Search results for "Integument"

showing 10 items of 754 documents

Topical anti-inflammatory potential of quercetin in lipid-based nanosystems: In vivo and in vitro evaluation

2013

Purpose: To develop quercetin-loaded phospholipid vesicles, namely liposomes and PEVs (Penetration Enhancer-containing Vesicles), and to investigate their efficacy on TPA-induced skin inflammation. Methods: Vesicles were made from a mixture of phospholipids, quercetin and polyethylene glycol 400 (PEG), specifically added to increase drug solubility and penetration through the skin. Vesicle morphology and self-assembly were probed by Cryo-Transmission Electron Microscopy and Small/Wide Angle X-ray Scattering, as well as the main physico-chemical features by Light Scattering. The anti-inflammatory efficacy of quercetin nanovesicles was assessed in vivo on TPA-treated mice dorsal skin by the d…

dermal fibroblastsmiceSkin AbsorptionAnti-Inflammatory AgentsDrug Evaluation PreclinicalPharmaceutical ScienceInflammationPharmacologyAdministration Cutaneousquercetinchemistry.chemical_compoundX-Ray DiffractionIn vivoskin inflammationmedicineAnimalsheterocyclic compoundsPharmacology (medical)PharmacologyDrug CarriersLiposomevesiclesintegumentary systemVesiclefungiOrganic Chemistry3T3 CellsPenetration (firestop)In vitrochemistryLiposomesNanoparticlesMolecular MedicineFemaleTopical anti-inflammatorymedicine.symptomQuercetinBiotechnology
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Current Trends in Advanced Alginate-Based Wound Dressings for Chronic Wounds

2021

Chronic wounds represent a major public health issue, with an extremely high cost worldwide. In healthy individuals, the wound healing process takes place in different stages: inflammation, cell proliferation (fibroblasts and keratinocytes of the dermis), and finally remodeling of the extracellular matrix (equilibrium between metalloproteinases and their inhibitors). In chronic wounds, the chronic inflammation favors exudate persistence and bacterial film has a special importance in the dynamics of chronic inflammation in wounds that do not heal. Recent advances in biopolymer-based materials for wound healing highlight the performance of specific alginate forms. An ideal wound dressing shou…

dressingMedicine (miscellaneous)wound healingInflammationReviewfibersMatrix metalloproteinaseMicrobiologyExtracellular matrixWound careDermisIn vivonanofibersmedicinealginateintegumentary systembusiness.industryRbiomaterialmedicine.anatomical_structureSelf-healing hydrogelsMedicinehydrogelmedicine.symptombusinessWound healingcommercially availablewound careJournal of Personalized Medicine
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Oral lichen planus after certolizumab pegol treatment in a patient with Crohn's disease

2011

Dear Sir , Lichen planus (LP) is a relatively uncommon inflammatory dermatosis of the mucocutaneous surfaces that can present with a variety of clinical manifestations and, most commonly, affecting middle-aged adults. The disease course may be short or chronic, although most cases may resolve after 1 month to 7 years. The real prevalence of LP is unknown, but is estimated to be 1% in the USA.1 The pathogenesis of LP is not entirely understood. In general, activated T lymphocytes are recruited to the dermal–epidermal junction and induce apoptosis in basal keratinocytes. Both CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes are found in the lichenoid infiltrate of LP, with a predominance of the latter cell type b…

education.field_of_studyCrohn's diseasemedicine.medical_specialtySettore MED/09 - Medicina Internaintegumentary systembusiness.industryPopulationMucocutaneous zoneoral lichen planu certolizumab crohnGastroenterologyGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseDermatologyPathogenesisstomatognathic diseasesBasal (phylogenetics)medicineOral lichen planusCertolizumab pegoleducationbusinessCD8medicine.drugJournal of Crohn's and Colitis
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Evaluation of desmoglein 1 and 3 autoantibodies in pemphigus vulgaris: correlation with disease severity

2020

Background Pemphigus is an autoimmune blistering disease of the skin and mucous membranes caused by autoantibodies against desmoglein 1 (Dsg1) and desmoglein 3 (Dsg3). Pemphigus vulgaris (PV) is the most common form of pemphigus. The aim of this study was to assess the correlation between the levels of anti-desmoglein 1 and 3 autoantibodies and the severity of PV disease. Material and Methods Nineteen newly diagnosed patients with pemphigus vulgaris were enrolled in this study. The titers of Dsg in subjects by using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) were done at diagnosis time-point, 4th and 8th weeks after the initiation of treatment, and the correlation of antibodies with the oral…

education.field_of_studyOral Medicine and Pathologyintegumentary systembusiness.industryResearchMucocutaneous zonePemphigus vulgarisAutoantibodymedicine.disease:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]Desmoglein030207 dermatology & venereal diseases03 medical and health sciencesPemphigusTiter0302 clinical medicineDesmoglein 1030220 oncology & carcinogenesisUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASImmunologyDesmoglein 3medicinebusinesseducationGeneral DentistryJournal of Clinical and Experimental Dentistry
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Occurrence of three different binding sites forBacillus thuringiensisδ-endotoxins in the midgut brush border membrane of the potato tuber moth,phthor…

1994

The potato tuber moth is susceptible to at least three insecticidal crystal proteins (ICPs) from Bacillus thuringiensis: CrylA(b), CrylB, and CrylC. To design useful combinations of toxin genes either in transgenic plants or in new genetically modified B. thuringiensis strains, it is necessary to determine the binding characteristics of the different ICPs so as not to combine a pair sharing the same binding site. This has been accomplished using two different techniques: 125I-labeling of the ICPs with further measurement of the radioactivity bound to brush border membrane vesicles, and microscopic visualization of the bound ICPs by enzyme-linked reagents such as antibodies or streptavidin u…

education.field_of_studyintegumentary systemBrush borderPhysiologymusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyfungiPopulationMidgutGeneral MedicineBiologybiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryBacillaleshumanitiesPhthorimaea operculellaBiochemistryInsect ScienceBacillus thuringiensisBiotinylationBinding siteeducationArchives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology
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Fallberichte

2004

High-dose immunoglobulins (IVIG) are important agents in the treatment of numerous autoimmune disorders. In the field of dermatology, increasing numbers of patients with bullous autoimmune disorders and mixed connective tissue diseases have been treated. We successfully treated a patient with pemphigus vulgaris with IVIG, after he had developed osteonecrosis of his right femoral head while on azathioprine and corticosteroids. After reduction of oral corticosteroids, his disease flared dramatically. The addition of a high dose immunosuppressive regimen including azathioprine and dapsone failed to help. Thus high dose IVIG (2 mg/kg, 4 weeks interval) therapy was initiated and induced complete…

education.field_of_studymedicine.medical_specialtyintegumentary systembusiness.industryPemphigus vulgarisAutoantibodyConnective tissueAzathioprineDermatologyDapsonemedicine.diseaseDermatologyFemoral headmedicine.anatomical_structureDesmoglein 1Desmoglein 3medicineeducationbusinessmedicine.drugJournal der Deutschen Dermatologischen Gesellschaft
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Scalp psoriasis: report of efficient treatment with secukinumab

2018

Background: Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease affecting 2-3% of the population in the world. The scalp is the most common, and frequently the first site of disease involvement. Occasionally it may be the only localization of psoriasis. Objective: Treatment of scalp psoriasis is often unsatisfactory, due to limited available topical therapy and reduced efficacy of some systemic drugs. Biologic therapies are recommended for severe psoriasis, resistant to topical treatment, but evidence from randomized, controlled studies is lacking regarding effectiveness on scalp-localized lesions. The aim of this paper is to show our experience on the efficacy of secukinumab on scalp psoriasi…

education.field_of_studymedicine.medical_specialtyintegumentary systembusiness.industryPopulationDermatologyDiseaseControlled studiesmedicine.diseaseDermatologybody regions030207 dermatology & venereal diseases03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicine.anatomical_structure030220 oncology & carcinogenesisScalpPsoriasismedicineEffective treatmentSecukinumabeducationbusinessScalp psoriasisScalp psoriasisJournal of Dermatological Treatment
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Type II keratin cDNAs from the rainbow trout: implications for keratin evolution.

2002

From a teleost fish, the rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss, we have cloned and sequenced cDNAs encoding five different type II keratins. The corresponding protein spots, as separated by 2D-PAGE of trout cytoskeletal preparations, have been identified by peptide mass mapping using MALDI mass spectrometry. Three of the sequenced keratins are expressed in the epidermis (subtype IIe), and two in simple epithelia and mesenchymal cells (subtype IIs). The IIs keratins are both orthologs of human K8. This leaves unsequenced only the trace component S3 of the biochemically established trout keratin catalog. A phylogenetic tree has been constructed from a multiple alignment of the rod domains of the …

endocrine systemCancer Researchanimal structuresDNA ComplementaryMolecular Sequence Datamacromolecular substancesPeptide MappingType II keratinEvolution MolecularMesodermSpecies SpecificityAntibody SpecificityKeratinAnimalsHumansProtein IsoformsAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularMolecular BiologyZebrafishPhylogenyZebrafishchemistry.chemical_classificationGeneticsMammalsMultiple sequence alignmentintegumentary systembiologyPhylogenetic treeSequence Homology Amino AcidLampreyAntibodies MonoclonalLampreysEpithelial CellsCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationProtein Structure TertiaryTroutchemistryOrgan SpecificityOncorhynchus mykissSpectrometry Mass Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-IonizationSharksKeratinsRainbow troutEpidermisSequence AlignmentDevelopmental BiologyDifferentiation; research in biological diversity
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Electron microscopic immunogold cytochemistry reveals chromogranin A confined to secretory granules of porcine Merkel cells

1990

By ultrastructural immunohistochemistry using the immunogold technique, immunoreactive (ir) Chromogranin A (CGA) was found to be confined to the secretory vesicles of porcine Merkel cells. CGA was present predominantly in the periphery of the electron-dense core and on the clear halo. These findings indicate that CGA is a regular constituent of Merkel cell secretory granules but probably not exclusively responsible for their electron opacity.

endocrine systemPathologymedicine.medical_specialtySwineCytoplasmic GranulesCalcium-binding proteinChromograninsmedicineAnimalsSkinintegumentary systembiologyGeneral NeuroscienceChromogranin AImmunogold labellingImmunohistochemistryNeurosecretory SystemsMolecular biologySecretory VesicleMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structurebiology.proteinCytochemistryUltrastructureChromogranin AImmunohistochemistryGoldMerkel cellNeuroscience Letters
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Chromogranin A in the Mammalian Merkel Cell: Cellular and Subcellular Distribution

1989

Chromogranin-A (CGA), which accounts for more than half the soluble matrix protein in secretory granules of various neuroendocrine cells, has a wide spectrum of potential biological roles and is considered an important marker of the diffuse neuroendocrine system (DNES). Light and electron microscopic immunohistochemistry of mammalian skin revealed that Merkel cells are exclusively CGA-immunoreactive (ir) and that the immunoreaction is localized in the secretory granules. This finding supports the classification of the Merkel cell as a member of the DNES. The CGA immunoreactivity was restricted to Merkel cells of pigs and humans. In human embryonic skin, CGA was expressed in Merkel cells as …

endocrine systemPathologymedicine.medical_specialtySwineVasoactive intestinal peptideNerve Tissue ProteinsDermatologyHorseradish peroxidaseBiochemistryImmunoenzyme TechniquesmedicineChromograninsAnimalsHumansMolecular BiologyViral matrix proteinintegumentary systembiologyAge FactorsChromogranin ACell BiologyEmbryonic stem cellCell biologyCell CompartmentationMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structureEpidermal Cellsbiology.proteinUltrastructureImmunohistochemistryChromogranin AEpidermisMerkel cellJournal of Investigative Dermatology
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