14 results on '"Carrascal, Teresa"'
Search Results
2. Noise Perception and Health Effects on Population: A Cross-Sectional Study on COVID-19 Lockdown by Noise Sources for Spanish Dwellings.
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Casla-Herguedas, Belén, Romero-Fernández, Amelia, Carrascal, Teresa, Navas-Martín, Miguel Ángel, and Cuerdo-Vilches, Teresa
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SLEEP interruptions ,COVID-19 pandemic ,STAY-at-home orders ,POPULATION health ,NOISE - Abstract
An online questionnaire on the subjective response to noise was created to collect national experiences from households during the first COVID-19 wave (from 14 March to 21 June). In this study, different noise sources (general noise, but also noise from neighbors, common areas, facilities, premises, and traffic) and self-declared health effects (stress, lack of concentration, sleep disturbance, anxiety, irritability, or their absence) reported from 582 participants were analyzed (before and during quarantine). A descriptive and statistical analysis between variables was established to observe relational trends for the two periods. The results associated stress and sleep disturbance with most of the noise sources before the pandemic. Sleep disturbance was not significant in confinement, maybe due to habit changes and staying home. Uncertainty linked to the pandemic could explain why stress showed significance during quarantine. Irritability showed an inverse relation with noise sources since their values were greater for declared noise sources and more annoying before the pandemic in all cases. Finally, anxiety showed an association with fewer noise sources, maybe also conditioned by other factors. However, the extreme situation and the uncertainty generated, the presence of cohabitants at home, and building factors (such as acoustic insulation) conditioned the households' experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Metastatic Lesions with and without Interleukin-18–Dependent Genes in Advanced-Stage Melanoma Patients
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Crende, Olatz, Sabatino, Marianna, Valcárcel, María, Carrascal, Teresa, Riestra, Pia, López-Guerrero, Jose A., Nagore, Eduardo, Mandruzzato, Susanna, Wang, Ena, Marincola, Francesco M., and Vidal-Vanaclocha, Fernando
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- 2013
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4. Applying Spanish Acoustic Regulations to Mechanical Ventilation with Heat Recovery Systems - Case Study.
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Carrascal, Teresa, Romero Fernández, Amelia, and Casla Herguedas, Belén
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VENTILATION ,HEAT recovery equipment ,INDOOR air quality ,ENERGY consumption ,NOISE measurement - Abstract
Due to recent changes in IAQ (Indoor Air Quality) and energy efficiency requirements, MVHR (Mechanical Ventilation with Heat Recovery) has become increasingly common in Spanish new build dwellings. Regarding acoustics, Spanish Decree RD 1367/2007 sets out limits for sound pressure levels due to building services and describes the noise measurement and assessment procedure, which applies also to ventilation noise. The assessment procedure consists of a series of measurements of different noise parameters and the calculation of corrections due to tonal, low frequency and impulsive components. This paper shows an example of a MVHR fan unit installed in the ceiling of a common dwelling, where some measurements were performed. Based on these measurements, this paper discusses the noise measurement and assessment procedures and proposes some improvements for the Spanish acoustic regulations. In addition, it also analyses the available calculation methods (ASHRAE and VDI 2081) and their application to comply with Spanish requirements [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Noise from ventilation systems in dwellings - Regulations and field test procedures in selected countries in Europe.
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Rasmussen, Birgit and Carrascal, Teresa
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VENTILATION ,DWELLINGS ,ACOUSTICAL engineering ,VIBRATION (Mechanics) ,SOUNDSCAPES (Auditory environment) ,SOUND systems - Abstract
In most countries in Europe, regulatory noise limits apply for service equipment in housing. During the last few decades, mechanical ventilation with heat recovery (MVHR) has become increasingly prevalent in new and retrofitted housing in Europe. The MVHR systems supply fresh air to obtain good indoor air quality, with minimal heat losses. However, the systems may operate continuously 24 hours/day and transmit noise into and between rooms by many possible paths. In practice, many people get annoyed or disturbed by the noise, especially during nighttime or when having quiet activities. Some countries have stricter service equipment noise limits for continuous sources, and stricter limits also apply for upper quality classes in acoustic classification schemes. Thus, both design and measurements become challenging. The aim of this paper is to investigate the noise limit values and descriptors applied to ventilation systems in housing in selected countries in Europe and to compare and discuss the field test procedures typically applied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. A Comparative Study of Acoustic Regulations for Hospital Bedrooms in Selected Countries in Europe.
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Rasmussen, Birgit, Carrascal, Teresa, and Secchi, Simone
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REVERBERATION time ,BEDROOMS ,SOUNDPROOFING ,HOSPITAL supplies ,OFFICES - Abstract
Regulatory acoustic requirements for hospitals exist in several countries in Europe, but many countries have either no or few regulatory limits or only recommendations. The purpose of limit values is to ensure optimal acoustic conditions for the patients under treatment and for the personnel for the various tasks taking place in many different rooms, e.g., bedrooms, examination and treatment rooms, corridors, stairwells, waiting and reception areas, canteens, offices, all with different acoustic needs. In addition, some rooms require special considerations such as psychiatric rooms and noisy MR-scanning rooms. The extent of limit values varies considerably between countries. Some specify few, others specify several criteria. The findings from a comparative study carried out by the authors in selected countries in various geographical parts of Europe show a diversity of acoustic descriptors and limit values. This paper includes updated criteria for reverberation time, airborne and impact sound insulation, noise from traffic and from service equipment for hospital bedrooms. The discrepancies between countries are discussed, aiming at potential learning and implementation of improved limits. In addition to regulations or guidelines, some countries have hospitals included in national acoustic classification schemes with different acoustic quality levels. Indications of such class criteria are included in the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Clinical and experimental approaches to the pathophysiology of interleukin-18 in cancer progression
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Vidal-Vanaclocha, Fernando, Mendoza, Lorea, Telleria, Naiara, Salado, Clarisa, Valcárcel, María, Gallot, Natalia, Carrascal, Teresa, Egilegor, Eider, Beaskoetxea, Jabier, and Dinarello, Charles A.
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- 2006
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8. Vascular endothelial growth factor regulates melanoma cell adhesion and growth in the bone marrow microenvironment via tumor cyclooxygenase-2
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Crende Olatz, Salado Clarisa, Carrascal Teresa, Hernández José-Julio, Mendoza Lorea, Valcárcel María, and Vidal-Vanaclocha Fernando
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Human melanoma frequently colonizes bone marrow (BM) since its earliest stage of systemic dissemination, prior to clinical metastasis occurrence. However, how melanoma cell adhesion and proliferation mechanisms are regulated within bone marrow stromal cell (BMSC) microenvironment remain unclear. Consistent with the prometastatic role of inflammatory and angiogenic factors, several studies have reported elevated levels of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) in melanoma although its pathogenic role in bone marrow melanoma metastasis is unknown. Methods Herein we analyzed the effect of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor celecoxib in a model of generalized BM dissemination of left cardiac ventricle-injected B16 melanoma (B16M) cells into healthy and bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-pretreated mice to induce inflammation. In addition, B16M and human A375 melanoma (A375M) cells were exposed to conditioned media from basal and LPS-treated primary cultured murine and human BMSCs, and the contribution of COX-2 to the adhesion and proliferation of melanoma cells was also studied. Results Mice given one single intravenous injection of LPS 6 hour prior to cancer cells significantly increased B16M metastasis in BM compared to untreated mice; however, administration of oral celecoxib reduced BM metastasis incidence and volume in healthy mice, and almost completely abrogated LPS-dependent melanoma metastases. In vitro, untreated and LPS-treated murine and human BMSC-conditioned medium (CM) increased VCAM-1-dependent BMSC adherence and proliferation of B16M and A375M cells, respectively, as compared to basal medium-treated melanoma cells. Addition of celecoxib to both B16M and A375M cells abolished adhesion and proliferation increments induced by BMSC-CM. TNFα and VEGF secretion increased in the supernatant of LPS-treated BMSCs; however, anti-VEGF neutralizing antibodies added to B16M and A375M cells prior to LPS-treated BMSC-CM resulted in a complete abrogation of both adhesion- and proliferation-stimulating effect of BMSC on melanoma cells. Conversely, recombinant VEGF increased adherence to BMSC and proliferation of both B16M and A375M cells, compared to basal medium-treated cells, while addition of celecoxib neutralized VEGF effects on melanoma. Recombinant TNFα induced B16M production of VEGF via COX-2-dependent mechanism. Moreover, exogenous PGE2 also increased B16M cell adhesion to immobilized recombinant VCAM-1. Conclusions We demonstrate the contribution of VEGF-induced tumor COX-2 to the regulation of adhesion- and proliferation-stimulating effects of TNFα, from endotoxin-activated bone marrow stromal cells, on VLA-4-expressing melanoma cells. These data suggest COX-2 neutralization as a potential anti-metastatic therapy in melanoma patients at high risk of systemic and bone dissemination due to intercurrent infectious and inflammatory diseases.
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- 2011
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9. IL-18 Regulates Melanoma VLA-4 Integrin Activation through a Hierarchized Sequence of Inflammatory Factors.
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Valcárcel, María, Carrascal, Teresa, Crende, Olatz, and Vidal-Vanaclocha, Fernando
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MELANOMA , *INTERLEUKIN-18 , *GENETIC regulation , *INTEGRINS , *METASTASIS , *INFLAMMATION , *NUCLEOTIDE sequence , *CANCER cells - Abstract
Very late antigen-4 (VLA-4) is frequently overexpressed on melanoma cells contributing to inflammation-dependent metastasis. Melanoma cell adhesion to endothelium via VLA-4-vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) interaction was used to study VLA-4 activation during melanoma cell response to inflammation. Cooperation among major inflammatory mediators was analyzed in melanoma cells exposed to single inflammatory factors in the presence of inhibitors for other assayed mediators. A stepwise cascade of hierarchized molecules heterogeneously made and used during melanoma response to IL-18, induced hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), in turn activating VLA-4 and melanoma cell adhesion to endothelium. The cascade involved prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) production from melanoma induced by IL-18-dependent tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα); next, PGE2-induced IL-1β via vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) secretion, which in turn induced VLA-4 activation via cyclooxygenase 2-dependent H2O2. This sequence operated in IL-18R/VLA-4/VEGF-expressing murine (B16) and human (A375 and 883) melanomas, but not in those without this phenotype. Separation of active VLA-4-expressing B16 melanoma cells through immobilized VCAM-1 verified their higher IL-18R/TNFR1/VEGFR2 expression and metastatic growth than inactive VLA-4-expressing cells. However, cooperation among melanoma cell sub-populations with heterogeneous cytokine receptor levels may occur through VLA-4-stimulating factors, leading to intratumoral amplification of metastatic potential. Therefore, expression of the VLA-4-stimulating factor sequence may help to predict melanoma prometastatic risk, and offers therapeutic targets for metastatic melanoma deactivation through VLA-4 activation blockade. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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10. Hydrogen peroxide mediates vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 expression from interleukin-18-activated hepatic sinusoidal endothelium: Implications for circulating cancer cell arrest in the murine liver.
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Mendoza, Lorea, Carrascal, Teresa, De Luca, Marco, Fuentes, Angela M., Salado, Clarisa, Blanco, Jerónimo, and Vidal-Vanaclocha, Fernando
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- 2001
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11. Vascular endothelial growth factor regulates melanoma cell adhesion and growth in the bone marrow microenvironment via tumor cyclooxygenase-2.
- Author
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Valcárcel, María, Mendoza, Lorea, Hernández, José-Julio, Carrascal, Teresa, Salado, Clarisa, Crende, Olatz, and Vidal-Vanaclocha, Fernando
- Abstract
Background: Human melanoma frequently colonizes bone marrow (BM) since its earliest stage of systemic dissemination, prior to clinical metastasis occurrence. However, how melanoma cell adhesion and proliferation mechanisms are regulated within bone marrow stromal cell (BMSC) microenvironment remain unclear. Consistent with the prometastatic role of inflammatory and angiogenic factors, several studies have reported elevated levels of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) in melanoma although its pathogenic role in bone marrow melanoma metastasis is unknown.Methods: Herein we analyzed the effect of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor celecoxib in a model of generalized BM dissemination of left cardiac ventricle-injected B16 melanoma (B16M) cells into healthy and bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-pretreated mice to induce inflammation. In addition, B16M and human A375 melanoma (A375M) cells were exposed to conditioned media from basal and LPS-treated primary cultured murine and human BMSCs, and the contribution of COX-2 to the adhesion and proliferation of melanoma cells was also studied.Results: Mice given one single intravenous injection of LPS 6 hour prior to cancer cells significantly increased B16M metastasis in BM compared to untreated mice; however, administration of oral celecoxib reduced BM metastasis incidence and volume in healthy mice, and almost completely abrogated LPS-dependent melanoma metastases. In vitro, untreated and LPS-treated murine and human BMSC-conditioned medium (CM) increased VCAM-1-dependent BMSC adherence and proliferation of B16M and A375M cells, respectively, as compared to basal medium-treated melanoma cells. Addition of celecoxib to both B16M and A375M cells abolished adhesion and proliferation increments induced by BMSC-CM. TNFα and VEGF secretion increased in the supernatant of LPS-treated BMSCs; however, anti-VEGF neutralizing antibodies added to B16M and A375M cells prior to LPS-treated BMSC-CM resulted in a complete abrogation of both adhesion- and proliferation-stimulating effect of BMSC on melanoma cells. Conversely, recombinant VEGF increased adherence to BMSC and proliferation of both B16M and A375M cells, compared to basal medium-treated cells, while addition of celecoxib neutralized VEGF effects on melanoma. Recombinant TNFα induced B16M production of VEGF via COX-2-dependent mechanism. Moreover, exogenous PGE2 also increased B16M cell adhesion to immobilized recombinant VCAM-1.Conclusions: We demonstrate the contribution of VEGF-induced tumor COX-2 to the regulation of adhesion- and proliferation-stimulating effects of TNFα, from endotoxin-activated bone marrow stromal cells, on VLA-4-expressing melanoma cells. These data suggest COX-2 neutralization as a potential anti-metastatic therapy in melanoma patients at high risk of systemic and bone dissemination due to intercurrent infectious and inflammatory diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Chapter 22. Serbia
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Mijić, Miomir, Radivojević, Ana, Šumarac Pavlović, Dragana, Mašović, Draško, Jovanović Popović, Milica, Ignjatović, Dušan, Rajčić, Aleksandar, Rasmussen, Birgit, Machimbarrena, María, Fausti, Patrizio, and Carrascal, Teresa
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typical errors in design and practice ,floor structure ,partition walls between dwellings ,Serbian housing stock ,building typology ,sound insulation - Abstract
Neighbour noise is a significant problem having had insufficient attention for decades, both for existing housing and new housing. Time had come to solve the challenges by establishing a common framework in building acoustics throughout Europe. As a consequence, the research network, COST Action TU0901 “Integrating and Harmonizing Sound Insulation Aspects in Sustainable Urban Housing Constructions” was established to initiate and support a process towards such framework. COST TU0901 considered the main tool to be an acoustic classification scheme for dwellings –implying definition of a number of quality classes– combined with knowledge about housing constructions complying with the class criteria. The findings from COST TU0901 are presented in two books with the joint main title “Building acoustics throughout Europe”. Volume 2 consists of country chapters describing the national housing stock, construction types and related sound insulation performance in countries involved in COST TU0901. This particular chapter presents the situation in Serbia regarding the basic characteristics of the housing stock and acoustic performance of typical constructions between dwellings - partition walls between dwellings, as well as floor structures.
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- 2014
13. Application of stereocontrolled stepwise [3+2] cycloadditions to the preparation of inhibitors of alpha4beta1-integrin-mediated hepatic melanoma metastasis.
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Zubia A, Mendoza L, Vivanco S, Aldaba E, Carrascal T, Lecea B, Arrieta A, Zimmerman T, Vidal-Vanaclocha F, and Cossio FP
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- Animals, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Crystallography, X-Ray, Cyclization, Drug Design, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Molecular Structure, Stereoisomerism, Antineoplastic Agents chemical synthesis, Integrin alpha4beta1 antagonists & inhibitors, Liver Neoplasms drug therapy, Melanoma drug therapy, Melanoma secondary
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- 2005
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14. Inhibition of cytokine-induced microvascular arrest of tumor cells by recombinant endostatin prevents experimental hepatic melanoma metastasis.
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Mendoza L, Valcárcel M, Carrascal T, Egilegor E, Salado C, Sim BK, and Vidal-Vanaclocha F
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- Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Humans, Liver Neoplasms prevention & control, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Recombinant Proteins pharmacology, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Vascular Cell Adhesion Molecule-1 analysis, Angiogenesis Inhibitors pharmacology, Endostatins pharmacology, Liver Neoplasms blood supply, Liver Neoplasms secondary, Melanoma, Experimental blood supply, Microcirculation drug effects
- Abstract
We investigated effects of endostatin (ES) in the prometastatic microenvironment of inflammation occurring during the microvascular phase of cancer cell infiltration in the liver. We used a model of intrasplenic injection of B16 melanoma (B16M) cells leading to hepatic metastasis through vascular cell adhesion molecule-(VCAM-1)-mediated capillary arrest of cancer cells via interleukin-18 (IL-18)-dependent mechanism. We show that administration of 50 mg/kg recombinant human (rh) ES 30 min before B16M, plus repetition of same dose for 3 additional days decreased metastasis number by 60%. A single dose of rhES before B16M injection reduced hepatic microvascular retention of luciferase-transfected B16M by 40% and inhibited hepatic production of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and IL-18 and VCAM-1 expression by hepatic sinusoidal endothelia (HSE). Consistent with these data, rhES inhibited VCAM-1-dependent B16M cell adhesion to primary cultured HSE receiving B16M conditioned medium, and it abolished the HSE cell production of TNF-alpha and IL-18 induced by tumor-derived vascular endothelial cell growth factor (VEGF). rhES abrogated recombinant murine VEGF-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of KDR/flk-1 receptor in HSE cells, preventing the proinflammatory action of tumor-derived VEGF on HSE. rhES also abolished hepatic production of TNF-alpha, microvascular retention of luciferase-transfected B16M, and adhesion of B16M cells to isolated HSE cells, all of them induced in mice given 5 micro g/kg recombinant murine VEGF for 18 h. This capillary inflammation-deactivating capability constitutes a nonantiangiogenic antitumoral action of endostatin that decreases cancer cell arrest within liver microvasculature and prevents metastases promoted by proinflammatory cytokines induced by VEGF.
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- 2004
- Full Text
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