216 results on '"M. van der Velde"'
Search Results
202. Screening for chronic kidney disease: where does Europe go?
- Author
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de Jong PE, van der Velde M, Gansevoort RT, and Zoccali C
- Subjects
- Chronic Disease, Costs and Cost Analysis, Decision Trees, Europe, Humans, Incidence, Kidney Diseases epidemiology, Mass Screening economics, Prevalence, Kidney Diseases diagnosis, Mass Screening methods
- Abstract
This review discusses various screening approaches for chronic kidney disease that are used in Europe. The criterion for defining chronic kidney disease in the various programs differs but is frequently limited to estimated glomerular filtration rate, thus offering only data on chronic kidney disease stages 3 and higher; however, screening should not be limited to measuring only estimated glomerular filtration rate but should also include a measure of microalbuminuria, because this will offer identification of chronic kidney disease stages 1 and 2. Defining these earlier stages is of importance because the risk for developing end-stage renal disease that is associated with stages 1 and 2 is nearly equal to the risk that is associated with stage 3. Moreover, the risk for cardiovascular events in stages 1 and 2 is equal to that in stage 3. Various reports argue that costs of screening programs in general practitioner or outpatient offices are high and that they are cost-effective only for preventing end-stage renal disease when they are limited to target groups, such as patients with diabetes or hypertension and elderly. The benefits of screening programs, however, should not be evaluated only with respect to the prevention of renal events but should also include the benefits of preventing cardiovascular events. The use of preselection based on either an impaired estimated glomerular filtration rate or on protein-dipstick positivity or elevated albuminuria in a morning urine void has been found effective in various European countries as an alternative for targeted screening.
- Published
- 2008
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203. Ghrelin and bone.
- Author
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van der Velde M, Delhanty P, van der Eerden B, van der Lely AJ, and van Leeuwen J
- Subjects
- Animals, Bone Remodeling physiology, Gastrectomy adverse effects, Humans, Rats, Bone and Bones metabolism, Ghrelin metabolism
- Abstract
A consequence of gastrectomy is loss of bone mass. Several mechanisms have been proposed, such as malabsorption of vitamins and minerals. Additionally, a peptide hormone produced in the stomach has been shown to mediate a calcitropic effect on bone. The identity of this peptide has not been elucidated, but ghrelin, produced by A-like cells in the fundus of the stomach, could be a good candidate. Ghrelin stimulates growth hormone (GH) secretion both in vivo and in vitro, and could by this means have a positive effect on bone. There is also evidence for direct effects of ghrelin on bone. We discuss here the role that ghrelin may play in bone metabolism, based on the most recent literature.
- Published
- 2008
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204. Ghrelin and unacylated ghrelin stimulate human osteoblast growth via mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)/phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) pathways in the absence of GHS-R1a.
- Author
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Delhanty PJ, van der Eerden BC, van der Velde M, Gauna C, Pols HA, Jahr H, Chiba H, van der Lely AJ, and van Leeuwen JP
- Subjects
- Alkaline Phosphatase metabolism, Analysis of Variance, Biomarkers analysis, Biomarkers metabolism, Cell Differentiation drug effects, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Cells, Cultured, DNA biosynthesis, Femur Head, Ghrelin, Humans, Osteoblasts drug effects, Receptors, Ghrelin, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Stimulation, Chemical, Thymidine analysis, Thymidine metabolism, Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases metabolism, Osteoblasts cytology, Peptide Hormones pharmacology, Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases metabolism, Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled metabolism, Signal Transduction physiology
- Abstract
Recent studies demonstrate widespread expression of ghrelin among tissues and have uncovered its pleiotropic nature. We have examined gene expression of ghrelin and its two receptor splice variants, growth hormone secretagogue receptors (GHS-R) 1a and 1b, in human bone biopsies and in the human pre-osteoblastic SV-HFO cell line during differentiation. Additionally, we examined proliferative effects of ghrelin and unacylated ghrelin (UAG) in differentiating and non-differentiating cells. We detected GHS-R1b mRNA in human bone and osteoblasts but not ghrelin's cognate receptor GHS-R1a, using two different real-time PCR assays and both total RNA and mRNA. In osteoblasts GHS-R1b mRNA expression remained low during the first 14 days of culture, but increased 300% in differentiating cells by day 21. Both human bone biopsies and osteoblasts expressed ghrelin mRNA, and osteoblasts were found to secrete ghrelin. Overall, ghrelin gene expression was greater in differentiating than non-differentiating osteoblasts, but was not increased during culture in either group. Ghrelin and UAG induced thymidine uptake dose-dependently, peaking at 1 and 10 nM respectively, at day 6 of culture in both non-differentiating and differentiating osteoblasts. The proliferative response to ghrelin and UAG declined with culture time and state of differentiation. The proliferative effects of ghrelin and UAG were suppressed by inhibitors of extracellular-signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and phosphoinositide-3 kinase, and both peptides rapidly induced ERK phosphorylation. Overall, our data suggest new roles for ghrelin and UAG in modulating human osteoblast proliferation via a novel signal transduction pathway.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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205. VADER (vacuum-assisted dermal recruitment): a new method of wound closure.
- Author
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Van der Velde M and Hudson DA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Suture Techniques, Vacuum, Wounds and Injuries surgery
- Abstract
Acute wounds which cannot be closed primarily are usually closed with a split skin graft. However a split skin graft has both functional (where tendons are exposed) and esthetic sequelae (contour deformity, different skin in color and texture). A novel technique is described which allows delayed primary closure of either fasciotomy wounds or full-thickness defects after harvest of a free or pedicle flap. The technique described combines the bootlace suture technique (which achieves wound closure by progressive suture tightening) with the VAC (vacuum-assisted closure) system (which reduces tissue edema, facilitating movement of tissue, and also reduces bacterial contamination of the wound). Twelve of 14 wounds (average width of wound after insertion and tightening of bootlace suture was 5 cm) were successfully closed after an average of 8 days (range, 4-23 days) in 11 patients (mean age, 45 years; range, 18-77 years) using this technique. Of the 2 patients where the technique was not successful, one patient was noncompliant and the other developed wound-edge necrosis. Other complications were self-limiting. The combined use of 2 methods of wound management facilitates delayed primary wound closure.
- Published
- 2005
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206. New onset hyperglycemia and diabetes are associated with increased cardiovascular risk after kidney transplantation.
- Author
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Cosio FG, Kudva Y, van der Velde M, Larson TS, Textor SC, Griffin MD, and Stegall MD
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Hyperglycemia etiology, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Diabetes Complications etiology, Hyperglycemia complications, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Post-transplant diabetes (PTDM) is a common and serious complication of kidney transplantation. The implications of developing hyperglycemia of lesser severity are not well understood., Methods: In this study we used American Diabetes Association (ADA) criteria to assess the incidence of abnormal glycemia post-transplant, the variables that relate to this complication, and the relationship between hyperglycemia and cardiovascular (CV) disease. Included in the study were 490 kidney recipients, transplanted from 1998 to 2003, without a history of diabetes, and with a pretransplant fasting glucose <126 mg/dL., Results: Within one week post-transplant, 45% of recipients had impaired fasting glycemia (IFG, glucose 100-125 mg/dL), and 21% PTDM (glucose > or =126). One year post-transplant, 33% of patients had IFG, and 13% PTDM. Risk factors for hyperglycemia at one year included: older recipient, male gender, higher BMI, higher pretransplant glucose, and higher glucose one week post-transplant (all P < 0.002 by multivariable analyses). During a follow-up period of 40 +/- 14 months, 12% of recipients had CV events (cardiac, CVA, and/or peripheral). Increasing fasting glucose levels at one, four, and/or 12 months post-transplant were significantly related to CV events. Furthermore, these relationships were independent of other CV risk factors, including: older age, CV events pretransplant, male gender, dyslipidemia, and transplant year. Fasting glucose levels >100 mg/dL were associated with higher incidence of post-transplant cardiac (P= 0.001) and peripheral vascular disease events (P= 0.003)., Conclusion: The incidence of post-transplant hyperglycemia and its CV impact have been underestimated. Pretransplant characteristics and, particularly, the glycemia during the first month post-transplant identified patients at risk of PTDM. Increasing glucose levels greater than 100 mg/dL, any time after the first month post-transplant, are associated with increasing CV risk. We postulate that aggressive detection and treatment of post-transplant hyperglycemia may significantly reduce CV morbidity and mortality after kidney transplantation.
- Published
- 2005
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207. Hybridization and asymmetric reproductive isolation between the closely related bryophyte taxa Polytrichum commune and P. uliginosum.
- Author
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van der Velde M and Bijlsma R
- Subjects
- Gene Frequency, Microsatellite Repeats genetics, Ploidies, Reproduction physiology, Species Specificity, Bryophyta genetics, Bryophyta physiology, Genetic Variation, Hybridization, Genetic
- Abstract
Based on genetic differentiation, the haploid dioecious bryophyte taxa Polytrichum commune and P. uliginosum have been inferred to be completely reproductively isolated. However, analysing diploid sporophytes from a sympatric population for three diagnostic microsatellite markers, we show here that reproductive isolation between these taxa is far more complex and highly asymmetric. Isolation between female-P. communex male-P. uliginosum seems to be complete and prezygotic (or early postzygotic) as no hybrid sporophytes were observed on P. commune females. In the other direction ( female-P. uliginosumx male-P. commune) isolation was clearly postzygotic as high frequencies of hybrid sporophytes were found on P. uliginosum females. However, during maturation these sporophytes showed irregular development, indicating that hybrid sporophytes are unlikely to produce ripe spores. Mechanisms possibly underlying this asymmetric reproductive isolation pattern are discussed. Notwithstanding hybrid offspring being unlikely, the high frequency of hybrid sporophytes observed suggests that viable spores may be formed occasionally through such rare processes as chromosome nondisjunction, possibly giving rise to allodiploids. Allodiploids have been reported in Polytrichum (and other bryophyte genera). Studies such as the one presented here will therefore help to elucidate the evolutionary importance of interspecific hybridization and allodiploidization in bryophyte speciation.
- Published
- 2004
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208. Past and current gene flow in the selfing, wind-dispersed species Mycelis muralis in western Europe.
- Author
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Chauvet S, van der Velde M, Imbert E, Guillemin ML, Mayol M, Riba M, Smulders MJ, Vosman B, Ericson L, Bijlsma R, and Giles BE
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Asteraceae physiology, Demography, Europe, Gene Frequency, Genetic Carrier Screening, Geography, Microsatellite Repeats genetics, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutation genetics, Population Dynamics, Reproduction physiology, Wind, Asteraceae genetics, Genetic Variation, Genetics, Population
- Abstract
The distribution of genetic diversity in Mycelis muralis, or wall lettuce, was investigated at a European scale using 12 microsatellite markers to infer historical and contemporary forces from genetic patterns. Mycelis muralis has the potential for long-distance seed dispersal by wind, is mainly self-pollinated, and has patchily distributed populations, some of which may show metapopulation dynamics. A total of 359 individuals were sampled from 17 populations located in three regions, designated southern Europe (Spain and France), the Netherlands, and Sweden. At this within-region scale, contemporary evolutionary forces (selfing and metapopulation dynamics) are responsible for high differentiation between populations (0.34 < F(ST) < 0.60) but, contrary to expectation, levels of within-population diversity, estimated by Nei's unbiased expected heterozygosity (H(E)) (0.24 < H(E) < 0.68) or analyses of molecular variance (50% of the variation found within-populations), were not low. We suggest that the latter results, which are unusual in selfing species, arise from efficient seed dispersal that counteracts population turnover and thus maintains genetic diversity within populations. At the European scale, northern regions showed lower allelic richness (A = 2.38) than populations from southern Europe (A = 3.34). In light of postglacial colonization hypotheses, these results suggest that rare alleles may have been lost during recolonization northwards. Our results further suggest that mutation has contributed to genetic differentiation between southern and northern Europe, and that Sweden may have been colonized by dispersers originating from at least two different refugia.
- Published
- 2004
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209. The reproductive biology of Polytrichum formosum: clonal structure and paternity revealed by microsatellites.
- Author
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van der Velde M, During HJ, van de Zande L, and Bijlsma R
- Subjects
- Genetics, Population, Genotype, Netherlands, Regression Analysis, Reproduction, Bryopsida genetics, Bryopsida physiology, Microsatellite Repeats genetics
- Abstract
Using highly polymorphic microsatellite markers, we assessed clonal structure and paternity in a population of the bryophyte species Polytrichum formosum. Identical multilocus genotypes of individual shoots were almost never observed in spatially separated cushions, but were found to be highly clustered within moss cushions. Therefore, asexual reproduction through dispersal of gametophyte fragments is not very important in P. formosum. However, asexual reproduction on a very localized scale through vegetative growth of genets (branching of gametophytes via clonal growth of rhizomes) is very extensive. The patchy spatial distribution of genets and the absence of intermingling among genets suggest that this species follows a 'phalanx' clonal growth strategy. Vegetative proliferation of genets will increase their size, and, consequently, will have considerable fitness consequences for individuals in terms of increased genet longevity and reproductive output. Although paternity analysis of sporophytes confirmed male genet size, i.e. gamete production, to be an important determinant of male reproductive fitness, it also showed that the spatial distance to female genets is the predominant factor that governs male reproductive success. Moreover, we showed that male gamete dispersal distances in P. formosum are much further than generally assumed, and are in the order of metres rather than centimetres. Combining the findings, we conclude that the high genotypic diversity observed for this facultatively clonal species is most likely explained by a preponderance of sexual reproduction over clonal reproduction.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
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210. Isolation and characterization of microsatellites in the moss species Polytrichum formosum.
- Author
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van der Velde M, van der Strate HJ, van de Zande L, and Bijlsma R
- Subjects
- Molecular Sequence Data, Netherlands, Polymorphism, Genetic, Bryopsida genetics, Genetics, Population, Microsatellite Repeats genetics
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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211. Amount and structure of intra- and interspecific genetic variation in the moss genus Polytrichum.
- Author
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Van Der Velde M and Bijlsma R
- Subjects
- Isoenzymes genetics, Plants classification, Species Specificity, Genetic Variation, Phylogeny, Plants genetics
- Abstract
Allozyme electrophoresis was used to determine amount and structure of genetic variation within and between five congeneric haploid moss species: Polytrichum formosum, P. commune, P. uliginosum, P. piliferum and P. juniperinum. For the different species, gene diversity within populations (HS) ranged from very low (0.025) to moderate values (0.127), being, on average, lower than those observed for vascular plants and many other moss species. Polytrichum piliferum and P. juniperinum showed significantly higher levels of HS than the other species examined, which possibly might be explained by sexual reproduction being more prevalent in these two species, that often live in more dynamic habitats, where turnover of individuals is more frequent. Genetic variability was observed to be structured in contrasting ways at different levels. At the intraspecific level genetic differentiation among populations of most Polytrichum species was low, FST = 0.1, indicating a considerable degree of gene flow by wind-dispersed spores over substantial distances. At the interspecific level strong divergence, genetic identities being on average I=0.222, was observed between most species studied, despite low levels of divergence at the morphological level. These I-values are significantly lower than observed for congeneric vascular plant species and most congeneric bryophyte species. This suggests that the morphological conservatism is not due to lack of genetic variability and evolutionary potential.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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212. Pregnancy outcomes after the Fontan repair.
- Author
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Canobbio MM, Mair DD, van der Velde M, and Koos BJ
- Subjects
- Abortion, Spontaneous etiology, Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Risk Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Fontan Procedure adverse effects, Pregnancy Outcome
- Abstract
Objectives: This study sought to determine risks and outcome of pregnancy and delivery after the modified Fontan operation., Background: Increasingly, female Fontan patients reaching child-bearing years are interested in having children. To date, the number of reported pregnancies is small, and pregnancy has therefore been discouraged., Methods: One hundred ten of 126 female patients from the Fontan registries of the Mayo Clinic and University of California Los Angeles Medical Center responded to a mailed questionnaire. An additional six patients with a reported pregnancy from other centers were identified and reviewed to assess pregnancy outcomes., Results: Among the participating centers, a total of 33 pregnancies after Fontan operation for various types of univentricular heart disease were reported. There were 15 (45%) live births from 14 mothers, with 13 spontaneous abortions and 5 elective terminations. In the 14 women with live births, the median number of years between operation and pregnancy was 4 (range 2 to 14). Reported prepregnancy problems in these gravidas included atrial flutter in one patient and ventricular dysfunction, aortic regurgitation and atrioventricular valve regurgitation in another. One patient developed supraventricular tachycardia during pregnancy and had conversion to sinus rhythm. No maternal cardiac complications were reported during labor, delivery or the immediate puerperium. There were six female and nine male infants (mean gestational age 36.5 weeks; median weight 2,344 g). One infant had an atrial septal defect. At follow-up, mothers and infants were alive and well., Conclusions: Pregnancy after the Fontan operation appears to have been well tolerated in 13 to 14 gravidas. There does appear to be an increased risk of miscarriage. The tendency to routinely discourage pregnancy may need to be reconsidered.
- Published
- 1996
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213. Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery for congenital heart disease.
- Author
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Burke RP, Wernovsky G, van der Velde M, Hansen D, and Castaneda AR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Animals, Animals, Newborn, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Swine, Television, Thoracic Surgery instrumentation, Thoracic Surgery methods, Treatment Outcome, Ductus Arteriosus, Patent surgery, Heart Defects, Congenital surgery, Laparoscopes
- Abstract
Video-assisted endoscopic techniques have reduced operative trauma in adult thoracic and general surgery, but applications in children with congenital heart disease have been limited. We report the development of video-assisted thoracic surgery procedures for neonates and infants with cardiovascular disease. Endoscopic instruments and techniques for pediatric cardiovascular procedures were designed and tested in the animal laboratory. Forty-eight operations were subsequently performed in 46 pediatric patients ranging in age from 2 hours to 14 years (median 9 months), weighing from 575 grams to 54 kg (median 8.5 kg). Clinical applications included seven different surgical procedures: patent ductus arteriosus interruption in infants (n = 26) and premature neonates (n = 5), vascular ring division (n = 8), pericardial drainage and resection (n = 3), arterial and venous collateral interruption (n = 2), thoracic duct ligation (n = 2), epicardial pacemaker lead insertion (n = 1), and diagnostic thoracoscopy (n = 1). There was no operative mortality. Technical success, defined as a video-assisted procedure completed without incising chest wall muscle or spreading the ribs, was achieved in 39 of 48 procedures (82%), with thoracotomy required to complete nine procedures. Most patients (22/25, 88%) undergoing elective ductus ligation were extubated in the operating room and discharged from the hospital within 48 hours of the operation. Eight of the last 10 patients having ductus ligation were discharged on the first postoperative day. Residual ductal flow was assessed by (1) transesophageal echocardiography in the operating room (incidence: 0/25, 0%, 70% CL 0% to 7.3%); (2) discharge auscultation (incidence: 1/30, 3%, 70% CL 0.5% to 10.8%); and (3) follow-up Doppler echocardiography (incidence: 3/25, 12%, 70% CL 5.4% to 22.6%). Video-assisted thoracoscopic techniques can be safely applied to pediatric patients with patent ductus arteriosus and vascular rings and may become an effective addition to the staged management of more complex forms of congenital heart disease.
- Published
- 1995
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214. Natural history and patterns of recovery of contractile function in single left ventricle after Fontan operation.
- Author
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Sluysmans T, Sanders SP, van der Velde M, Matitiau A, Parness IA, Spevak PJ, Mayer JE Jr, and Colan SD
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Echocardiography, Heart Defects, Congenital diagnostic imaging, Heart Defects, Congenital physiopathology, Heart Ventricles abnormalities, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Postoperative Period, Stress, Mechanical, Treatment Outcome, Tricuspid Valve abnormalities, Cardiac Surgical Procedures methods, Heart Defects, Congenital surgery, Myocardial Contraction, Ventricular Function, Left
- Abstract
Background: Before the era of the Fontan procedure, the typical course of patients with single left ventricle (LV) consisted of heart failure and death during the second or third decade of life. Despite the advent of effective palliative therapy, ventricular dysfunction remains a significant clinical problem for these patients., Methods and Results: To investigate the causes of ventricular dysfunction in these patients and to determine whether Fontan-type repair reverses deterioration of LV function, the ventricular dimensions, volume, shape, wall stress, and systolic function were determined by echocardiography in 84 patients 0.2-35 years old with double-inlet single LV or tricuspid atresia. Measurements were obtained in 67 patients after palliation (arterial shunt or pulmonary artery band) and in 47 patients a median of 4.4 years after a Glenn (n = 9) or a Fontan operation (n = 38). Before a Fontan procedure, ventricular volumes were 2 to 3 times normal. Ventricular afterload, assessed as circumferential and meridional end-systolic wall stress, became abnormal after 2 years of age. With age, LV shape changed progressively from ellipsoidal to spherical, as indicated by the decrease in long axis:short axis ratio from normal (1.9) toward unity. Concomitantly, the ratio of circumferential to meridional end-systolic wall stress fell from 1.3 to unity, the ratio of a sphere at equilibrium. This age-related change in shape and load occurred in concert with progressive deterioration of LV systolic function and contractility. Aortic oxygen saturation, an indicator of pulmonary blood flow and therefore volume work in single-ventricle physiology, was inversely and independently correlated with contractility. In the group of patients in whom a Glenn or a Fontan operation was performed at < 10 years of age, ventricular dimensions, volumes, and wall stress diminished and LV function and contractility improved after surgery (p < 0.001). In patients undergoing surgery after 10 years of age, few had improvement of LV function after surgery. Postoperative ventricular function and contractility were inversely related to age at surgery and to aortic oxygen saturation measured before surgery., Conclusions: Although Fontan-type repair of single ventricle early in life is associated with reversal of the abnormal contractile mechanics associated with age and volume load, this capacity for recovery diminishes with age at surgery.
- Published
- 1992
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215. Bulboventricular foramen size in infants with double-inlet left ventricle or tricuspid atresia with transposed great arteries: influence on initial palliative operation and rate of growth.
- Author
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Matitiau A, Geva T, Colan SD, Sluysmans T, Parness IA, Spevak PJ, Van Der Velde M, Mayer JE Jr, and Sanders SP
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Echocardiography, Follow-Up Studies, Heart Defects, Congenital mortality, Heart Defects, Congenital pathology, Heart Defects, Congenital surgery, Heart Septal Defects, Ventricular mortality, Heart Septal Defects, Ventricular pathology, Heart Septal Defects, Ventricular surgery, Heart Septum diagnostic imaging, Heart Septum growth & development, Heart Septum surgery, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Regression Analysis, Transposition of Great Vessels mortality, Transposition of Great Vessels pathology, Transposition of Great Vessels surgery, Heart Defects, Congenital diagnostic imaging, Heart Septal Defects, Ventricular diagnostic imaging, Palliative Care statistics & numerical data, Transposition of Great Vessels diagnostic imaging, Tricuspid Valve abnormalities
- Abstract
Bulboventricular foramen obstruction may complicate the management of patients with single left ventricle. Bulboventricular foramen size was measured in 28 neonates and infants greater than 5 months old and followed up for 2 to 5 years in those patients whose only systemic outflow was through the foramen. The bulboventricular foramen was measured in two planes by two-dimensional echocardiography, its area calculated and indexed to body surface area. One patient died before surgical treatment. The mean initial bulboventricular foramen area index was 0.94 cm2/m2 in 12 patients (Group A) in whom the foramen was bypassed as the first procedure in early infancy. The remaining 15 patients underwent other palliative operations but the bulboventricular foramen continued to serve as the systemic outflow tract. There was one surgical death. Six (Group B) of the 14 survivors developed bulboventricular foramen obstruction during follow-up (mean initial bulboventricular foramen area index 1.75 cm2/m2). The remaining eight patients (Group C) did not develop obstruction during follow-up and had an initial bulboventricular foramen larger than that in the other two groups (mean initial bulboventricular foramen area index 3.95 cm2/m2). All patients with an initial bulboventricular foramen area index less than 2 cm2/m2 who did not undergo early bulboventricular foramen bypass developed late obstruction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1992
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216. Gel electrophoresis of human tears reveals various forms of tear lactoferrin.
- Author
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Kijlstra A, Kuizenga A, van der Velde M, and van Haeringen NJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Chromatography, Affinity, Disulfides metabolism, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Glycosylation, Hot Temperature, Humans, Immunoblotting, Iron Chelating Agents metabolism, Molecular Weight, Temperature, Lactoferrin analysis, Lactoglobulins analysis, Milk analysis, Tears analysis
- Abstract
Lactoferrin is a metal binding protein, which is present in high concentrations in human tears. Little is known concerning the exact molecular shape of lactoferrin in tears. Sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and immunoblotting experiments showed that this protein is present in multiple forms in tear fluid. SDS-PAGE analysis of human tears under non reducing conditions and pretreatment of tears in sample buffer at room temperature revealed lactoferrin in a major form of 60 kD, a minor form of 64 kD and a third form of 52 kD. Pretreatment of tears at elevated temperatures prior to sample application resulted in the loss of this third form. Disruption of intrachain disulfide bridges prior to SDS-PAGE analysis resulted in a shift in the apparent molecular weight of lactoferrin to 78 kD and 83 kD for the major and minor form, respectively. Chromatography of human tears on ConA-Sepharose as well as enzymatic deglycosylation showed that the difference in molecular weight of the major and minor lactoferrin form was not due to a variation in the carbohydrate side chains. The presence of the minor form could also not be ascribed to iron saturation. Instead we found that addition of iron ions to human tears resulted in a shift of tear lactoferrin to a lower molecular weight species of about 52 kD, coinciding with the third lactoferrin form mentioned above and a small protein band of approximately 57 kD, representing the iron saturated minor lactoferrin form. Similar findings were observed using purified milk lactoferrin. Increasing the temperature prior to sample application or disruption of disulfide bridges dissociated the iron-lactoferrin complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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