC50/90 of danofloxacin, enrofloxacin and marbofloxacin were 0.03 and 0.06 μg/mL. For Klebsiella spp. (n = 70), similar resu…

Cattle DiseasesMicrobial Sensitivity TestsBiologymedicine.disease_causeAntimicrobial resistanceMicrobiologyMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesMammary Glands AnimalAntibiotic resistanceAmpicillinClavulanic acidDrug Resistance BacterialmedicineAnimalsDairy cattlePirlimycinMastitis Bovine030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesSurveillanceBacteriaGeneral Veterinary030306 microbiologySCCmecMinimum inhibitory concentrationsGeneral Medicinebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionmedicine.diseaseAnti-Bacterial Agents3. Good healthMastitisEuropePenicillinDairyingMilk[SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologyStreptococcus agalactiaeBacterial mastitis pathogensCattleFemale[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathologymedicine.drug
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Amperometric detection of extended-spectrum β-lactamase activity : application to the characterization of resistant E.coli strains

2015

EA MERS CT3; International audience; The amperometric detection of extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL) with carbon screen-printed sensors was investigated in the presence of the Nitrocefin, a commercially-available β-lactamase chromogenic cephalosporin substrate. Using an ESBL isolated from a clinical sample, it was shown for the first time that the intensity of a specific anodic pic current (EP = [similar]+0.3 V vs. Ag/AgCl) resulting from the catalytic hydrolysis of the β-lactam ring was proportional to the amount of ESBL. The proof-of-principle of a novel susceptibility assay for the rapid and accurate identification of ESBL- producing bacteria was then demonstrated. The detection schem…

Cefotaximemedicine.drug_classélectrochimie[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]CephalosporinAnalytical chemistryBiochemistrybeta-LactamasesAnalytical Chemistry03 medical and health sciencesClavulanic acidDrug Resistance BacterialElectrochemistrymedicineEscherichia colipolycyclic compoundsEnvironmental ChemistryNitrocefin[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biologyélectrode sérigraphiéeSpectroscopybêta-lactamase à spectre étendu (BLSE)Enzyme Assays030304 developmental biologyDetection limit0303 health sciencesChromatographybiology030306 microbiologyChemistryChromogenicbactériologienitrocéfineHydrolysisbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationbacterial infections and mycosesAmperometryAnti-Bacterial AgentsCephalosporinscultureampérométrie[SDE]Environmental SciencesBacteriamedicine.drugbactériologie;culture;Escherichia coli;bêta-lactamase à spectre étendu (BLSE);électrochimie;ampérométrie;électrode sérigraphiée;nitrocéfine
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Use of the Cultex® Radial Flow System as an in vitro exposure method to assess acute pulmonary toxicity of fine dusts and nanoparticles with special …

2013

Exposure of the respiratory tract to airborne particles (including metal-dusts and nano-particles) is considered as a serious health hazard. For a wide range of substances basic knowledge about the toxic properties and the underlying pathomechanisms is lacking or even completely missing. Legislation demands the toxicological characterization of all chemicals placed on the market until 2018 (REACH). As toxicological in vivo data are rare with regard to acute lung toxicity or exhibit distinct limitations (e.g. inter-species differences) and legislation claims the reduction of animal experiments in general ("3R" principle), profound in vitro models have to be established and characterized to m…

Cell SurvivalPulmonary toxicityMetal NanoparticlesToxicologyRisk AssessmentCell LineToxicologyBasic knowledgeToxicity Tests AcuteHumansMedicineInter-laboratoryInhalation ExposureReproducibilityLung toxicitybusiness.industryReproducibility of ResultsIn vitro exposureDustGeneral MedicineCritical parameterAlveolar Epithelial CellsParticulate MatterRadial flowBiochemical engineeringbusinessChemico-Biological Interactions
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Cell Cycle in Potentially Dedifferentiating Cereal Mesophyll Protoplasts Cultured in vitro. I. Abnormalities in Cycle Kinetics

1993

Summary Protoplasts isolated from immature and mature mesophyll of wheat and oats were cultured in vitro . The potential progression from G1 (G0) to G2, through mitosis and cytokinesis was analysed. The degree and speed of progression through the cell cycle depended on the species and the state of maturity of the tissue from which the protoplasts were derived. In all the protoplast populations that were tested at least initiation of DNA synthesis was detected by labelling nuclei with the thymidine-analogue, bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU). Protoplasts derived from mature leaf tissue of wheat appeared to be recalcitrant to reach G2. Wheat protoplasts derived from immature leaf tissue appeared to pr…

Cell divisionPhysiologyfungifood and beveragesContext (language use)Plant Sciencebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionBiologyCell cycleProtoplastCell biologyTissue cultureBotanybacteriaHordeum vulgareAgronomy and Crop ScienceMitosisCytokinesisJournal of Plant Physiology
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Toward minimal bacterial cells: evolution vs. design.

2008

Abstract Recent technical and conceptual advances in the biological sciences opened the possibility of the construction of newly designed cells. In this paper we review the state of the art of cell engineering in the context of genome research, paying particular attention to what we can learn on naturally reduced genomes from either symbiotic or free living bacteria. Different minimal hypothetically viable cells can be defined on the basis of several computational and experimental approaches. Projects aiming at simplifying living cells converge with efforts to make synthetic genomes for minimal cells. The panorama of this particular view of synthetic biology lead us to consider the use of d…

Cell engineeringContext (language use)BiologyMicrobiologyGenomeArticleEvolution MolecularSynthetic biologyGenome researchGenes SyntheticBiological sciencesreduced genomesEvolution ChemicalBacteriasynthetic cellbusiness.industrysynthetic genomeComputational BiologyBiotechnologyInfectious DiseasesMinimal genomeBiochemical engineeringsynthetic biologybusinessFree living bacteriaGenome Bacterialminimal genomeFEMS microbiology reviews
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Requirements for Th1-dependent immunity against infection with Leishmania major

2004

Protective immunity against cutaneous leishmaniasis is dependent on the induction of Th1/Tc1 immune responses resulting in efficient parasite elimination. In this review, the mechanisms leading to protection are discussed with special focus on the role of Leishmania major-infected dendritic cells (DC) in induction of Th1-dependent immunity. Murine strain-dependent differences between DC derived from Leishmania-susceptible as compared to resistant mice are highlighted.

Cellular immunityImmunologyLeishmaniasis CutaneousBiologyMicrobiologyMiceImmune systemCutaneous leishmaniasisImmunitymedicineAnimalsHumansLeishmania majorLeishmania majorAntigen PresentationMice Inbred BALB CDendritic CellsDendritic cellTh1 Cellsbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseLeishmaniaMice Inbred C57BLInfectious DiseasesImmunologyInterleukin 12Microbes and Infection
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Eradication of enterococci biofilms by lactic acid alone and combined with chlorhexidine and cetrimide

2012

Objective: The antimicrobial activity of lactic acid (LA) alone or in combination with chlorhexidine (CHX) and cetrimide (CTR) against three Enterococcus faecalis strains, E. faecalis ATCC 29212, E. faecalis EF-D1 and E. faecalis U-1765, one Enterococcus durans strain and one dual-species biofilm was investigated. Study Design: The irrigating solutions tested were 20%, 15%, 10%, 5% and 2.5% LA, alone and in combination with 2% CHX and with 0.2% CTR. The biofilms were grown in the MBECTM high-throughput device for 24 hours and exposed to the solutions for 30 seconds and 1 minute. “Eradication” was defined as 100% bacterial kill. Results: Twenty percent LA eradicated all enterococci biofilms …

CetrimideEnterococcus faecalisMicrobiologyEndodonticschemistry.chemical_compoundmedicineLactic AcidGeneral DentistrybiologyCetrimoniumChlorhexidineChlorhexidineBiofilmbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationAntimicrobial:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]Enterococcus duransLactic acidOtorhinolaryngologychemistryEnterococcusBiofilmsUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASAnti-Infective Agents LocalCetrimonium CompoundsSurgeryResearch-ArticleDrug Therapy CombinationEnterococcusmedicine.drug
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