Search results for "DAMAGE"

showing 10 items of 1289 documents

Non-invasive cardiovascular imaging for evaluating subclinical target organ damage in hypertensive patients

2017

International audience; Arterial hypertension (HTN) accounts for the largest amount of attributable cardiovascular (CV) mortality worldwide, and risk stratification in hypertensive patients is of crucial importance to manage treatment and prevent adverse events. Asymptomatic involvement of different organs in patients affected by HTN represents an independent determinant of CV risk and the identification of target organ damage (TOD) is recommended to further reclassify patients' risk. Non-invasive CV imaging is progressively being used and continues to provide new technological opportunities to TOD evaluation at early stage. The aim of this article is to provide the community of cardiology …

cardiovascular riskmedicine.medical_specialtyarterial hypertension[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Population030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyAsymptomatic03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicinetarget organ damageMedicineRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingIn patient030212 general & internal medicineAdverse effecteducationnon-invasive cardiovascular imagingSubclinical infectioneducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryNon invasiveGeneral MedicineTarget organ damage3. Good healthRisk stratificationCardiologyprognosismedicine.symptomCardiology and Cardiovascular Medicinebusiness
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Cardiovascular risk assessment beyond Systemic Coronary Risk Estimation: A role for organ damage markers

2012

BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular risk assessment in the clinical practice is mostly based on risk charts, such as Framingham risk score and Systemic Coronary Risk Estimation (SCORE). These enable clinicians to estimate the impact of cardiovascular risk factors and assess individual cardiovascular risk profile. Risk charts, however, do not take into account subclinical organ damage, which exerts independent influence on risk and may amplify the estimated risk profile. Inclusion of organ damage markers in the assessment may thus contribute to improve this process. OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to evaluate the influence of implementation of SCORE charts with widely available indexes of organ damage, with t…

cardiovascular riskmedicine.medical_specialtyestimated glomerular filtration ratemicroalbuminuriaPhysiologyCardiovascular risk organ damage markersCoronary DiseaseLeft ventricular hypertrophyRisk Assessmentmetabolic syndromecardiovascular risk; estimated glomerular filtration rate; left ventricular hypertrophy; metabolic syndrome; microalbuminuria; prevention; score; target organ damagepreventiontarget organ damageSCOREInternal MedicineMedicineHumansAlbuminuriaRisk factorIntensive care medicineEstimationFramingham Risk Scorebusiness.industryMetabolic Syndrome XBiomarkermedicine.diseaseSurgeryleft ventricular hypertrophyAlbuminuriaMicroalbuminuriamedicine.symptomMetabolic syndromebusinessRisk assessmentCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineBiomarkersGlomerular Filtration RateHuman
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In situ transmission electron microscopy study of electron beam-induced transformations in colloidal cesium lead halide perovskite nanocrystals

2017

An increasing number of studies have recently reported the rapid degradation of hybrid and all-inorganic lead halide perovskite nanocrystals under electron beam irradiation in the transmission electron microscope, with the formation of nanometer size, high contrast particles. The nature of these nanoparticles and the involved transformations in the perovskite nanocrystals are still a matter of debate. Herein, we have studied the effects of high energy (80/200 keV) electron irradiation on colloidal cesium lead bromide (CsPbBr3) nanocrystals with different shapes and sizes, especially 3 nm thick nanosheets, a morphology that facilitated the analysis of the various ongoing processes. Our resul…

cesium lead halide nanocrystalsMaterials scienceInorganic chemistryGeneral Physics and AstronomyHalideNanoparticleElectrons02 engineering and technologyElectron010402 general chemistryPhotochemistry01 natural sciencesArticleColloidElectron beam processingGeneral Materials SciencePerovskite (structure)NanotecnologiaGeneral Engineering021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesNanocrystalTransmission electron microscopyradiation damageTEM0210 nano-technology
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ERA-experiment “space biochemistry”

1995

Abstract The general goal of the experiment was to study the response of anhydrobiotic (metabolically dormant) microorganisms (spores of Bacillus subtilis, cells of Deinococcus radiodurans, conidia of Aspergillus species) and cellular constituents (plasmid DNA, proteins, purple membranes, amino acids, urea) to the extremely dehydrating conditions of open space, in some cases in combination with irradiation by solar UV-light. Methods of investigation included viability tests, analysis of DNA damages (strand breaks, DNA-protein cross-links) and analysis of chemical effects by spectroscopic, electrophoretic and chromatographic methods. The decrease in viability of the microorganisms was as exp…

chemistry.chemical_classificationAtmospheric SciencebiologyDNA damageChemistryMicroorganismFungal geneticsAerospace EngineeringAstronomy and AstrophysicsDeinococcus radioduransBacillus subtilisbiology.organism_classificationAmino acidchemistry.chemical_compoundGeophysicsBiochemistrySpace and Planetary ScienceUreaGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesDNAAdvances in Space Research
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Detoxication Strategy of Epoxide Hydrolase—The Basis for a Novel Threshold for Definable Genotoxic Carcinogens

2004

From our recent work on the three-dimensional structure of epoxide hydrolases we theoretically deduced the likelihood of a two-step catalytic mechanism that we and others have subsequently experimentally confirmed. Analysis of the rate of the two steps by us and by others show that the first step—responsible for removal of the reactive epoxide from the system—works extraordinarily fast (typically three orders of magnitude faster than the second step), sucking up the epoxide like a sponge. Regeneration of the free enzyme (the second step of the catalytic mechanism) is slow. This becomes a toxicological problem only at doses of the epoxide that titrate the enzyme out. Our genotoxicity work s…

chemistry.chemical_classificationDNA damagelcsh:RM1-950Epoxide10050 Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology610 Medicine & healthArticlesBiologymedicine.disease_causeBioinformaticsCombinatorial chemistryDetoxicationchemistry.chemical_compoundEnzymelcsh:Therapeutics. PharmacologychemistryEpoxide Hydrolasesmedicine570 Life sciences; biologyEpoxide hydrolaseCarcinogenGenotoxicity
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Endogenous DNA Damage and Its Relevance for the Initiation of Carcinogenesis

2011

chemistry.chemical_classificationGeneticsReactive oxygen specieschemistryDNA damagemedicineEndogenyCarcinogenesismedicine.disease_causeSpontaneous hydrolysisCell biologyCancer Risk Evaluation
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1,4-Naphthoquinones as inducers of oxidative damage and stress signaling in HaCaT human keratinocytes.

2010

Selected biological effects of 1,4-naphthoquinone, menadione (2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone) and structurally related quinones from natural sources--the 5-hydroxy-naphthoquinones juglone, plumbagin and the 2-hydroxy-naphthoquinones lawsone and lapachol--were studied in human keratinocytes (HaCaT). 1,4-naphthoquinone and menadione as well as juglone and plumbagin were highly cytotoxic, strongly induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation and depleted cellular glutathione. Moreover, they induced oxidative DNA base damage and accumulation of DNA strand breaks, as demonstrated in an alkaline DNA unwinding assay. Neither lawsone nor lapachol (up to 100 microM) were active in any of these assay…

chemistry.chemical_classificationKeratinocytesReactive oxygen speciesDose-Response Relationship DrugDNA damageBiophysicsPlumbaginBiochemistryMolecular biologyLawsoneCell Linechemistry.chemical_compoundHaCaTOxidative StresschemistryMenadioneBiochemistryHumansReactive Oxygen SpeciesMolecular BiologyJugloneLapacholNaphthoquinonesSignal TransductionArchives of biochemistry and biophysics
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Effects of isoflurane on the Dnase I activity in an isolated enzyme preparation and on the Dnase I-G actin complex

1991

Effects of isoflurane on the DNase I activity in an isolated enzyme preparation and in the DNase I-globular (G) actin complex were investigated. DNase I, DNase I-G actin complex, and G actin were exposed to various (0.2–4.0 vol%) isoflurane concentrations for 180 min. Thereafter, DNase I activity was determined. DNase I activity was inhibited in relation to time and concentration of isoflurane exposure. At concentrations ranging from 0.2 to 1.0 vol% of isoflurane inactive DNase I was activated in the DNase I-G actin complex. The DNase I inhibitor G actin showed a reduced capability to inhibit DNase I following isoflurane exposure. Albumin can inhibit the DNase I inactivation possibly by com…

chemistry.chemical_classificationProtein DenaturationIsofluraneAlbuminAbsorption (skin)BuffersToxicologyMolecular biologyActinschemistry.chemical_compoundEnzymechemistryBiochemistryIsofluranemedicineAnimalsDeoxyribonuclease ICattlePancreasDNAActinDNA Damagemedicine.drugJournal of Biochemical Toxicology
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Reactive oxygen species involvement in apoptosis and mitochondrial damage in Caco-2 cells induced by enniatins A, A1, B and B1

2013

The cytotoxic effects, the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and lipid peroxidation (LPO) as well as the cell cycle disruption, the induction of apoptosis and changes in mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm) as a function of increasing time have been determined in human colorectal adenocarcinoma (Caco-2) cells after exposure to enniatins (ENs) A, A₁, B and B₁. IC₅₀ values obtained by the MTT and Neutral Red assay, after 24, 48 and 72 h of exposure ranged from 0.5±0.1 to >15 μM. A significant increase (p≤0.05) in ROS generation and LPO production, as determined by the fluorescent probe H2-DCFDA and TBARS method respectively, was observed for all mycotoxins tested at 3.0 μM concent…

chemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesNeutral redNecrosisDNA damageGeneral MedicineBiologyToxicologymedicine.disease_causeMolecular biologyLipid peroxidationchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryBiochemistryApoptosismedicineTBARSmedicine.symptomOxidative stressToxicology Letters
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2013

Re-canalization of cerebral vessels in ischemic stroke is pivotal to rescue dysfunctional brain areas that are exposed to moderate hypoxia within the penumbra from irreversible cell death. Goal of the present study was to evaluate the effect of moderate hypoxia followed by reoxygenation (MHR) on the evolution of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and blood-brain barrier (BBB) integrity in brain endothelial cells (BEC). BBB integrity was assessed in BEC in vitro and in microvessels of the guinea pig whole brain in situ preparation. Probes were exposed to MHR (2 hours 67-70 mmHg O2, 3 hours reoxygenation, BEC) or towards occlusion of the arteria cerebri media (MCAO) with or without subsequent repe…

chemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyMultidisciplinaryNADPH oxidasebiologyNitrotyrosineBrain damageBlood–brain barriermedicine.diseasemedicine.disease_causeExtravasationCell biologychemistry.chemical_compoundmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistrymedicinebiology.proteinmedicine.symptomReperfusion injuryOxidative stressPLOS ONE
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