2 resultados para CUMS
Resumo:
O Refluxo Vesico – Ureteral (RVU) é uma patologia frequente na idade pediátrica. A detecção precoce de RVU é fundamental na orientação terapêutica, de modo a permitir um crescimento renal adequado e prevenir infecções urinárias recorrentes. A investigação radiológica de RVU baseia-se na ecografia e cistouretrografia miccional seriada (CUMS), sendo este último procedimento, o método de eleição, efectuado sob controlo fluoroscópico. Este trabalho tem como objectivo dar a conhecer o papel CUMS na avaliação de RVU e abordar os parâmetros técnicos de aquisição, posicionamento e critérios de qualidade de imagem.
Changes in tau phosphorylation levels in the hippocampus and frontal cortex following chronic stress
Resumo:
Studies have indicated that early-life or early-onset depression is associated with a 2- to 4-fold increased risk of developing Alzheimers disease (AD). In AD, aggregation of an abnormally phosphorylated form of the tau protein may be a key pathological event. Tau is known to play a major role in promoting microtubule assembly and stabilization, and in maintaining the normal morphology of neurons. Several studies have reported that stress may induce tau phosphorylation. The main aim of the present study was to investigate possible alterations in the tau protein in the hippocampus and frontal cortex of 32 male Sprague-Dawley rats exposed to chronic unpredictable mild stress (CUMS) and then re-exposed to CUMS to mimic depression and the recurrence of depression, respectively, in humans. We evaluated the effects of CUMS, fluoxetine, and CUMS re-exposure on tau and phospho-tau. Our results showed that a single exposure to CUMS caused a significant reduction in sucrose preference, indicating a state of anhedonia. The change in behavior was accompanied by specific alterations in phospho-tau protein levels, but fluoxetine treatment reversed the CUMS-induced impairments. Moreover, changes in sucrose preference and phospho-tau were more pronounced in rats re-exposed to CUMS than in those subjected to a single exposure. Our results suggest that changes in tau phosphorylation may contribute to the link between depression and AD.