Search results for "shock"

showing 10 items of 1248 documents

Insight into the primary mode of action of TiO2 nanoparticles on Escherichia coli in the dark.

2015

16 pages; International audience; Large-scale production and incorporation of titanium dioxide nanoparticles (NP-TiO2 ) in consumer products leads to their potential release into the environment and raises the question of their toxicity. The bactericidal mechanism of NP-TiO2 under UV light is known to involve oxidative stress due to the generation of reactive oxygen species. In the dark, several studies revealed that NP-TiO2 can exert toxicological effects. However, the mode of action of these nanoparticles is still controversial. In the present study, we used a combination of fluorescent probes to show that NP-TiO2 causes Escherichia coli membrane depolarization and loss of integrity, lead…

Osmotic stressOsmotic shock[ SDV.TOX.ECO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Toxicology/Ecotoxicology010501 environmental sciencesBiology[ SDV.MP.BAC ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Bacteriologymedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencesBiochemistryMicrobiologyPermeability03 medical and health sciencesAdenosine TriphosphateOsmotic PressuremedicineExtracellularEscherichia coliMagnesiumMode of actionTranscriptomicsMolecular Biology030304 developmental biology0105 earth and related environmental scienceschemistry.chemical_classificationTitanium0303 health sciencesReactive oxygen speciesMicrobial ViabilityToxicityEscherichia coli ProteinsSodiumDepolarizationTitanium dioxide nanoparticlesMetabolism[SDV.MP.BAC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/BacteriologyBiochemistrychemistryBiophysicsPotassiumNanoparticles[SDV.TOX.ECO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Toxicology/EcotoxicologyTranscriptomeOxidative stressIntracellular
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Finding the right balance in oxygen delivery after resuscitation

2022

OxygenOxygen ConsumptionAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineResuscitationOxygen Inhalation TherapyHumansShock HemorrhagicMinerva Anestesiologica
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Do historical sediments of pulp and paper industry contribute to the exposure of fish caged in receiving waters?

2011

Field experiments were conducted in early summer 2004 by caging brown trout (Salmo trutta m. lacustris) in Southern Lake Saimaa (SE Finland) for 10 days. Cages were positioned into two depths at four distances (5 to 17 km) from the pulp and paper mill; one set with direct contact to the sediment and other locating at the three meters' depth from the water surface. Resin acids were measured from sediment, water, and fish bile. Possible toxicities were investigated by measuring liver EROD-activity, HSP70-protein, and gene expression profiles by microarray. The concentration of resin acids in the sediment showed clear gradient along the distance from the mill, and their concentrations in water…

PaperGeologic SedimentsTroutIndustrial WasteFresh WaterManagement Monitoring Policy and LawBrown troutCytochrome P-450 CYP1A1AnimalsBileHSP70 Heat-Shock ProteinsSalmoWater pollutionEffluentFinlandbiologybusiness.industryPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthSedimentAquatic animalPaper millGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationTroutGene Expression RegulationEnvironmental chemistrybusinessAcidsBiomarkersResins PlantWater Pollutants ChemicalEnvironmental MonitoringJournal of environmental monitoring : JEM
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Heat shock protein Hsp70 expression and DNA damage in Baikalian sponges exposed to model pollutants and wastewater from Baikalsk Pulp and Paper Plant

2002

Abstract Lake Baikal, a unique habitat for a great number of endemic species, is the largest freshwater reservoir in the world which is still largely unaffected by anthropogenic pollution, except for some shore regions with industrial activity. The expressions of a biomarker of exposure (heat shock protein Hsp70) and a biomarker of effect (DNA single-strand breaks) were measured for the first time in endemic Baikalian sponge species (Baikalospongia intermedia, Lubomirskia fusifera, and Lubomirskia abietina). Tissue cubes of B. intermedia and dissociated cells of L. fusifera and L. abietina reacted to temperature stress (10–16 °C above ambient temperature) with a time-dependent increase in e…

PaperHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisIndustrial WasteFresh WaterAquatic Sciencechemistry.chemical_compoundAnimalsHSP70 Heat-Shock ProteinsWater aerationWater pollutionPollutantbiologyEcologybusiness.industryPaper millbiology.organism_classificationPoriferaPentachlorophenolSiberiaZincSpongeLeadchemistryWastewaterEnvironmental chemistryAerationbusinessWater Pollutants ChemicalDNA DamageAquatic Toxicology
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Htid-1, the human homolog of the Drosophila melanogaster l(2)tid tumor suppressor, defines a novel physiological role of APC.

2007

Htid-1, the human counterpart of the Drosophila tumor suppressor gene lethal(2)tumorous imaginal discs (l(2)tid) encodes three splice forms translated into three cytosolic - Tid50, Tid48 and Tid46 - and three mitochondrial - Tid43, Tid40 and Tid38 - proteins. Here we provide evidence for the association of the endogenous Tid50/Tid48 proteins with the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) tumor suppressor in normal colon epithelium, colorectal cancer cells and mouse NIH3T3 fibroblasts. Using the Glutathione S-transferase binding assay we show that the N-terminal region including the Armadillo domain (ARM) of APC is sufficient to bind the Tid molecules. Using immunoprecipitation and confocal micro…

Patched ReceptorsBeta-cateninTumor suppressor geneAdenomatous polyposis coliAdenomatous Polyposis Coli ProteinReceptors Cell SurfacePlasma protein bindingLigandsMitochondrial ProteinsMiceCytosolCell Line TumorAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsGuanine Nucleotide Exchange FactorsHumansIntestinal MucosaActinHeat-Shock Proteinsbeta CateninPatched ReceptorsbiologySequence Homology Amino AcidGene Expression ProfilingTumor Suppressor ProteinsWnt signaling pathwayGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCell BiologyHSP40 Heat-Shock ProteinsActin cytoskeletonMolecular biologyCell biologyMitochondriaDrosophila melanogasterras GTPase-Activating ProteinsMultiprotein Complexesbiology.proteinNIH 3T3 CellsRho Guanine Nucleotide Exchange FactorsProtein BindingCellular signalling
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Microsatellite Instability in Colorectal Cancer: Time to Stop Hiding!

2011

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second cause of cancer-related death worldwide. Surgery constitutes the primary therapy for these tumors, together with chemotherapy that is usually recommended in patients with metastatic primary CRC. Although molecularly distinct entities arising from different physiopathogenic mechanisms - microsatellite (MSI) and chromosomal instability (also called microsatellite stable, MSS) - have been characterized in CRC, there is still no specific therapeutic approach that takes into account disease’s molecular heterogeneity [1]. MSI is observed in 1015% of sporadic CRCs. MSI CRCs displayed particular morphologic features, with greater predilection for the right colo…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyChemotherapyColorectal cancermedicine.medical_treatmentMicrosatellite instabilityDiseaseBiologymedicine.diseasedigestive system diseasesTherapeutic approachOncologyChromosome instabilityCancer researchmedicineMicrosatelliteAnimalsHumansIn patientMicrosatellite InstabilityHSP110 Heat-Shock ProteinsColorectal NeoplasmsneoplasmsEditorial CommentsOncotarget
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Morphology of cardiac muscle in septic shock. Observations with a porcine septic shock model.

1995

The morphology of cardiac muscle was investigated in a porcine model of septic shock, created by intermitted application of Escherichia coli-endotoxin. The earliest lesions, found after 18 h of septic shock, were endothelial cell swelling, marked leucostasis and slight ischaemic alterations of the muscle fibres. At the end point of the experiments, after 48 h, some fibrin thrombi were found associated with more pronounced ischaemic alterations of cardiac muscle cells and some necrotic fibres. Comparing these findings with the severe endothelial and muscle fibre lesions found in skeletal muscle, the endothelial cells of the heart microvasculature, are clearly more resistant to the attack of …

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyHeart diseaseSwineFibrinPathology and Forensic MedicinemedicineAnimalsMuscle fibreCardiac OutputMuscle SkeletalMolecular BiologyCarbon MonoxidebiologySeptic shockMyocardiumCardiac muscleSkeletal muscleCell BiologyGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseShock SepticEndothelial stem cellDisease Models Animalmedicine.anatomical_structureShock (circulatory)biology.proteinmedicine.symptomVirchows Archiv : an international journal of pathology
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Changes in immunohistochemical levels and subcellular localization after therapy and correlation and colocalization with CD68 suggest a pathogenetic …

2011

In an earlier work, the role of heat shock protein (Hsp60) in the pathogenesis of ulcerative colitis (UC) was suggested by its significant increase in the pathological mucosa parallel with an increase in inflammatory cells. More data in this direction are reported in this work. We analyzed by immunohistochemistry biopsies of colon tissue from 2 groups of patients with UC and treated with either 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) alone or in combination with a probiotic. We looked for inflammatory markers and Hsp60. Both the treatments were effective in reducing symptoms but the group treated with both 5-ASA and probiotics showed better clinical results. Amelioration of symptoms was associated wi…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyHistologyColonBiopsyAntigens Differentiation MyelomonocyticInflammationBiomarkers PharmacologicalPathology and Forensic MedicinePathogenesisAntigens CDHeat shock proteinmedicineHumansColitisMesalamineInflammationMucous Membranebusiness.industryCD68ProbioticsAnti-Inflammatory Agents Non-SteroidalColocalizationChaperonin 60medicine.diseaseUlcerative colitisImmunohistochemistryMedical Laboratory TechnologyProtein TransportGene Expression RegulationDisease ProgressionImmunohistochemistryColitis Ulcerativemedicine.symptombusinessFollow-Up StudiesApplied immunohistochemistrymolecular morphology : AIMM
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Assessment of the fundamental flexural guided wave in cortical bone by an ultrasonic axial-transmission array transducer

2013

Abstract The fundamental flexural guided wave (FFGW), as modeled, for example, by the A0 Lamb mode, is a clinically useful indicator of cortical bone thickness. In the work described in this article, we tested so-called multiridge-based analysis, based on the crazy climber algorithm and short-time Fourier transform, for assessment of the FFGW component recorded by a clinical array transducer featuring a limited number of elements. Methods included numerical finite-element simulations and experiments in bone phantoms and human radius specimens ( n  = 41). The proposed approach enabled extraction of the FFGW component and determination of its group velocity. This group velocity was in good ag…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyMaterials scienceLightAcoustics and UltrasonicsAcousticsTransducersBiophysicsModels BiologicalSensitivity and SpecificityHigh-Energy Shock Wavessymbols.namesakeFlexural strengthmedicineHumansScattering RadiationComputer SimulationRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingSensitivity (control systems)UltrasonographyGuided wave testingRadiological and Ultrasound Technologyta114Reproducibility of ResultsRadiusRadiusFourier transformmedicine.anatomical_structuresymbolsGroup velocityCortical boneUltrasonic sensorAlgorithmsUltrasound in Medicine and Biology
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Changes in Gastric Mucosal Permeability Induced by Haemorrhagic Shock in the Anaesthetized Rat: - Modulation by Acid

1998

Abstract Gastric mucosal damage induced by haemorrhagic shock in the anaesthetized rat has been evaluated by studying changes in capillary-to-lumen clearance of fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labelled dextran. Haemorrhagic shock (20 min ischaemia + 20 min reperfusion) induced a significant increase in blood-to-lumen permeability to FITC-dextran of different molecular weight (10 000, 40 000 and 70 000) without modifying the macroscopic integrity of the gastric mucosa. The increase in vascular permeability was dependent on the time of administration of the tracer and was correlated with an elevation of the protein content of the gastric lumen. Intravenous administration of the secretagogue…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyPharmaceutical ScienceVascular permeabilityShock HemorrhagicPharmacologyCapillary Permeabilitychemistry.chemical_compoundGastric mucosaAnimalsMedicineRats WistarFluorescein isothiocyanatePharmacologybusiness.industryDextransHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationRatsPentagastrinDextranmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryGastric MucosaPermeability (electromagnetism)Shock (circulatory)Secretagoguemedicine.symptombusinessFluorescein-5-isothiocyanatemedicine.drugJournal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology
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