568 resultados para SINDROME CLINICO
Resumo:
Uric acid is a major inducer of inflammation in renal interstitium and may play a role in the progression of renal damage in hyperuricemic subjects with primary nephropathies, renal vascular disease, and essential hypertension. At the same time, UA also acts as a water-soluble scavenger of reactive oxygen species. We evaluated the cellular effects of UA on cultured HMC as a potential interstitial target for abnormally elevated levels in acute and chronic renal disease. Intracellular free Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) was monitored by microfluorometry of fura 2-loaded cells, while oxidation of intracellularly trapped non-fluorescent 2,7-dichlorofluorescein diacetate (DCFHDA, 20 uM) was employed to assess the generation of reactive oxygen species during 12-hr incubations with various concentrations of UA or monosodium urate. Fluorescent metabolites of DCFH-DA in the culture media of HMC were detected at 485/530 nm excitation/emission wavelengths, respectively. UA dose-dependently lowered resting [Ca2+]i (from 102±9 nM to 95±3, 57±2, 48±6 nM at 1-100 uM UA, respectively, p <0.05), leaving responses to vasoconstrictors such as angiotensin II unaffected. The effect was not due to Ca2+/H+ exchange upon acidification of the bathing media, as acetate, glutamate, lactate and other organic acids rather increased [Ca2+]i (to max. levels of 497±42 nM with 0.1 mM acetate). The decrease of [Ca2+]i was abolished by raising extracellular Ca2+ and not due to effects on Ca2+ channels or activation of Ca2+-ATPases, since unaffected by thapsigargin. The process rather appeared sensitive to removal of extracellular Na+ in combination with blockers of Na+/Ca2+ exchange, such as 2’,4’-dichlorobenzamil, pointing to a countertransport mechanism. UA dose-dependently prompted the extracellular release of oxidised DCFH (control 37±2 relative fluorescence units (RFU)/ml, 0.1uM 47±2, 1 uM 48±2, 10 uM 51±4, 0.1 mM 53±4; positive control, 10 uM sodium nitroprusside 92±5 RFU/ml, p<0.01). In summary, UA interferes with Ca2+ transport in cultured HMC, triggering oxidative stress which may initiate a sequence of events leading to interstitial injury and possibly amplifying renal vascular damage and/or the progression of chronic disease.
Resumo:
L’argomento della presente tesi di dottorato riguarda lo studio clinico del trapianto di cellule staminali emopoietiche aploidentiche nelle patologie oncoematologiche. Nel periodo di tempo compreso tra 1/12/2005 ed il 30/10/2007 sono stati arruolati 10 pazienti (6 LAM, 3 LAL, 1 LMC in crisi blastica mieloide) nell’ambito di uno studio clinico che prevedeva il trapianto di midollo osseo aploidentico per pazienti affetti da patologia oncoematologica in prima o successiva recidiva, per i quali non fosse disponibile un donatore di midollo osseo consanguineo o da banca. Lo schema di condizionamento al trapianto di midollo osseo utilizzato era il seguente: Fludarabina 150/m2, Busulfano orale 14mg/kg, Tiothepa 10mg/kg e Ciclofosfamide 160mg/kg. Per la profilassi della malattia da trapianto contro l’ospite è stata somministrata timoglobulina antilinfocitaria (ATG) al dosaggio complessivo di 12.5 mg/kg, short course metotrexate (+1, +3 e +11), cortisone e ciclosporina con tapering precoce al + 60. I pazienti hanno reinfuso una megadose di cellule CD34+ mediana pari a 12.8x106/kg. Tre pazienti non sono valutabili per l’attecchimento a causa di rigetto (1/3) o morte precoce (2/3). Sette pazienti sono valutabili per l’attecchimento; per questi pazienti il tempo mediano a 500 PMN/mmc e a 20 x 109/l piastrine è stato rispettivamente di 17 e 20 giorni. Quattro pazienti su 7 hanno svillupato una Graft versus Host Disease (GVHD) acuta di grado II-IV, mentre soltanto 1/7 ha sviluppato una GVHD cronica. Sette pazienti su 10 trapiantati hanno ottenuto una remissione completa successivamente al trapianto. Di questi, attualmente 2 pazienti sono vivi in remissione completa, mentre gli altri 5 sono ricaduti e successivamente deceduti. In conclusione, il trapianto aploidentico è una procedura fattibile ed efficace. Tale procedura è in grado di garantire un 20% di lungo sopravviventi in un setting di pazienti a prognosi estremamente infausta.
Resumo:
A new multi-energy CT for small animals is being developed at the Physics Department of the University of Bologna, Italy. The system makes use of a set of quasi-monochromatic X-ray beams, with energy tunable in a range from 26 KeV to 72 KeV. These beams are produced by Bragg diffraction on a Highly Oriented Pyrolytic Graphite crystal. With quasi-monochromatic sources it is possible to perform multi-energy investigation in a more effective way, as compared with conventional X-ray tubes. Multi-energy techniques allow extracting physical information from the materials, such as effective atomic number, mass-thickness, density, that can be used to distinguish and quantitatively characterize the irradiated tissues. The aim of the system is the investigation and the development of new pre-clinic methods for the early detection of the tumors in small animals. An innovative technique, the Triple-Energy Radiography with Contrast Medium (TER), has been successfully implemented on our system. TER consist in combining a set of three quasi-monochromatic images of an object, in order to obtain a corresponding set of three single-tissue images, which are the mass-thickness map of three reference materials. TER can be applied to the quantitative mass-thickness-map reconstruction of a contrast medium, because it is able to remove completely the signal due to other tissues (i.e. the structural background noise). The technique is very sensitive to the contrast medium and is insensitive to the superposition of different materials. The method is a good candidate to the early detection of the tumor angiogenesis in mice. In this work we describe the tomographic system, with a particular focus on the quasi-monochromatic source. Moreover the TER method is presented with some preliminary results about small animal imaging.