251 resultados para infectious pancreatic necrosis
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Peritoneal dialysis is an extrarenal epuration modality which uses physiological properties of peritoneum as a dialysis membrane. Despite the improvement of peritoneal dialysis techniques in the last ten years, peritonitis remains one of the most redoubt complications. Peritonitis may sometimes lead to technical failures, which need catheter removing, but rarely lead to death. Our retrospective study at the dialysis center of CHUV has analyzed factors which can predict this kind of complication. It calculates peritonitis rate and median peritonitis free-survival for different groups of patients. It also describes causatives organisms and their sensitivity to antibiotics.
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Only few infectious mouse mammary tumor viruses (MMTV) have been characterized which induce a potent superantigen response in vivo. Here we describe the characterization of an MMTV which was isolated from milk of the highly mammary tumor-prone SHN mouse strain. Exposure of newborn mice to milk-borne MMTV (SHN) results in a very slow deletion of V beta 7, 8.1, 8.2 and 8.3 expressing peripheral T cells. Subcutaneous injection of adult mice with this virus induces a rapid and strong stimulation of all four affected V beta-subsets in vivo. Besides the strong T cell effect we observed an early proliferation and activation of the local B cell pool leading to the initial secretion of IgM followed by preferential secretion of IgG2a by day 6. Sequence comparison of the polymorphic C terminus with known open reading frames revealed high homology to the endogenous provirus Mtv-RCS. This is the first report of a virus having a complete overlap in V beta-specificity with a bacterial superantigen stimulating as many as 35% of the whole CD4+ T cell repertoire including V beta 8.2.
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High-density lipoproteins (HDLs) protect pancreatic beta cells against apoptosis. This property might relate to the increased risk to develop diabetes in patients with low HDL blood levels. The mechanisms by which HDLs protect beta cells are poorly characterized however. Here we used a transcriptomic approach to identify genes differentially modulated by HDLs in beta cells subjected to apoptotic stimuli. The transcript encoding 4E-BP1 was up-regulated by serum starvation and HDLs blocked this increase. 4E-BP1 inhibits cap-dependent translation in its non- or hypo-phosphorylated state but it looses this ability when hyper-phosphorylated. At the protein level, 4E-BP1 was also up-regulated in response to starvation and IL1beta and this was blunted by HDLs. While an ectopic increase of 4E-BP1 expression induced beta cell death, silencing 4E-BP1 increase with shRNAs inhibited the apoptotic-inducing capacities of starvation. HDLs can therefore protect beta cells by blocking 4E-BP1 protein expression but this is not the sole protective mechanism activated by HDLs. Indeed, HDLs blocked apoptosis induced by ER stress with no associated decrease in total 4E-BP1 induction. Although, HDLs favored the phosphorylation, and hence the inactivation of 4E-BP1 in these conditions, this appeared not to be required for HDL protection. Our results indicate that HDLs can protect beta cells through modulation of 4E-BP1 depending on the type of stress stimuli.
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Interleukin-10 (IL-10) has been reported to inhibit nitric oxide (NO) synthesis and microbicidal activity of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-stimulated macrophages (M phi) by preventing the secretion of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) which serves as an autocrine activating signal. We have examined the effects of recombinant IL-10 on the capacity of IFN-gamma together with exogenous TNF-alpha to induce NO synthesis by bone marrow-derived M phi. Under these conditions and in contrast to its reported deactivating potential, IL-10 strongly enhanced NO synthesis measured as nitrite (NO2-) release (half maximal stimulation at approximately 10 U/ml). IL-10 further increased NO2- production by M phi stimulated in the presence of optimal concentrations of prostaglandin E2, a positive modulator of M phi activation by IFN-gamma/TNF-alpha. Increased steady state levels of NO synthase mRNA were observed in 4-h IFN-gamma/TNF-alpha cultures and enhanced NO2(-)-release was evident 24 h but not 48 h after stimulation. These results suggest that the effects of IL-10 on M phi function are more complex than previously recognized.
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Les POCT (point of care tests) ont un grand potentiel d'utilisation en médecine infectieuse ambulatoire grâce à leur rapidité d'exécution, leur impact sur l'administration d'antibiotiques et sur le diagnostic de certaines maladies transmissibles. Certains tests sont utilisés depuis plusieurs années (détection de Streptococcus pyogenes lors d'angine, anticorps anti-VIH, antigène urinaire de S. pneumoniae, antigène de Plasmodium falciparum). De nouvelles indications concernent les infections respiratoires, les diarrhées infantiles (rotavirus, E. coli entérohémorragique) et les infections sexuellement transmissibles. Des POCT, basés sur la détection d'acides nucléiques, viennent d'être introduits (streptocoque du groupe B chez la femme enceinte avant l'accouchement et la détection du portage de staphylocoque doré résistant à la méticilline). POCT have a great potential in ambulatory infectious diseases diagnosis, due to their impact on antibiotic administration and on communicable diseases prevention. Some are in use for long (S. pyogenes antigen, HIV antibodies) or short time (S. pneumoniae antigen, P. falciparum). The additional major indications will be community-acquired lower respiratory tract infections, infectious diarrhoea in children (rotavirus, enterotoxigenic E. coli), and hopefully sexually transmitted infections. Easy to use, these tests based on antigen-antibody reaction allow a rapid diagnosis in less than one hour; the new generation of POCT relying on nucleic acid detection are just introduced in practice (detection of GBS in pregnant women, carriage of MRSA), and will be extended to many pathogens
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Sweet syndrome is a non infectious febrile disease with a neutrophilic infiltrate of dermis. Extracutaneous involvement can occur. We report two cases of Sweet syndrome with cutaneous and pulmonary involvement and give a short review of the literature of pulmonary involvement in Sweet syndrome.
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A proliferation-inducing ligand (APRIL) is a ligand of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family that stimulates tumor cell growth in vitro and in vivo. Expression of APRIL is highly upregulated in many tumors including colon and prostate carcinomas. Here we identify B cell maturation antigen (BCMA) and transmembrane activator and calcium modulator and cyclophilin ligand (CAML) interactor (TACI), two predicted members of the TNF receptor family, as receptors for APRIL. APRIL binds BCMA with higher affinity than TACI. A soluble form of BCMA, which inhibits the proliferative activity of APRIL in vitro, decreases tumor cell proliferation in nude mice. Growth of HT29 colon carcinoma cells is blocked when mice are treated once per week with the soluble receptor. These results suggest an important role for APRIL in tumorigenesis and point towards a novel anticancer strategy.
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PURPOSE: To compare clinical benefit response (CBR) and quality of life (QOL) in patients receiving gemcitabine (Gem) plus capecitabine (Cap) versus single-agent Gem for advanced/metastatic pancreatic cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients were randomly assigned to receive GemCap (oral Cap 650 mg/m(2) twice daily on days 1 through 14 plus Gem 1,000 mg/m(2) in a 30-minute infusion on days 1 and 8 every 3 weeks) or Gem (1,000 mg/m(2) in a 30-minute infusion weekly for 7 weeks, followed by a 1-week break, and then weekly for 3 weeks every 4 weeks) for 24 weeks or until progression. CBR criteria and QOL indicators were assessed over this period. CBR was defined as improvement from baseline for >or= 4 consecutive weeks in pain (pain intensity or analgesic consumption) and Karnofsky performance status, stability in one but improvement in the other, or stability in pain and performance status but improvement in weight. RESULTS: Of 319 patients, 19% treated with GemCap and 20% treated with Gem experienced a CBR, with a median duration of 9.5 and 6.5 weeks, respectively (P < .02); 54% of patients treated with GemCap and 60% treated with Gem had no CBR (remaining patients were not assessable). There was no treatment difference in QOL (n = 311). QOL indicators were improving under chemotherapy (P < .05). These changes differed by the time to failure, with a worsening 1 to 2 months before treatment failure (all P < .05). CONCLUSION: There is no indication of a difference in CBR or QOL between GemCap and Gem. Regardless of their initial condition, some patients experience an improvement in QOL on chemotherapy, followed by a worsening before treatment failure.
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RESUME DESTINE AUX NON SCIENTIFIQUESLe diabète est une maladie associée à un excès de glucose (sucre) dans le sang. Le taux de glucose sanguin augmente lorsque l'action d'une hormone, l'insuline, responsable du transport du glucose du sang vers les tissus de l'organisme diminue, ou lorsque les quantités d'insuline à disposition sont inadéquates.L'une des causes communes entre les deux grands types de diabète connus, le type 1 et le type 2, est la disparition des cellules beta du pancréas, spécialisées dans la sécrétion d'insuline, par mort cellulaire programmée aussi appelée apoptose. Alors que dans le diabète de type 1, la destruction des cellules beta est causée par notre propre système immunitaire, dans le diabète de type 2, la mort de ces cellules, est principalement causée par des concentrations élevées de graisses saturés ou de molécules impliquées dans l'inflammation que l'on rencontre en quantités augmentées chez les personnes obèses. Etant donné l'augmentation épidémique du nombre de personnes obèses de par le monde, on estime que le nombre de personnes diabétiques (dont une majorité sont des diabétiques de type 2), va passer de 171 million en l'an 2000, à 366 million en l'an 2030, expliquant la nécessité absolue de mettre au point de nouvelles stratégies thérapeutique pour combattre cette maladie.L'apoptose est un processus complexe dont la dérégulation induit de nombreuses affections allant du cancer jusqu'au diabète. L'activation de caspase 3, une protéine clé contrôlant la mort cellulaire, était connue pour systématiquement mener à la mort cellulaire programmée. Ces dernières années, notre laboratoire a décrit des mécanismes de survie qui sont activés par caspase 3 et qui expliquent sans doute pourquoi son activation ne mène pas systématiquement à la mort cellulaire. Lorsqu'elle est faiblement activée, caspase 3 clive une autre protéine appelée RasGAP en deux protéines plus courtes dont l'une, appelée le fragment Ν a la particularité de protéger les cellules contre l'apoptose.Durant ma thèse, j'ai été impliqué dans divers projets destinés à mieux comprendre comment le fragment Ν protégeait les cellules contre l'apoptose et à savoir s'il pouvait être utilisé comme outil thérapeutique dans les conditions de survenue d'un diabète expérimental. C'est dans ce but que nous avons créé une souris transgénique, appelée RIP-N, exprimant le fragment Ν spécifiquement dans les cellules beta. Comme attendu, les cellules beta de ces souris étaient plus résistantes à la mort induite par des composés connus pour induire le diabète, comme certaines molécules induisant l'inflammation ou les graisses saturées. Nous avons ensuite pu montrer que les souris RIP-N étaient plus résistantes à la survenue d'un diabète expérimental que ce soit par l'injection d'une drogue induisant l'apoptose des cellules beta, que ce soit dans un fond génétique caractérisé par une attaque spontanée des cellules beta par le système immunitaire ou dans le contexte d'un diabète de type 2 induit par l'obésité. Dans plusieurs des modèles animaux étudiés, nous avons pu montrer que le fragment Ν protégeait les cellules en activant une voie protectrice bien connue impliquant successivement les protéines Ras, PI3K et Akt ainsi qu'en bloquant la capacité d'Akt d'activer le facteur NFKB, connu pour être délétère pour la survie de la cellule beta. La capacité qu'a le fragment Ν d'activer Akt tout en prévenant l'activation de NFKB par Akt est par conséquent particulièrement intéressante dans l'intégration des signaux régulant la mort cellulaire dans le contexte de la survenue d'un diabète.La perspective d'utiliser le fragment Ν comme outil thérapeutique dépendra de notre capacité à activer les signaux protecteurs induits par le fragment Ν depuis l'extérieur de la cellule ou de dériver des peptides perméables aux cellules possédant les propriétés du fragment N.2 SUMMARYDiabetes mellitus is an illness associated with excess blood glucose. Blood glucose levels raise when the action of insulin decreases or when insulin is provided in inappropriate amounts. In type 1 diabetes (T1D) as well as in type 2 diabetes (T2D), the insulin secreting beta cells in the pancreas undergo controlled cell death also called apoptosis. Whereas in T1D, beta cells are killed by the immune system, in T2D, they are killed by several factors, among which are increased blood glucose levels, increased levels of harmful lipids or pro-inflammatory cytokines that are released by the dysfunctional fat tissue of obese people. Given the epidemic increase in the number of obese people throughout the world, the number of diabetic people (a majority of which are type 2 diabetes) is estimated to rise from 171 million affected people in the year 2000 to 366 million in 2030 explaining the absolute requirement for new therapies to fight the disease.Apoptosis is a very complex process whose deregulation leads to a wide range of diseases going from cancer to diabetes. Caspase 3 although known as a key molecule controlling apoptosis, has been shown to have various other functions. In the past few years, our laboratory has described a survival mechanism, that takes place at low caspase activity and that might explain how cells that activate their caspases for reasons other than apoptosis survive. In such conditions, caspase 3 cleaves another protein called RasGAP into two shorter proteins, one of which, called fragment N, protects cells from apoptosis.We decided to check whether fragment Ν could be used as a therapeutical tool in the context of diabetes inducing conditions. We thus derived a transgenic mouse line, called RIP-N, in which the expression of fragment Ν is restricted to beta cells. As expected, the beta cells of these mice were more resistant ex-vivo to cell death induced by diabetes inducing factors. We then showed that the RIP-N transgenic mice were resistant to streptozotocin induced diabetes, a mouse model mimicking type 1 diabetes, which correlated to fewer number of apoptotic beta cells in the pancreas of the transgenic mice compared to their controls. The RIP-N transgene also delayed overt diabetes development in the NOD background, a mouse model of autoimmune type 1 diabetes, and delayed the occurrence of obesity induced hyperglycemia in a mouse model of type 2-like diabetes. Interestingly, fragment Ν was mediating its protection by activating the protective Akt kinase, and by blocking the detrimental NFKB factor. Our future ability to activate the protective signals elicited by fragment Ν from the outside of cells or to derive cell permeable peptides bearing the protective properties of fragment Ν might condition our ability to use this protein as a therapeutic tool.3 RESUMELe diabète est une maladie associée à un excès de glucose plasmatique. La glycémie augmente lorsque l'action de l'insuline diminue ou lorsque les quantités d'insuline à disposition sont inadéquates. Dans le diabète de type 1 (D1) comme dans le diabète de type 2 (D2), les cellules beta du pancréas subissent la mort cellulaire programmée aussi appelée apoptose. Alors que dans le D1 les cellules beta sont tuées par le système immunitaire, dans le D2 elles sont tuées par divers facteurs parmi lesquels on trouve des concentrations élevées de glucose, d'acides gras saturés ou de cytokines pro-inflammatoires qui sont sécrétées en concentrations augmentées par le tissu adipeux dysfonctionnel des personnes obèses. Etant donné l'augmentation épidémique du nombre de personnes obèses de par le monde, on estime que le nombre de personnes diabétiques (dont une majorité sont des diabétiques de type 2), va passer de 171 million en l'an 2000, à 366 million en l'an 2030, justifiant la nécessité absolue de mettre au point de nouvelles stratégies thérapeutique pour combattre cette maladie.L'apoptose est un processus complexe dont la dérégulation induit de nombreuses affections allant du cancer jusqu'au diabète. Caspase 3, bien que connue comme étant une protéine clé contrôlant l'apoptose a bien d'autres fonctions démontrées. Ces dernières années, notre laboratoire a décrit un mécanisme de survie qui est activé lorsque caspase 3 est faiblement activée et qui explique probablement comment des cellules qui ont activé leurs caspases pour une autre raison que l'apoptose peuvent survivre. Dans ces conditions, caspase 3 clive une autre protéine appelée RasGAP en deux protéines plus courtes dont l'une, appelée le fragment Ν a la particularité de protéger les cellules contre l'apoptose.Nous avons donc décidé de vérifier si le fragment Ν pouvait être utilisé comme outil thérapeutique dans les conditions de survenue d'un diabète expérimental. Pour se faire, nous avons créé une souris transgénique, appelée RIP-N, exprimant le fragment Ν spécifiquement dans les cellules beta. Comme attendu, les cellules beta de ces souris étaient plus résistantes ex-vivo à la mort induite par des facteurs pro-diabétogènes. Nous avons ensuite pu montrer que les souris RIP-N étaient plus résistantes à la survenue d'un diabète induit par la streptozotocine, un drogue mimant la survenue d'un D1 et que ceci était corrélée à une diminution du nombre de cellules en apoptose dans le pancréas des souris transgéniques comparé à leurs contrôles. L'expression du transgène a aussi eu pour effet de retarder la survenue d'un diabète franc dans le fond génétique NOD, un modèle génétique de diabète de type 1 auto-immun, ainsi que de retarder la survenue d'une hyperglycémie dans un modèle murin de diabète de type 2 induit par l'obésité. Dans plusieurs des modèles animaux étudiés, nous avons pu montrer que le fragment Ν protégeait les cellules en activant la kinase protectrice Akt ainsi qu'en bloquant le facteur délétère NFKB. La perspective d'utiliser le fragment Ν comme outil thérapeutique dépendra de notre capacité à activer les signaux protecteurs induits par le fragment Ν depuis l'extérieur de la cellule ou de dériver des peptides perméables aux cellules possédant les propriétés du fragment
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Infectious diseases (ID) are a major cause of morbidity and mortality after SOT. Since May 2008, the STCS has registered 95% of all SOT recipients in Switzerland. The extensive data set includes pre- and post-transplant variables that are prospectively collected at transplantation, 6 months post-transplant, and yearly thereafter. All ID events are recorded using internationally validated defi nitions. We obtained data from 1101 patients (79 heart, 685 kidney, 29 kidney-pancreas, 212 liver, and 96 lung transplants). So far the median observation times were 0.8 (IQR 0.3-1.4; heart); 1.1 (0.6-1.8, kidney); 1.1 (0.6-1.9, kidney-pancreas); 1.0 (0.5-1.7, liver); and 0.9 years (0.5-1.5, lung). The highest rates of proven or probable ID events were seen in lung (76%), followed by liver (64%), heart (62%), kidney-pancreas (62%), kidney (58%). During the observation period, ID was the cause of death in 19 patients (1.7%). Rates of infections per person-years according to pathogen and type of transplantation are shown in Figure 1. The data indicate that virus infections are only second after bacteria whereas fungi occur at relatively low rates. This prospective and standardized long-term collection of all ID events will allow a comprehensive assessment of the burden of ID across all SOT types in Switzerland. Regular analysis will identify new trends, serve as a quality control and help design anti-infectious interventions aiming at increasing safety and improving overall transplantation outcome.
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Glucose exerts inverse effects upon the secretory function of islet alpha- and beta-cells, suppressing glucagon release and increasing insulin release. This diverse action may result from differences in glucose transport and metabolism between the two cell types. The present study compares glucose transport in rat alpha- and beta-cells. beta-Cells transcribed GLUT2 and, to a lesser extent, GLUT 1; alpha-cells contained GLUT1 but no GLUT2 mRNA. No other GLUT-like sequences were found among cDNAs from alpha- or beta-cells. Both cell types expressed 43-kDa GLUT1 protein which was enhanced by culture. The 62-kDa beta-cell GLUT2 protein was converted to a 58-kDa protein after trypsin treatment of the cells without detectable consequences upon glucose transport kinetics. In beta-cells, the rates of glucose transport were 10-fold higher than in alpha-cells. In both cell types, glucose uptake exceeded the rates of glucose utilization by a factor of 10 or more. Glycolytic flux, measured as D-[5(3)H]glucose utilization, was comparable in alpha- and beta-cells between 1 and 10 mmol/liter substrate. In conclusion, differences in glucose transporter gene expression between alpha- and beta-cells can be correlated with differences in glucose transport kinetics but not with different glucose utilization rates.
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The cytokine tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) induces Ca2+-dependent glutamate release from astrocytes via the downstream action of prostaglandin (PG) E2. By this process, astrocytes may participate in intercellular communication and neuromodulation. Acute inflammation in vitro, induced by adding reactive microglia to astrocyte cultures, enhances TNFalpha production and amplifies glutamate release, switching the pathway into a neurodamaging cascade (Bezzi, P., Domercq, M., Brambilla, L., Galli, R., Schols, D., De Clercq, E., Vescovi, A., Bagetta, G., Kollias, G., Meldolesi, J., and Volterra, A. (2001) Nat. Neurosci. 4, 702-710). Because glial inflammation is a component of Alzheimer disease (AD) and TNFalpha is overexpressed in AD brains, we investigated possible alterations of the cytokine-dependent pathway in PDAPP mice, a transgenic model of AD. Glutamate release was measured in acute hippocampal and cerebellar slices from mice at early (4-month-old) and late (12-month-old) disease stages in comparison with age-matched controls. Surprisingly, TNFalpha-evoked glutamate release, normal in 4-month-old PDAPP mice, was dramatically reduced in the hippocampus of 12-month-old animals. This defect correlated with the presence of numerous beta-amyloid deposits and hypertrophic astrocytes. In contrast, release was normal in cerebellum, a region devoid of beta-amyloid deposition and astrocytosis. The Ca2+-dependent process by which TNFalpha evokes glutamate release in acute slices is distinct from synaptic release and displays properties identical to those observed in cultured astrocytes, notably PG dependence. However, prostaglandin E2 induced normal glutamate release responses in 12-month-old PDAPP mice, suggesting that the pathology-associated defect involves the TNFalpha-dependent control of secretion rather than the secretory process itself. Reduced expression of DENN/MADD, a mediator of TNFalpha-PG coupling, might account for the defect. Alteration of this neuromodulatory astrocytic pathway is described here for the first time in relation to Alzheimer disease.
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HYPOTHESIS: Recent evidence indicates that tumor response rates after isolated limb perfusion (ILP) are improved when tumor necrosis factor (TNF) is added to the locoregional perfusion of high doses of chemotherapy. Other factors, related to the patient or the ILP procedure, may interfere with the specific role of TNF in the early hemodynamic response after ILP with TNF and high-dose chemotherapy. DESIGN: Case-control study. SETTING: Tertiary care university hospital. PATIENTS: Thirty-eight patients with a locoregionally advanced tumor of a limb treated by ILP with TNF and high-dose chemotherapy (TNF group) were compared with 31 similar patients treated by ILP with high-dose chemotherapy alone (non-TNF group). INTERVENTIONS: Swan-Ganz catheter hemodynamic recordings, patients' treatment data collection, and TNF and interleukin 6 plasma level measurements at regular intervals during the first 36 hours following ILP. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Hemodynamic profile and total fluid and catecholamine administration. RESULTS: In the TNF group, significant changes were observed (P<.006): the mean arterial pressure and the systemic vascular resistance index decreased, and the temperature, heart rate, and cardiac index increased. These hemodynamic alterations started when the ILP tourniquet was released (ie, when or shortly after the systemic TNF levels were the highest). The minimal mean arterial pressure, the minimal systemic vascular resistance index, the maximal cardiac index, the intensive care unit stay, and the interleukin 6 maximal systemic levels were significantly (P<.001 for all) correlated to the log(10) of the systemic TNF level. In the non-TNF group, only a brief decrease in the blood pressure following tourniquet release and an increase in the temperature and in the heart rate were statistically significant (P<.006). Despite significantly more fluid and catecholamine administration in the TNF group, the mean arterial pressure and the systemic vascular resistance index were significantly (P<.001) lower than in the non-TNF group. CONCLUSIONS: Release of the tourniquet induces a blood pressure decrease that lasts less than 1 hour in the absence of TNF and that is distinct from the septic shock-like hemodynamic profile following TNF administration. The systemic TNF levels are correlated to this hemodynamic response, which can be observed even at low TNF levels.