988 resultados para pathophysiology


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Impingement of the lesser trochanter on the ischium or the posterior acetabular rim is not a frequent pathology, but has recently received increased recognition. We have seen 14 cases over a period of 14 years, but concentrate on eight hips showing complex deformities revealing similar characteristics. All eight hips had a residual Perthes or a Perthes-like disease with an elliptically deformed femoral head, but a congurent joint a short or absent femoral neck, a high riding greater trochanter, and a reduced vertical distance between the head and the lesser trochanter. Impingement took place between the lesser trochanter and the ischium or the posteroinferior acetabular border, but was hardly recognisable due to the predominant intraarticular impingement of the nonspherical femoral head and the extraarticular impingement of the greater trochanter. In three cases the impingement showed reproducible subluxation of the hip. While in our hips, excision was the preferred treatment for impingement due to an oversized lesser trochanter, distal advancement was used in the hips with the Perthes morphology; the surgical time was not longer. The overall clinical results in this group however were dominated by a substantial increase in the range of motion (ROM), dependent mainly on the achieved contour of the femoral head and the relative lengthening of the neck. Strength of active hip flexion was normal. Recurrent subluxation disappeared and no complications were recorded.

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Because proliferative vitreoretinopathy cannot be effectively treated, its prevention is indispensable for the success of surgery for retinal detachment. The elaboration of preventive and therapeutic strategies depends upon the identification of patients who are genetically predisposed to develop the disease, as well as upon an understanding of the biological process involved and the role of local factors, such as the status of the uveovascular barrier. Detachment of the retina or vitreous activates glia to release cytokines and ATP, which not only protect the neuroretina but also promote inflammation, retinal ischemia, cell proliferation, and tissue remodeling. The vitreal microenvironment favors cellular de-differentiation and proliferation of cells with nonspecific nutritional requirements. This may render a pharmacological inhibition of their growth difficult without causing damage to the pharmacologically vulnerable neuroretina. Moreover, reattachment of the retina relies upon the local induction of a controlled wound-healing response involving macrophages and proliferating glia. Hence, the functional outcome of proliferative vitreoretinopathy will be determined by the equilibrium established between protective and destructive repair mechanisms, which will be influenced by the location and the degree of damage to the photoreceptor cells that is induced by peri-retinal gliosis.

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Only limited data are available about the precise mechanism leading to tissue inflammation and damage in patients with hidradenits suppurativa (HS). The central pathogenetic event in HS is the occlusion of the upper parts of the hair follicle leading to a perifollicular lympho-histiocytic inflammation. In early lesions, neutrophilic abscess formation and influx of mainly macrophages, monocytes and dendritic cells predominate. In chronic disease, the infiltrate expand with increased frequencies of B cells and plasma cells. In the inflammatory infiltrates toll like receptor 2 (TLR2) was highly expressed by infiltrating macrophages and dendritic cells indicating that stimulation of inflammatory cells by TLR2 activating microbial products may be important trigger factors in the chronic inflammatory process. Furthermore, the pro inflammatory cytokines IL-12 and IL-23 are abundantly expressed by macrophages infiltrating papillary and reticular dermis of HS skin. Both of these cytokines are believed to be important mediators in autoimmune tissue destruction and its blocking by biologics has been shown to be effective in the treatment of psoriasis. Especially IL-23 has been shown to be involved in the induction of a T helper cell subset producing IL-17, therefore, named Th17, which is distinct from the classical Th1/Th2 subsets. In chronic HS lesions IL-17-producing T helper cells were found to infiltrate the dermis. An overexpression of various other cytokines like IL-1beta, CYCL9 (MIG), IL-10 , IL-11 and BLC has been described in HS lesion whereas IL-20 and IL-22 have been shown to be down regulated. Similar to psoriasis also in HS the antimicrobial peptides beta defensin 2 and psoriasin are highly upregulated. This may at least in part explain the clinical finding that HS patients suffer only rarely from skin infections. Taken together the inflammatory reaction leading to HS are only poorly understood, but they show many similarity with other inflammatory reactions as e.g. in psoriasis.

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The present article reviews the different types of ophthalmologic complications following administration of intraoral local anesthesia. Since the first report by Brain in 1936, case reports about that topic have been published regularly in the literature. However, clinical studies evaluating the incidence of ophthalmologic complications after intraoral local anesthesia are rarely available. Previous data point to a frequency ranging from 0.03% to 0.13%. The most frequently described ophthalmologic complications include diplopia (double vision), ptosis (drooping of upper eyelid), and mydriasis (dilatation of pupil). Disorders that rather affect periorbital structures than the eye directly include facial paralysis and periorbital blanching (angiospasm). Diverse pathophysiologic mechanisms and causes have been reported in the literature, with the inadvertent intravascular administration of the local anesthetic considered the primary reason. The agent as well as the vasopressor is transported retrogradely via arteries or veins to the orbit or to periorbital structures (such as the cavernous sinus) with subsequent anesthesia of nerves and paralysis of muscles distant from the oral cavity. In general the ophthalmologic complications begin shortly after administration of the local anesthesia, and disappear once the local anesthesia has subsided.

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Spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA1), due to the expansion of a polyglutamine repeat within the ubiquitously expressed Ataxin-1 protein, leads to the premature degeneration of Purkinje cells (PCs), the cause of which is poorly understood. Here, we identified the unique proteomic signature of Sca1(154Q/2Q) PCs at an early stage of disease, highlighting extensive alterations in proteins associated with synaptic functioning, maintenance, and transmission. Focusing on Homer-3, a PC-enriched scaffold protein regulating neuronal activity, revealed an early decline in its expression. Impaired climbing fiber-mediated synaptic transmission diminished mTORC1 signaling, paralleling Homer-3 reduction in Sca1(154Q/2Q) PCs. Ablating mTORC1 within PCs or pharmacological inhibition of mTORC1 identified Homer-3 as its downstream target. mTORC1 knockout in Sca1(154Q/2Q) PCs exacerbated and accelerated pathology. Reinstating Homer-3 expression in Sca1(154Q/2Q) PCs attenuated cellular dysfunctions and improved motor deficits. Our work reveals that impaired mTORC1-Homer-3 activity underlies PC susceptibility in SCA1 and presents a promising therapeutic target.

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The plasma anion gap is a frequently used parameter in the clinical diagnosis of a variety of conditions. The commonest application of the anion gap is to classify cases of metabolic acidosis into those that do and those that do not leave unmeasured anions in the plasma. While this algorithm is useful in streamlining the diagnostic process, it should not be used solely in this fashion. The anion gap measures the difference between the unmeasured anions and unmeasured cations and thus conveys much more information to the clinician than just quantifying anions of strong acids. In this chapter, the significance of the anion gap is emphasized and several examples are given to illustrate a more analytic approach to using the clinical anion gap; these include disorders of low anion gap, respiratory alkalosis and pyroglutamic acidosis.

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BACKGROUND The mechanisms of childhood and perinatal arterial ischemic stroke (AIS) are poorly understood. Multiple risk factors include cerebral arteriopathy, congenital cardiac disease, infection, sickle cell disease, and maternal-fetal conditions in neonates. For infections and parainfectious conditions being the most important a possible inflammatory pathophysiology has long been suspected. This pilot study aims to detect, whether there are any abnormalities of inflammatory markers associated with childhood and neonatal stroke. METHODS The concentration of 23 different metalloproteinases (MMPs), tissue inhibitors of MMPs (TIMPs), endothelial factors, vascular cell adhesion proteins, and cytokines in plasma were measured in 12 children with AIS, 7 healthy age matched controls and 6 full term neonates with perinatal AIS. RESULTS At the time of the acute event children with AIS had significantly elevated levels of MMP-9, TIMP4, IL-6, IL-8 and CRP compared to controls (p < 0.05). Except for lower IL-6 and CRP levels the pattern of children with a history of varizella-zoster virus (VZV) and other viral infections did not differ to the non-infectious group. Median levels of MMP-1, MMP-2, TIMP-1, TIMP-2, sE-selectin, sICAM-1, sVCAM-1, IL-8, IL-10, TNF-alpha, VEGF, Fetuin A were found to be higher in the neonatal group when compared with older children. CONCLUSION This pilot study supports the assumption of an inflammatory process and up-regulation of metalloproteinases and their inhibitors, and altered pattern of circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines, CRP and vWF levels in pediatric and neonatal AIS. It highlights the feasibility but also difficulties for similar larger future studies that should aim to clarify childhood stroke etiopathogenesis and consecutive further therapeutic options.

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Preeclampsia is a disease that affects 3–5% of all pregnancies. The cause is unknown and there is currently no treatment. The disease poses significant health risks to both the mother and the fetus. To date, research on the topic has not produced a convincing cause for the development of the hallmark symptoms of preeclampsia. The hypothesis of an agonistic autoimmune response to the AT1 receptor is presented. Immunoglobulin fractions from normotensive and preeclampsia patients were prepared for experimental tests. Model systems were tested in three categories to determine if AT 1 receptor specific activation and receptor-ligand interaction was caused by a suspected autoantibody. Activation was found in rat neonatal cardiornyocytes that caused an increased contraction rate. This activity was found in preeclampsia patients, absent in normotensive patients. The activation was antagonized by losartan, an AT1 receptor antagonist, and by epitope peptide competition of the receptor-ligand type interaction. This epitope was the 7 amino acid peptide fragment, AFHYESQ, a sequence present in the second extracellular loop of the AT1 receptor. The patterns of AT1 receptor activation were also found in a human trophoblast cell line, HTR8, with an effect on Pai-1 secretion, a factor that plays a role in preventing hypercoagulation. In human mesangial cells, the AT1 receptor autoantibody present in the immunoglobulin fraction from preeclampsia patients was found to stimulate the secretion of Pai-1, and IL-6, a factor that plays a role in the activation of an inflammatory response. This activity was found in samples from preeclampsia patients, but absent in normotensive patients. Tests including losartan, AFHYESQ, and a non-competitive peptide demonstrated that the secretion of Pai-1 and IL-6 met the criteria for AT1 receptor activation by the suspected agonistic autoantibody. These three model systems address relevant pathophysiology for preeclampsia patients, including increased cardiac output, abnormal placentation, and renal damage. The AT1 receptor agonistic autoantibody is potentially a key player in the development of the pathology and symptoms of preeclampsia. ^

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Non-Hodgkin's Lymphomas (NHL) are a group (>30) of important human lymphoid cancers that unlike other tumors today, are showing a marked increase in incidence. The lack of insight to the pathogenesis of B-cell NHL poses a significant problem in the early detection and effective treatment of these malignancies. This study shows that large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL) cells, the most common type of B-cell NHL (account for more than 30% of cases), have developed a novel mechanism for autonomous neoplastic B cell growth. We have identified that the key transcription factor NF-κB, is constitutively activated in LBCL cell lines and primary biopsy-derived LBCL cells, suggesting that they are autonomously activated, and do not require accessory T-cell signaling for cell growth and survival. Further studies have indicated that LBCL cells ectopically express an important T-cell associated co-mitogenic factor, CD154 (CD40 ligand), that is able to internally activate the CD401NF-κB pathway, through constitutive binding to its cognate receptor, CD40, on the lymphoma cell surface. CD40 activation triggers the formation of a “Signalosome” comprising virtually the entire canonical CD40/NF-κB signaling pathway that is anchored by CD40 in plasma membrane lipid rafts. The CD40 Signalosome is vulnerable to interdiction by antibody against CD40 that disrupts the Signalosome and induces cell death in the malignant cells. In addition to constitutive NF-κB activation, we have found that the nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) transcription factor is also constitutively activated in LBCL cells. We have demonstrated that the constitutively active NFATc1 and c-rel members of the NFAT and NF-κB families of transcription factors, respectively, interact with each other, bind to the CD154 promoter, and synergistically activate CD154 gene transcription. Down-regulation of NFATc1 and c-rel with small interfering RNA inhibits CD154 gene transcription and lymphoma cell growth. Our findings suggest that continuous CD40 activation not only provides dysregulated proliferative stimuli for lymphoma cell growth and extended tumor cell survival, but also allows continuous regeneration of the CD40 ligand in the lymphoma cell and thereby recharges the system through a positive feedback mechanism. Targeting the CD40/NF-κB signaling pathway could provide potential therapeutic modalities for LBCL cells in the future. ^