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Intensive chemotherapy in patients with chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML) in accelerated or blastic phase - a report from the Swedish CML Group

In attempting to restore the chronic phase (CP) of chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML), the Swedish CML group utilized an intensive chemotherapy protocol for 83 patients (aged 16-79 years) in accelerated (AP, n = 22) or blastic phase (BC, n = 61). Most patients received a combination of mitoxantrone (12 mg/m(2) /d) and etoposide (100 mg/m(2) /d) together with cytosine arabinoside (1 g/m(2) b.i.d)

A Report on the International Transglutaminase Autoantibody Workshop for Celiac Disease

OBJECTIVES: Measurement of transglutaminase autoantibodies (TGAA) is considered to be the most efficient single serologic test for celiac disease (CD) by the American Gastroenterological Association Institute. We hypothesized that a large international collaborative effort toward improving and standardizing TGAA measurement is both feasible and necessary. The primary aim of this workshop is to com

Schizophrenia and contact with health and social services: A Nordic multi-centre study

Background: In a Nordic multi-centre study investigating the life and care situation of persons with schizophrenia living in the community, factors explaining use of health and social services were examined. Method: Four hundred and eighteen individuals with schizophrenia from 10 sites were interviewed about their contact with different services (support functions within and outside the mental hea

A syndrome of joint laxity and impaired tendon integrity in lumican- and fibromodulin-deficient mice

Lumican and fibromodulin regulate the assembly of collagens into higher order fibrils in connective tissues. Here, we show that mice deficient in both of these proteoglycans manifest several clinical features of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. The Lum(-/-)Fmod(-/-) mice are smaller than their wild type littermates and display gait abnormality, joint laxity, and age-dependent osteoarthritis. Misaligned kne

Could benefits of epidural analgesia following oesophagectomy be measured by perceived perioperative patient workload?

Background: A controversy exists whether beneficial analgesic effects of epidural analgesia over intravenous analgesia influence the rate of post-operative complications and the length of hospital stay. There is some evidence that favours epidural analgesia following major surgery in high-risk patients. However, there is a controversy as to whether epidural analgesia reduces the intensive care res

Increased frequency of a new polymorphism in the cycle 2 (cdc2) gene in patients with Alzheimer's disease frontotemporal dementia

Recent studies show linkage between Alzheimer's disease (AD) and two loci on chromosome 10. The cell division cycle 2 (cdc2) gene is located close to one of the chromosome 10 markers, and is a candidate gene for AD since it is involved in the pathogenesis of AD. We sequenced coding exons and flanking intronic sequences and the promoter region on the cdc2 gene and found three new single nucleotide

Stretch of the vascular wall induces smooth muscle differentiation by promoting actin polymerization

Stretch of the vascular wall by the intraluminal blood pressure stimulates protein synthesis and contributes to the maintenance of the smooth muscle contractile phenotype. The expression of most smooth muscle specific genes has been shown to be regulated by serum response factor and stimulated by increased actin polymerization. Hence we hypothesized that stretch-induced differentiation is promoted

Age-related changes in the response of human articular cartilage to IL-1 alpha and transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) - Chondrocytes exhibit a diminished sensitivity to TGF-beta

Cartilage glycosaminoglycan (GAG) synthesis and composition, upon which its structural integrity depends, varies with age, is modified by anabolic and catabolic stimuli, and is regulated by UDP-glucuronate availability. However, how such stimuli, prototypically represented by transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) and IL-1alpha, modify GAG synthesis during aging of normal human articular car

Resonant shake-up satellites in photoemission at the Ga 3p photothreshold in GaN

Photoemission spectra recorded near the Ga 3p photothreshold from GaN have been found to contain satellites of the main Ga 3d emission line. The intensity of these satellites resonate at this threshold, and are associated with a 3d(8) state. The correlation energies and binding energies for the satellite multiplet have been measured for the satellite and related Auger transitions. The satellite mu

The role of electrostatic interactions in calmodulin-peptide complex formation

The complex between calmodulin and the calmodulin-binding portion of smMLCKp has been studied. Electrostatic interactions have been anticipated to be important in this system where a strongly negative protein binds a peptide with high positive charge. Electrostatic interactions were probed by varying the pH in the range from 4 to 11 and by charge deletions in CaM and smMLCKp. The change in net cha

On-chip microextraction for proteomic sample preparation of in-gel digests

Despite the high sensitivity and relatively high tolerance for contaminants of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) there is often a need to purify and concentrate the sample solution, especially after in-gel digestion of proteins separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-DE). A silicon microextraction chip (SMEC) for sample clean-up

Lysozyme in catanionic surfactant mixtures

We investigate the competition between the associations of oppositely charged protein-surfactant complexes and oppositely charged surfactant complexes. In all systems examined, the most favorable complexation is the one between the two oppositely charged surfactant ions, despite the strong binding known, for example, dodecyl sulfate, DS-, to lysozyme. Thus, the phase behavior of the catanionic sys

Use of in vivo C-13 nuclear magnetic resonance Spectroscopy to elucidate L-arabinose metabolism in Yeasts

Candida arabinofermentans PYCC 5603(T) and Pichia guilliermondii PYCC 3012 were shown to grow well on L-arabinose, albeit exhibiting distinct features that justify an in-depth comparative study of their respective pentose catabolism. Carbon-13 labeling experiments coupled with in vivo NMR were used to investigate L-arabinose metabolism in these yeasts, thereby complementing recently reported physi