Search results for "Reaction"

showing 10 items of 6134 documents

Null alleles of human complement C4. Evidence for pseudogenes at the C4A locus and for gene conversion at the C4B locus

1990

The two genes for the C4A and C4B isotypes of the fourth component of human complement are located in the MHC class III region. Previous studies have demonstrated the unusual expression of C4 genes in the form of aberrant or duplicated haplotypes. Null alleles of C4A or C4B (AQ0 or BQ0) have been defined by the absence of gene products and occur at frequencies of 0.1-0.3. However, only some C4 null alleles are due to gene deletions, the remainder were thought to be nonexpressed genes. We have analyzed the C4 gene structure of 26 individuals lacking either C4A or C4B protein. The DNA of individuals with apparently nonexpressed C4 genes was tested for the presence of C4A- and C4B-specific seq…

PseudogeneImmunologyMolecular Sequence DataGene ConversionLocus (genetics)chemical and pharmacologic phenomenaPolymerase Chain ReactionRestriction fragmentComplement C4bImmunology and AllergyHumansGene conversionAlleleGeneAllelesGeneticsbiologyBase SequenceHomozygoteC4AComplement C4aComplement C4ArticlesDNANull alleleMolecular biologyGenesbiology.proteinDNA ProbesOligonucleotide ProbesPseudogenesThe Journal of Experimental Medicine
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Do Transposed-Letter Similarity Effects Occur at a Syllable Level?

2006

One key issue for any computational model of visual word recognition is the choice of an input coding scheme for assigning letter position. Recent research has shown that transposed-letter similarity effects occur even when the transposed letters are not adjacent (caniso- casino; Perea & Lupker, 2004 , JML). In the present study we conducted two single-presentation lexical decision experiments to examine whether transposed-letter effects occur at a syllable level. We tested two types of nonwords: (1) nonwords created by transposing two internal CV syllables (PRIVEMARA; the base word is primavera, the Spanish for spring) and (2) nonwords created by transposing two adjacent bigrams that …

PsycholinguisticsBigramSpeech recognitionDecision MakingOrthographic projectionExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyPhoneticsGeneral MedicinePsycholinguisticsLinguisticsSemanticsDiscrimination LearningReadingArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)PhoneticsWord recognitionReaction TimeLexical decision taskHumansAttentionDiscrimination learningComprehensionGeneral PsychologyMathematicsCoding (social sciences)Experimental Psychology
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Psychomotor slowness is associated with self-reported sleep duration among the general population

2010

Short and long self‐reported sleep durations have been found to be associated with several seemingly disparate health risks and impaired functional abilities, including cognitive functioning. The role of long sleep is especially poorly understood in this context. Psychomotor slowness, shown to have analogous associations with cognitive performance and health risks as self‐reported long sleep duration, has not been studied together with sleep duration in epidemiological settings. We hypothesized that self‐reported habitual sleep duration, especially long sleep, is associated with slow psychomotor reaction time, and that this association is independent of vigilance‐related factors. The hypoth…

Psychomotor learningeducation.field_of_studyCognitive NeurosciencePopulationPoison controlContext (language use)General MedicineSleep in non-human animalsDevelopmental psychologyBehavioral NeuroscienceCognitive epidemiologyEffects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performanceeducationPsychologyPsychomotor reaction timeClinical psychologyJournal of Sleep Research
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Manipulating feedback on schizophrenia: Evidence from a Posner task.

2021

Abstract Individuals with schizophrenia show difficulties in achieving vital objectives. Abnormal behavioral and emotional responses to environmental feedback may be some of the psychological mechanisms underlying this lack of goal attainment in schizophrenia. The present study aims to assess how different types of feedback may affect performance in a computerized affective Posner task (non-monetary vs. monetary rewards; contingent vs. non-contingent feedback). The sample was composed of 32 patients with schizophrenia and 35 controls. Reaction times and error rates were the behavioral measurements. The emotional experience was assessed through self-reported affective scales. The results ind…

PsychosisSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)media_common.quotation_subjectFrustrationAffect (psychology)medicine.diseaseTask (project management)ArousalFeedbackPsychiatry and Mental healthFeelingRewardmedicineReaction TimeSchizophreniaHumansIn patientAttentionPsychologyBiological PsychiatryCognitive psychologymedia_commonJournal of psychiatric research
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Political determinants of the fiscal sustainability: evidence from six individual developed countries.

2007

This paper aims at assessing the fiscal sustainability and its political determinants in six countries, namely France, Germany, Greece, Italy, the United Kingdom, the United States. First, using the recent sustainability approach of Bohn (1998) based on fiscal reaction function, econometric findings using OLS reveal a positive response of the primary surplus to changes in debt in several countries. In other words, fiscal policy is sustainable in France, Italy, the United Kingdom, the United States, but not in Germany and Greece. Second, by introducing political dummy variables, we test the electoral budget cycle, the partisan cycle and the government coalition theories. We find the presence…

Public debt sustainability[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and financesPolitical budget cyclestime series.time seriesFiscal reaction function[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance
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Systemic PaO2 oscillations cause mild brain injury in a pig model

2016

OBJECTIVE: Systemic PaO2 oscillations occur during cyclic recruitment and derecruitment of atelectasis in acute respiratory failure and might harm brain tissue integrity. DESIGN: Controlled animal study. SETTING: University research laboratory. SUBJECTS: Adult anesthetized pigs. INTERVENTIONS: Pigs were randomized to a control group (anesthesia and extracorporeal circulation for 20 hr with constant PaO2, n = 10) or an oscillation group (anesthesia and extracorporeal circulation for 20 hr with artificial PaO2 oscillations [3 cycles min⁻¹], n = 10). Five additional animals served as native group (n = 5). MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Outcome following exposure to artificial PaO2 oscillations…

Pulmonary Atelectasismedicine.medical_specialtySwinemedicine.medical_treatment10208 Institute of NeuropathologyHippocampusInflammation610 Medicine & healthHippocampal formationReal-Time Polymerase Chain ReactionCritical Care and Intensive Care Medicinegamma-Aminobutyric acidRNA ComplementaryRandom Allocation03 medical and health sciencesExtracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation0302 clinical medicine030202 anesthesiologyNeurotransmitter receptorInternal medicinemedicineExtracorporeal membrane oxygenationAnimalsReceptoralpha-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic Acidgamma-Aminobutyric AcidRespiratory Distress Syndromebusiness.industryExtracorporeal circulationRespiration Artificialrespiratory tract diseasesEndocrinologyBrain Injuries570 Life sciences; biologyBlood Gas AnalysisInflammation Mediatorsmedicine.symptombusiness2706 Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedicine.drug
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Soot-exposed mononuclear cells increase inflammatory cytokine mRNA expression and protein secretion in cocultured bronchial epithelial cells.

2000

<i>Background:</i> Soot particles are air pollutants capable of inducing airway and lung parenchymal injury. Mononuclear and bronchial epithelial cells are central to the maintenance of homeostasis and inflammation in the airways. <i>Objectives:</i> The aim of this study was to evaluate the contribution of mononuclear cells to the release of inflammatory mediators by bronchial epithelial cells. <i>Methods:</i> To model the in vivo situation, an in vitro system of cocultured blood monocytes and BEAS-2B cells was established in a transwell system. Blood monocytes were exposed to soot particles (FR 101) at concentrations of up to 100 μg/10<sup>6</su…

Pulmonary and Respiratory MedicineAdultMaleInflammationBronchiEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayBiologycomplex mixturesPeripheral blood mononuclear cellSensitivity and SpecificityMonocytesAir pollutantsParenchymamedicineHumansRNA MessengerSoot particlesCells CulturedAir PollutantsLungInterleukin-6Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionInterleukin-8Epithelial CellsBlood Proteinsrespiratory systemCarbonCoculture Techniquesrespiratory tract diseasesCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureSecretory proteinCytokinesCytokine mrnaFemalemedicine.symptomInflammation MediatorsRespiration; international review of thoracic diseases
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Production of reactive oxygen intermediates by human macrophages exposed to soot particles and asbestos fibers and increase in NF-kappa B p50/p105 mR…

1999

Alveolar macrophages (AM) play a decisive role in the immunologic defense system of the lung and in inflammatory pulmonary pathomechanisms. AM and blood monocytes (BM) were exposed to chrysotile B, soot FR 101, and Printex 90 (P 90). We evaluated the reactive oxygen intermediate (ROI) release of AM and BM after particle exposure. ROI release was measured by chemiluminescence. Thirty-minute exposure caused a significant (up to 2.5-fold) increase in ROI release of AM (100 micrograms/10(6) cells) compared with control experiments (p0.01). Identical exposure conditions for BM resulted in a similar reaction pattern (maximum 2.2-fold increase in ROI release; p0.05). After a 90-min particle exposu…

Pulmonary and Respiratory MedicineAdultMaleP50Asbestos Serpentinemedicine.medical_treatmentMonocytesProinflammatory cytokineSuperoxide dismutaseGene expressionMacrophages AlveolarmedicineHumansRNA MessengerReceptorCells CulturedAgedLungbiologyDose-Response Relationship DrugChemistryReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionNF-kappa BMiddle AgedNFKB1Molecular biologyCarbonCytokinemedicine.anatomical_structureGene Expression RegulationImmunologyLuminescent Measurementsbiology.proteinFemaleReactive Oxygen SpeciesBronchoalveolar Lavage FluidLung
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Characterization of the interstitial lung and peripheral blood T cell receptor repertoire in cigarette smokers.

2005

T lymphocytes modulate the pulmonary inflammatory response. The aim of this study was to evaluate the clonality within the interstitial lung and peripheral blood T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire in smokers. Interstitial T lymphocytes were isolated from surplus tissue of 16 patients (63 +/- 9 [+/- SD] yr old, 11 male) undergoing surgery due to lung cancer (n = 15) or emphysema. TCR clonality was assessed by PCR amplification followed by spectratyping. Nearly all TCR of interstitial lung lymphocytes showed oligoclonal bands (CD4(+) subset 13/16 patients, 81%; CD8(+) 100%) indicating a specific differentiation. Peripheral blood T lymphocytes (PBL) TCR (especially CD4(+)) had less oligoclonal b…

Pulmonary and Respiratory MedicineCD4-Positive T-LymphocytesMalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyLung NeoplasmsCellular differentiationClinical BiochemistryReceptors Antigen T-Cellchemical and pharmacologic phenomenaBiologyCD8-Positive T-LymphocytesPolymerase Chain ReactionmedicineHumansIntraindividual comparisonCell LineageLung cancerMolecular BiologyLungAgedLungT-cell receptorSmokinghemic and immune systemsCell DifferentiationCell BiologyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePeripheral bloodT-Cell Receptor Repertoiremedicine.anatomical_structureBloodPulmonary EmphysemaFemaleCD8American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology
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Drug-induced and iatrogenic infiltrative lung disease.

2004

At present more than 350 drugs are known to cause injury of the lung parenchyma,upper and lower airways, pulmonary circulation, pleura, mediastinum, lymph nodes,and neuromuscular system. Infiltrative lung disease (ILD) is the most common pattern of drug-induced injury. This article, which is clinically oriented rather than drug oriented, reviews the patterns of ILD produced by therapeutic drugs and radiation therapy.

Pulmonary and Respiratory MedicineDrugLung Diseasesmedicine.medical_specialtyDrug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactionsmedia_common.quotation_subjectIatrogenic DiseaseMEDLINEAmiodaronePulmonary EdemaSarcoidosis PulmonaryIatrogenic diseaseMedicineHumansIntensive care medicinemedia_commonbusiness.industryPneumoniamedicine.diseaseBreast radiationDermatologyPulmonary AlveoliMethotrexateLung diseaseSarcoidosisbusinessAnti-Arrhythmia AgentsClinics in chest medicine
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