2,052 results on '"Interstitial space"'
Search Results
2. Safe Together, Vulnerable Apart: How Interstitial Space in Text Logos Impacts Brand Attitudes in Tight versus Loose Cultures.
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Gupta, Tanvi and Hagtvedt, Henrik
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LOGO design ,BRANDING (Marketing) ,PRODUCT safety ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability ,THREATS ,SOCIAL structure ,CULTURE - Abstract
This research demonstrates that interstitial space in textual brand logos—that is, spacious (vs. compact) arrangement of letters—unfavorably influences brand attitude by reducing product safety perceptions. When potential threats are salient, the effect tends to occur within tight (but not loose) cultures, characterized by sensitivity to threats and a need for rigid social structures. When threats are not salient, the effect appears to occur across cultures. Five studies, including lab and field experiments, as well as archival dataset analysis, provide supportive evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A French bazaar and a Mexican street market: an object-centered comparative analysis of interstitial spaces.
- Author
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Boudreau, Julie-Anne, Billen, Léa, and Agüero, Jordi
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SOCIAL norms , *COMPARATIVE studies , *COMMUNITY organization , *CITIES & towns , *PUBLIC spaces , *CENTRAL business districts - Abstract
A neighborhood bazaar run by a community organization in Saint-Denis in the Greater Paris region, an 'informal' cultural street market in downtown Mexico City run by the oldest members of the Punk-Rock community... Two spaces that have in common the circulation of objects and a dense web of affective interactions between people and commodities. This article shows how the circulation of objects creates interstitial spaces between the public and the domestic. But it goes further by demonstrating that these interstitial spaces also challenge market and gender norms. Through a participatory methodology involving photography and comparative dialog, the article analyzes the place of objects in the creation of interstitial spaces and their subversive potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. Interstitial space and the Spiritualist séance: psychical geography, telephonic imaginary and social possibility in 1870s Britain.
- Author
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Andrick, John M.
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SPIRITUALISM , *QUANTUM mechanics , *SPIRITS , *PSYCHIC ability , *IMAGINATION , *SOCIAL theory - Abstract
As the key site in extending the territoriology of Victorian Spiritualism, the domestic séance harboured multiple interstices or interstitial spaces, most notably evident in the spaces in-between sitters and mediums, the various particularities of the séance room (such as spirit cabinets and penetrable walls for spirit materialisation and transport), and the thresholds between the world sitters inhabited and the one with which they sought intimate contact. Notions of interstitial space extended into Spiritualist philosophy when Anna Blackwell wrote in 1871 of a proto-quantum mechanics model of inter-cellular connec-tivity, linking humans to spirits that predated twentieth-century quantum notions of entanglement and nonlocality. The introduction of telephony in Britain further expanded the psychical geography of a Spiritualist imaginary of longdistance communication and provided a new means for spirit contact. In addition, the appearance of the telephone silence cabinet, an interstitial communicative device functioning in a manner similar to that of the séance spirit cabinet, provided conversation privacy through the mediumistic assistance of postal employees. This article contends that interstitial space served as a key component of Spiritualist thought and practice furthering an imaginary of social possibility in 1870s Britain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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5. Cultivating an Alternative Subjectivity Beyond Neoliberalism: Community Gardens in Urban China.
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Mai, Xin, Xu, Yueli, and Liu, Yungang
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COMMUNITY gardens , *PUBLIC spaces , *NEOLIBERALISM , *URBAN renewal , *LOCAL government - Abstract
In the literature, community gardens feature as contested spaces: They are radical spaces used by grassroots movements to claim the "right to the city," organized garden projects attached to neoliberal strategies, or physical breeding grounds for neoliberal citizen-subjectivity. Long established in many Western contexts, community gardens were not evident in China until a group of scholar-activists in Shanghai initiated the practice in 2016. Drawing on two flagship community garden cases in that city, we investigate the emergence and development of community gardens and discuss the ways in which they instantiate neither a radical nor a neoliberal political vision. Our observations show that a nonprofit organization—rather than the local citizenry or municipal government—proactively advanced the production of community gardens and the discursive construction of community participation over time. The rationale underlying this practice arises from organizers' framing of the community gardens as an "experiment of governance innovation" that dovetails with a broader reorientation of China's urban renewal agenda from demolition and reconstruction toward a people-centered incremental urban regeneration characterized by mass mobilization and social participation. We argue, therefore, that the community garden phenomenon reifies an alternative subjectivity—one that emphasizes the increasing visibility of social organizations as a state "flanking mechanism" to achieve extraeconomic objectives in urban governance. We also advance a pluralist understanding of China's urban governance beyond a growth-chasing logic to embrace the increasing complexity of the state ethos and societal instruments at play in and associated with this sphere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Intranasally administered extracellular vesicles from human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neural stem cells quickly incorporate into neurons and microglia in 5xFAD mice.
- Author
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Attaluri, Sahithi, Gonzalez, Jenny Jaimes, Kirmani, Maha, Vogel, Andrew D., Upadhya, Raghavendra, Kodali, Maheedhar, Madhu, Leelavathi N., Rao, Shama, Shuai, Bing, Babu, Roshni S., Huard, Charles, and Shetty, Ashok K.
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BRAIN ,NEURONS ,AMYLOIDOSIS ,ANIMAL experimentation ,INTRANASAL administration ,STEM cells ,RESEARCH funding ,NEUROGLIA ,EXTRACELLULAR vesicles ,MICE - Abstract
Introduction: Extracellular vesicles (EVs) released by human-induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived neural stem cells (NSCs) have robust antiinflammatory and neurogenic properties due to therapeutic miRNAs and proteins in their cargo. Hence, hiPSC-NSC-EVs are potentially an excellent biologic for treating neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer's disease (AD). Methods: This study investigated whether intranasally (IN) administered hiPSCNSC-EVs would quickly target various neural cell types in the forebrain, midbrain, and hindbrain regions of 3-month-old 5xFAD mice, a model of b-amyloidosis and familial AD. We administered a single dose of 25 x 10
9 hiPSC-NSC-EVs labeled with PKH26, and different cohorts of naïve and 5xFAD mice receiving EVs were euthanized at 45 min or 6 h post-administration. Results: At 45 min post-administration, EVs were found in virtually all subregions of the forebrain, midbrain, and hindbrain of naïve and 5xFAD mice, with predominant targeting and internalization into neurons, interneurons, and microglia, including plaque-associated microglia in 5xFAD mice. EVs also came in contact with the plasma membranes of astrocytic processes and the soma of oligodendrocytes in white matter regions. Evaluation of CD63/CD81 expression with the neuronal marker confirmed that PKH26 + particles found within neurons were IN administered hiPSC-NSC-EVs. At 6 h post-administration, EVs persisted in all cell types in both groups, with the distribution mostly matching what was observed at 45 min post-administration. Area fraction (AF) analysis revealed that, in both naïve and 5xFAD mice, higher fractions of EVs incorporate into forebrain regions at both time points. However, at 45 min post-IN administration, AFs of EVs within cell layers in forebrain regions and within microglia in midbrain and hindbrain regions were lower in 5xFAD mice than naïve mice, implying that amyloidosis reduces EV penetrance. Discussion: Collectively, the results provide novel evidence that IN administration of therapeutic hiPSC-NSC-EVs is an efficient avenue for directing such EVs into neurons and glia in all brain regions in the early stage of amyloidosis. As pathological changes in AD are observed in multiple brain areas, the ability to deliver therapeutic EVs into various neural cells in virtually every brain region in the early stage of amyloidosis is attractive for promoting neuroprotective and antiinflammatory effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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7. Intranasally administered extracellular vesicles from human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neural stem cells quickly incorporate into neurons and microglia in 5xFAD mice
- Author
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Sahithi Attaluri, Jenny Jaimes Gonzalez, Maha Kirmani, Andrew D. Vogel, Raghavendra Upadhya, Maheedhar Kodali, Leelavathi N. Madhu, Shama Rao, Bing Shuai, Roshni S. Babu, Charles Huard, and Ashok K. Shetty
- Subjects
Alzheimer’s disease ,astrocytes ,extracellular vesicles ,human neural stem cells ,human pluripotent stem cells ,interstitial space ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
IntroductionExtracellular vesicles (EVs) released by human-induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived neural stem cells (NSCs) have robust antiinflammatory and neurogenic properties due to therapeutic miRNAs and proteins in their cargo. Hence, hiPSC-NSC-EVs are potentially an excellent biologic for treating neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease (AD).MethodsThis study investigated whether intranasally (IN) administered hiPSC-NSC-EVs would quickly target various neural cell types in the forebrain, midbrain, and hindbrain regions of 3-month-old 5xFAD mice, a model of β-amyloidosis and familial AD. We administered a single dose of 25 × 109 hiPSC-NSC-EVs labeled with PKH26, and different cohorts of naïve and 5xFAD mice receiving EVs were euthanized at 45 min or 6 h post-administration.ResultsAt 45 min post-administration, EVs were found in virtually all subregions of the forebrain, midbrain, and hindbrain of naïve and 5xFAD mice, with predominant targeting and internalization into neurons, interneurons, and microglia, including plaque-associated microglia in 5xFAD mice. EVs also came in contact with the plasma membranes of astrocytic processes and the soma of oligodendrocytes in white matter regions. Evaluation of CD63/CD81 expression with the neuronal marker confirmed that PKH26 + particles found within neurons were IN administered hiPSC-NSC-EVs. At 6 h post-administration, EVs persisted in all cell types in both groups, with the distribution mostly matching what was observed at 45 min post-administration. Area fraction (AF) analysis revealed that, in both naïve and 5xFAD mice, higher fractions of EVs incorporate into forebrain regions at both time points. However, at 45 min post-IN administration, AFs of EVs within cell layers in forebrain regions and within microglia in midbrain and hindbrain regions were lower in 5xFAD mice than naïve mice, implying that amyloidosis reduces EV penetrance.DiscussionCollectively, the results provide novel evidence that IN administration of therapeutic hiPSC-NSC-EVs is an efficient avenue for directing such EVs into neurons and glia in all brain regions in the early stage of amyloidosis. As pathological changes in AD are observed in multiple brain areas, the ability to deliver therapeutic EVs into various neural cells in virtually every brain region in the early stage of amyloidosis is attractive for promoting neuroprotective and antiinflammatory effects.
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
8. Radial gradient characteristics formed by the interstitial space of MWCNT yarn owing to twisting.
- Author
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Goh, Byeonghwa and Choi, Joonmyung
- Subjects
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ELECTRIC capacity , *CARBON nanotubes , *MULTISCALE modeling , *ENERGY harvesting , *PARTICLE dynamics - Abstract
The interstitial space of a multiwalled carbon nanotube (MWCNT) yarn is key to creating electric double-layer capacitance for harvesting energy. Despite various fabrication methods for MWCNT yarns, the formation mechanism of the interstitial space inside the yarns is poorly understood. Herein, the twisting process of a cylindrical MWCNT bundle into a yarn was simulated using the mesoscale coarse-grained particle dynamics model. A larger fraction of interstitial space was observed in the sheath region of the yarn, where large-diameter MWCNTs were mainly distributed. Small-diameter MWCNTs first swirled toward the inner core during the twisting process, causing the large-diameter MWCNTs to be sparsely distributed throughout the sheath region. The proposed methodology and its results can be applied to the geometric design of twisted MWCNT bundles to maximize the fraction of the interstitial space therein. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. Quantitative Study of the Coupling Among Cardiovascular System, Lymphatic System and Interstitial Space
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Marazzi, Nicholas Mattia, Huxley, Virginia H., Sacco, Riccardo, Guidoboni, Giovanna, Kilgour, D. Marc, editor, Kunze, Herb, editor, Makarov, Roman, editor, Melnik, Roderick, editor, and Wang, Xu, editor
- Published
- 2021
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10. Use of Maintenance and Resuscitation Fluids
- Author
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Magder, Sheldon, Magder, Sheldon, editor, Malhotra, Atul, editor, Hibbert, Kathryn A., editor, and Hardin, Charles Corey, editor
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- 2021
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11. Basics of Fluid Physiology
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Magder, Sheldon, Magder, Alexandr, Magder, Sheldon, editor, Malhotra, Atul, editor, Hibbert, Kathryn A., editor, and Hardin, Charles Corey, editor
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- 2021
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12. Engineering and characterization of a hydrogel mimicking subcutaneous interstitial space
- Author
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Rodler, Agnes, Samanta, Ayan, Goh, Wen-Jun, Hilborn, Jöns, Hansson, Per, Rodler, Agnes, Samanta, Ayan, Goh, Wen-Jun, Hilborn, Jöns, and Hansson, Per
- Abstract
We have synthesized and characterized a collagen-hyaluronic acid hybrid network. The aim was to create a hydrogel mimicking the extracellular matrix of adipose tissue, primarily for use in in vitro studies of protein drug transport in the subcutaneous interstitial space. The network was created by covalently crosslinking methacryloyl-functionalized collagen type I and thiol-functionalized hyaluronic acid by means of thiol-Michael and thiol-ene photo-click reaction. The degree of modification corresponded to 74 % of the lysine and arginine groups on collagen, and 16 to 29 % of the carboxylate groups on hyaluronic acid, as determined with H-1 NMR. Circular dichroism measurements showed that the triple helix of modified collagen remained intact. Oscillatory shear rheology tests showed that the hydrated networks displayed viscoelastic properties characteristic of hydrogels. The storage modulus, measured at 1 Hz frequency in the linear viscoelastic range (<5%), varied in a controllable way between 1.5 and 4 kPa depending on the collagen concentration and collagen-to-hyaluronic acid ratio. The hydrogels had a lower collagen content (0.6--1.2 wt%) but similar hyaluronic acid content and shear modulus at low strain rates as the extracellular matrix in adipose tissue and were penetrable by albumin and lysozyme. The results show that the hydrogels are promising as model systems for investigations of drug transport.
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- 2024
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13. Microcirculation
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Furst, Branko and Furst, Branko
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- 2020
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14. Circulatory and Respiratory Functions of the Blood
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Furst, Branko and Furst, Branko
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- 2020
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15. Mobile app development: Work-integrated learning collaborations with Māori and Fijian partners.
- Author
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YEO, ALVIN, HINZE, ANNIKA, VANDERSCHANTZ, NICHOLAS, APOROSA, APO, and PARURU, DANNY
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MOBILE apps ,SOFTWARE architecture ,INTERNSHIP programs ,LEARNING strategies ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
Only a few information and communication technology (ICT) work-integrated learning (WIL) projects involving universities and Indigenous partners are being reported and very little is known about the approaches that are followed. This article reports on successful student work placements in Indigenous communities when codeveloping software for the community. We provide two case studies of projects which involved work-integrated learning students and researchers from a university, as well as researchers and practitioners from Indigenous communities in New Zealand and Fiji. Two independent app development projects were the central focus of the collaborations with these two communities including placement students. The article describes the learning and insights from these WIL projects and provides recommendations for creating successful WIL opportunities with Indigenous communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
16. O espaço intersticial e a transferência de trabalho na instituição.
- Author
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Mundim Moreira, Lara, Castanho, Pablo, and Tourinho Moretto, Maria Lívia
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MEDICAL records ,PSYCHOANALYSTS ,PSYCHOANALYSIS ,LISTENING ,LOGIC - Abstract
Copyright of Estilos da Clínica is the property of FEUSP - Faculdade de Educacao da USP - Universidade de Sao Paulo and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
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17. Mass Transport Through Interstitial Structures
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B. Iwanowska-Chomiak and A. Walicka
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interstitial space ,interstitial fluids ,fractal models ,Mechanical engineering and machinery ,TJ1-1570 - Abstract
Interstitial space, also called interstitum, separating the vital organs of a human body, is the primary source of lymph and is a major fluid compartment in the body. Interstitial space (IS) is filled out by thick collagen (CL) bundles which form lattices represented by a network of capillaries. This network has the structure similar to a sponge porous matrix (SPM) with pores-capillaries of variable cross-section. To analyse the mass transport of interstitial fluids (IFs) through the porous matrix it is assumed that the SPM is composed of an irregular system of pores which may be modelled as a fractal porous matrix. The interstitial fluids can be either bio-suspensions or bio-solutions and therefore they have to be modelled as non-Newtonian fluids. Analysing the fluid flow through the porous matrix it is assumed that the SPM is modelled as capillary tubes of variable radii. Introducing a hindrance factor allowed us to consider the porous matrix as a system of fractal capillaries but of constant radii. Classical and fractal expressions for the flow rate, velocity and permeability are derived based on the physical properties of the capillary model of interstitial structures. Each parameter in the proposed expressions does not contain any empirical constant and has a clear physical meaning, and the proposed fractals models relate the flow properties of the fluids under consideration with the structural parameters of interstitium as a porous medium.
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- 2019
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18. The Space-to-Product Ratio Effect: How Interstitial Space Influences Product Aesthetic Appeal, Store Perceptions, and Product Preference.
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SEVILLA, JULIO and TOWNSEND, CLAUDIA
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DISPLAY of merchandise ,CONSUMER psychology ,SENSORY perception ,CONSUMER preferences ,POPULARITY ,SCARCITY ,DECISION making ,AESTHETICS - Abstract
The authors identify and examine the effect of space-to-product ratio on consumer response; very generally, consumers perceive products as more valuable when more space is devoted to their display. In both lab and field studies, the authors find that this phenomenon influences total sales, purchase likelihood, and even perceived product experience (taste perceptions). More interstitial space increases perceptions of individual products as more aesthetically pleasing and the store as more prestigious. The authors find these effects across a variety of product categories and rule out a number of competing alternative explanations that are based on perceptions of product popularity, scarcity, assortment search difficulty, and messiness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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19. Interstitial Space
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Jaeger, Dieter, editor and Jung, Ranu, editor
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- 2022
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20. Rapid manifestation of reactive astrogliosis in acute hippocampal brain slices
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Takano, Takahiro, He, Wei, Han, Xiaoning, Wang, Fushun, Xu, Qiwu, Wang, Xiaohai, Bush, Nancy Ann Oberheim, Cruz, Nancy, Dienel, Gerald A, and Nedergaard, Maiken
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Underpinning research ,Neurological ,Animals ,Animals ,Newborn ,Aquaporin 4 ,Astrocytes ,Calcium ,Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials ,Female ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein ,Gliosis ,Glycogen ,Green Fluorescent Proteins ,Hippocampus ,In Vitro Techniques ,Lactic Acid ,Male ,Mice ,NAD ,Quaternary Ammonium Compounds ,NADH ,astrohcytes ,electron microscopy ,interstitial space ,mitochondria ,purinergic receptors ,two-photon microscopy ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
A flurry of studies over the past decade has shown that astrocytes play a more active role in neural function than previously recognized. Hippocampal slices prepared from young rodent pups have served as a popular model for studying the pathways by which astrocytes participate in synaptic transmission. It is, however, not known how well astrocytes tolerate traumatic injury and hypoxia, which are unavoidable when preparing acute slices. We here showed that astrocytes exhibit striking changes in expression of several receptors and structural proteins, including re-expression of the developmental marker nestin within 90 min following preparation of live vibratome slices. Moreover, immunoelectron microscopy showed a 2.7-fold loss of astrocytic processes in acute hippocampal slices prepared from glial fibrillary acidic protein-green fluorescent protein reporter mice. A sharp decrease in the number of mitochondria was also noted in acute slices, concurrently with an increase in mitochondrial size. Glycogen content decreased 3-fold upon slice preparation and did not recover despite stable recordings of field excitatory postsynaptic current. Analysis of Ca(2+) signaling showed that astrocytic responses to purine receptor and mGluR5 agonists differed in slice versus in vivo. These observations suggest that the functional properties and the fine structure of astrocytes in slices may be reflective of early stages of reactive gliosis and should be confirmed in vivo when possible.
- Published
- 2014
21. Settling Down: From Jack London’s London Holiday to Stephen Reynolds’s Sea-Change
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Seaber, Luke, Brant, Clare, Series editor, Saunders, Max, Series editor, and Seaber, Luke
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- 2017
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22. Magnetic Resonance Imaging: Advanced Imaging Techniques
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Verstraete, Koenraad L., Dutoit, J. C., Drapé, J. L., Bloem, J. L., Vanhoenacker, Filip M., editor, Parizel, Paul M., editor, and Gielen, Jan L., editor
- Published
- 2017
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23. Identification of Early Stage Liver Fibrosis by Modifications in the Interstitial Space Diffusive Microenvironment Using Fluorescent Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes.
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Lee A, Simon AA, Boyreau A, Allain-Courtois N, Lambert B, Pradère JP, Saltel F, and Cognet L
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- Animals, Mice, Liver pathology, Extracellular Matrix metabolism, Fluorescent Dyes chemistry, Disease Models, Animal, Diffusion, Nanotubes, Carbon chemistry, Liver Cirrhosis pathology
- Abstract
During liver fibrosis, recurrent hepatic injuries lead to the accumulation of collagen and other extracellular matrix components in the interstitial space, ultimately disrupting liver functions. Early stages of liver fibrosis may be reversible, but opportunities for diagnosis at these stages are currently limited. Here, we show that the alterations of the interstitial space associated with fibrosis can be probed by tracking individual fluorescent single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) diffusing in that space. In a mouse model of early liver fibrosis, we find that nanotubes generally explore elongated areas, whose lengths decrease as the disease progresses, even in regions where histopathological examination does not reveal fibrosis yet. Furthermore, this decrease in nanotube mobility is a purely geometrical effect as the instantaneous nanotube diffusivity stays unmodified. This work establishes the promise of SWCNTs both for diagnosing liver fibrosis at an early stage and for more in-depth studies of the biophysical effects of the disease.
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- 2024
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24. The glymphatic system and its role in cerebral homeostasis.
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Benveniste, Helene, Elkin, Rena, Heerdt, Paul M., Koundal, Sunil, Yuechuan Xue, Lee, Hedok, Wardlaw, Joanna, and Tannenbaum, Allen
- Abstract
The brain’s high bioenergetic state is paralleled by high metabolic waste production. Authentic lymphatic vasculature is lacking in brain parenchyma. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow has long been thought to facilitate central nervous system detoxification in place of lymphatics, but the exact processes involved in toxic waste clearance from the brain remain incompletely understood. Over the past 8 yr, novel data in animals and humans have begun to shed new light on these processes in the form of the “glymphatic system,” a brain-wide perivascular transit passageway dedicated to CSF transport and interstitial fluid exchange that facilitates metabolic waste drainage from the brain. Here we will discuss glymphatic system anatomy and methods to visualize and quantify glymphatic system (GS) transport in the brain and also discuss physiological drivers of its function in normal brain and in neurodegeneration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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25. Land of Chabot
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Saskia de Wit and Andre Dekker
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Land of Chabot ,interstitial space ,metropolitan garden ,Henk Chabot ,highway ,landscape theatre ,Architecture ,NA1-9428 - Abstract
In the contemporary metropolitan landscape of Rotterdam, the open landscape spaces that once surrounded the city have been reduced to components in a hybrid field. When the polders were still expansive, with an omnipresent horizon, and big skies, they were depicted extensively by the Dutch landscape painter Henk Chabot (1894-1949). Chabot is the Rotterdam painter of an oeuvre that is associated with angular, realistic expressionism of many layers of paint in hard colours, who painted heavily emphasised skies over poor countryside, or monumental portraits of refugees or farmers. For fifteen years, he lived and worked in a studio by the river Rotte. Now, only a relic of the farmland where he lived remains: an interstice between motorways, recreation parks, and suburbs that seemed to be overlooked in the frenzy of urban planning processes. The reason this interstice still exists is that it has been reserved for a future motorway for the last 30 years, and in the not-so-distant future will become the tunnel entrance for the new A16 motorway. As a left-over space, the terrain seems non-descript. However, it does have the implicit characteristics of a ‘landscape theatre’: introducing the processes and the scale of landscape as self-evident elements of the city, and heralding the open polder landscape twenty minutes away. It borrows its physical boundaries from the Rotte river dyke, the heemtuin (botanical garden) adjacent to the Ommoord apartment blocks, the access road to Ommoord, the industrial estate, and residential area in Terbregge. Such a “borrowed boundary” can be seen as a defining trait of the landscape theatre. The open space that is defined by this borrowed boundary and the central point of the tunnel entrance, is a secluded, self-contained place, removed in time and space, insulated against the everyday reality and, aside from the public realm of streets, squares, and parks, from the hustle and bustle of urban life: a place “outside”.
- Published
- 2020
26. Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of T-Cell Bispecifics in the Tumour Interstitial Fluid
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Miro Julian Eigenmann, Tine Veronica Karlsen, Marek Wagner, Olav Tenstad, Tina Weinzierl, Tanja Fauti, Hans Peter Grimm, Trude Skogstrand, Christian Klein, Johannes Sam, Pablo Umana, Marina Bacac, Helge Wiig, and Antje-Christine Walz
- Subjects
T-cell bispecifics ,pharmacokinetics ,tumour uptake ,cytokines ,PBPK modelling ,interstitial space ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
The goal of this study is to investigate the pharmacokinetics in plasma and tumour interstitial fluid of two T-cell bispecifics (TCBs) with different binding affinities to the tumour target and to assess the subsequent cytokine release in a tumour-bearing humanised mouse model. Pharmacokinetics (PK) as well as cytokine data were collected in humanised mice after iv injection of cibisatamab and CEACAM5-TCB which are binding with different binding affinities to the tumour antigen carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA). The PK data were modelled and coupled to a previously published physiologically based PK model. Corresponding cytokine release profiles were compared to in vitro data. The PK model provided a good fit to the data and precise estimation of key PK parameters. High tumour interstitial concentrations were observed for both TCBs, influenced by their respective target binding affinities. In conclusion, we developed a tailored experimental method to measure PK and cytokine release in plasma and at the site of drug action, namely in the tumour. Integrating those data into a mathematical model enabled to investigate the impact of target affinity on tumour accumulation and can have implications for the PKPD assessment of the therapeutic antibodies.
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- 2021
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27. Neglected interstitial space in malaria recurrence and treatment.
- Author
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Zhang, Qiang, Ao, Zhuo, Hu, Nan, Zhu, Yuting, Liao, Fulong, and Han, Dong
- Abstract
The interstitial space, a widespread fluid-filled compartment throughout the body, is related to many pathophysiological alterations and diseases, attracting increasing attention. The vital role of interstitial space in malaria infection and treatment has been neglected current research efforts. We confirmed the reinfection capacity of parasites sequestrated in interstitial space, which replenish the mechanism of recurrence. Malaria parasite-infected mice were treated with artemisinin-loaded liposomes through the interstitial space and exhibited a better therapeutic response. Notably, compared with oral administration, interstitial administration showed an unexpectedly high activation and recruitment of immune cells, and resulted in better clearance of sequestered parasites from organs, and enhanced pathological recovery. The interstitial route of administration prolongs the blood circulation time of artemisinin and increases its plasma concentration, and may compensate for the inefficiency of oral administration and the nanotoxicity of intravenous administration, providing a potential strategy for infectious disease therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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28. A CARTOGRAPHY OF ANGRY INDIAN GODDESSES TOWARDS NOMADIC AFFECT.
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MUKHERJEE, INDRANI
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FEMALE friendship ,GODDESSES ,CARTOGRAPHY ,FIFTEENTH century ,POSTHUMANISM - Abstract
Copyright of Indialogs, Spanish Journal of India Studies is the property of Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Habitat-specific effects of interstitial space between stream substrate particles on the colonization of aquatic organisms.
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Natsumeda, Takaharu and Iguchi, Kei'ichiro
- Subjects
- *
COLONIZATION , *RIVERS , *CADDISFLIES , *SPACE , *PARTICLES , *AQUATIC organisms - Abstract
We examined the effects of interstitial space between stream substrate particles on the colonization of aquatic organisms using three types of substrates (gravel, a cobble, and a cobble on gravel) in a riffle and pool of a temperate stream. Significantly greater abundance, wet weight, diversity (H′), taxonomic richness, and evenness of aquatic organisms were found in the riffle than in the pool, and the interstitial space substrate (i.e., a cobble on gravel) had significantly greater abundance, wet weight, and taxonomic richness of aquatic organisms than did the cobble substrate. Of the 13 families observed in the experiments, larval net-spinning caddisfly (Hydropsychidae) dominated the riffle in terms of the abundance and wet weight; chironomid larvae dominated both the riffle and the pool in terms of abundance. Simple main effect tests indicated significant effects of substrate on the abundance and wet weight of larval caddisfly in the riffle, and post hoc tests on substrate in each habitat indicated that the abundance and wet weight of larval caddisfly on interstitial space substrate were significantly greater than those on cobble substrate in the riffle. Our results suggest the importance of interstitial space between stream substrates in riffles to ensure higher colonization rates of aquatic organisms such as larval net-spinning caddisflies characterized as filter feeders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Introduction: Contested Urbanism in Delhi’s Interstitial Spaces
- Author
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Chakravarty, Surajit, Negi, Rohit, Zérah, Marie-Hélène, Series editor, Chakravarty, Surajit, editor, and Negi, Rohit, editor
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Interstitial Spaces: A Model for Transgressive Processes
- Author
-
Hussénius, Anita, Scantlebury, Kathryn, Andersson, Kristina, Gullberg, Annica, Bull, Jacob, editor, and Fahlgren, Margaretha, editor
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Entre identidades, violencias y resistencias. La frontera como espacio intersticial
- Author
-
Agustina Belén Varela Manograsso
- Subjects
Cuerpos migrantes ,Resistance ,Resistencias ,Violencias ,Violence ,Interstitial space ,Migrant bodies ,Philosophy ,Borders ,1 - Filosofía y psicología [CDU] ,Fronteras ,Espacio intersticial ,Identities ,Identidades - Abstract
En las últimas décadas se han multiplicado las fronteras físicas y simbólicas. Los Estados han militarizado sus fronteras territoriales convirtiendo a la cuestión migratoria no sólo en una amenaza para la soberanía nacional, sino también para la identidad colectiva e individual. El avance de las identidades nacionales en nuestra sociedad global cada vez más interdependiente está generando distintos tipos de violencias que confluyen en las fronteras, desencadenando la desaparición física y simbólica de los cuerpos migrantes que las habitan e intentan cruzarlas. Sin embargo, en esas mismas fronteras emergen novedosas formas de resistencia a pesar y a partir de la experiencia de la violencia. Este artículo analiza esta ambivalencia de las fronteras como espacios intersticiales donde se activan distintas formas de violencias, pero también prácticas mediadoras entre el adentro y el afuera de la comunidad política que articulan nuevas subjetividades a raíz de ellas. In recent decades, physical and symbolic borders have multiplied. States have militarized their territorial borders, turning the migration issue not only into a threat to national sovereignty, but also to the collective and individual identity. The rise of national identities in our increasingly interdependent global society is generating different modalities of violence that converge at borders, triggering the physical and symbolic disappearance of the migrant bodies that inhabit them and try to cross them. However, in those same borders, new forms of resistance emerge despite and from the experience of violence. This paper analyses this ambivalence of borders as interstitial spaces where different modalities of violence are activated, but also mediating practices between the inside and out side political community that articulate new subjectivities as a result of them.
- Published
- 2022
33. Myocardial interstitial matrix as novel target for succinic acid treatment strategies during experimental hypobaric hypoxia
- Author
-
Igor V. Zadnipryany, Tatiana P. Sataieva, Olga S. Tretiakova, and Walery Zukow
- Subjects
rats ,myocardium ,hypobaric hypoxia ,interstitial space ,fibroblasts ,fibrosis ,succinic acid ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Objective — Quantitative morphological studies of myocardial cellular elements. Aim of research is to study myocardial interstitial matrix with and without succinic acid treatment in the rats exposed to intermittent hypobaric hypoxia. Material and Methods — The study was conducted on 26 adult males of Wistar rats weighing 220-310 g, divided into 3 groups. The first control group consisted of 6 intact animals. The second group included 10 rats which were exposed to hypobaric hypoxia without medication for 30 days. Third group was composed of 10 rats, which were medicated by succinic acid solution which was injected intraperitoneally once a day at the rate of 0.5 ml/100 g of animal body weight 15 minutes before hypoxic exposure for 30 days. Results — In the second group almost the entire stroma was consisting of the thickened collagen fibers and proliferating cells of the connective tissue. Their total number increased relatively to the control by 31% initiating the processes of collagenases. An increase in the number of myofibroblasts which was observed in the hypoxic rat heart in the second group followed by high MPP-9 expression. Hypoxic effects in the third group were not significantly different from control according to the observed changes in the stroma. In rats of the third group the capillary diameter exceeded the indicator of the second group, but was significantly lower than the control indicator. Accordingly, compared with the series without correction, the cross-sectional area of the capillaries was increased – 28.44±0.14 μm2 against 24.53±0.20 μm2. The total cross-sectional area of the capillaries is 0.77±0.10 x103 μm2. The relative surface area of the vascular area was lower than the control by 21.8%. Conclusion ― Fibrosis in the myocardium inevitably leads to increased myocardial stiffness, resulting in systolic and diastolic dysfunction, neurohormonal activation and, ultimately, heart failure caused by hypobaric hypoxia. Reduced oxygen delivery by microvascular damage, increased perivascular fibrosis may contribute to contractile failure. Succinic acid combined with inosine acts as a high-energy phosphate reserve, to maintain adenosine triphosphate at levels sufficient to support contractile function.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Evaluation of Impedance and Reactance in the Intensive Treatment of Lymphoedema
- Author
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Jose Maria Pereira De Godoy, Henrique Jose Pereira De Godoy, and Maria De Fatima Guerreiro Godoy
- Subjects
interstitial space ,lower limb ,lymphoedema treatment ,Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: Lymphoedema is a progressive, chronic, clinical sign of an abnormal accumulation of macromolecules in the interstitial space that causes a buildup of fluids. Aim: To evaluate specific data of bioimpedance such as impedance and reactance in the evolution of lymphoedema treatment. Materials and Methods: A prospective quantitative study was enrolled in the Clinica Godoy-Brazil in May 2013, on 24 patients with bilateral lower limb lymphoedema (48 legs). Bioimpedance variables (impedance and reactance) were evaluated before and after five days of intensive treatment (mechanical lymphatic therapy, cervical stimulation, manual lymphatic therapy and grosgrain compression stockings) of the legs with the results being compared with a control group. The patients of the control group had arm lymphoedema without clinical evidence of swelling of the legs. All patients were weighed and underwent volumetry by the water displacement technique or perimetry (elephantiasis), and multi-frequency bioelectrical impedance before treatment and at the beginning and at the end of each day of treatment. The results are reported as descriptive statistics and Kruskal-Wallis test (Conover-Inman). Results: Statistically significant differences were found between the study and control groups for impedance (p-value
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Stimulation Modeling on Three-Dimensional Anisotropic Diffusion of MRI Tracer in the Brain Interstitial Space
- Author
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Wei Wang, Qingyuan He, Jin Hou, Dehua Chui, Mingyong Gao, Aibo Wang, Hongbin Han, and Huipo Liu
- Subjects
interstitial space ,anisotropic diffusion ,mathematical model ,brain ,magnetic resonance ,Gd-DTPA ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Purpose: To build a mathematical model based magnetic resonance (MR) method to simulate drug anisotropic distribution in vivo in the interstitial space (ISS) of the brain.Materials and Methods: An injection of signal intensity-related gadolinium-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (Gd-DTPA), which is an exogenous drug, was administered, and its diffusion was traced in the ISS of the brain using MRI. Dynamic MRI scans were performed to monitor and record the changes in signal intensity in each pixel of the region of interest. The transport parameters were calculated using the modified equation to simulate three-dimensional anisotropic diffusion, which was resolved using a Laplace transform and a linear regressive model.Results: After Gd-DTPA was introduced into the caudate nucleus, its distribution was demonstrated in real time. As the Gd-DTPA gradually cleared, the associated hyperintensity attenuated over time. The average diffusion coefficient (D) and the clearance rate constant (k) were (1.305 ± 0.364) × 10−4 mm2/s and (1.40 ± 0.206) × 10−5 s−1, respectively.Discussion: The combination of trace-based MRI and modified diffusion mathematical models can visualize and measure the three-dimensional anisotropic distribution of drugs in the ISS of the brain.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Sweet Spots: In-Between Spaces in New Orleans
- Author
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Toulouse, Teresa A., editor and Ewell, Barbara C., editor
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Repeated determination of moxifloxacin concentrations in interstitial space fluid of muscle and subcutis in septic patients.
- Author
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Nowak, Hartmuth, Weidemann, Caroline, Martini, Stefan, Oesterreicher, Zoe Anne, Dorn, Christoph, Adamzik, Michael, Kees, Frieder, Zeitlinger, Markus, and Rahmel, Tim
- Subjects
- *
EXTRACELLULAR fluid , *MUSCLES , *SPACE plasmas , *THIGH , *MOXIFLOXACIN , *CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Background: For an effective antimicrobial treatment, it is crucial that antibiotics reach sufficient concentrations in plasma and tissue. Currently no data exist regarding moxifloxacin plasma concentrations and exposure levels in tissue under septic conditions.Objectives: To determine the pharmacokinetics of moxifloxacin in plasma and interstitial space fluid over a prolonged period.Patients and Methods: Ten septic patients were treated with 400 mg of moxifloxacin once a day; on days 1, 3 and 5 of treatment plasma sampling and microdialysis in the subcutis and muscle of the upper thigh were performed to determine concentrations of moxifloxacin in different compartments. This trial was registered in the German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS, register number DRKS00012985).Results: Mean unbound fraction of moxifloxacin in plasma was 85.5±3.4%. On day 1, Cmax in subcutis and muscle was 2.8±1.8 and 2.5±1.3 mg/L, respectively, AUC was 24.8±15.1 and 21.3±10.5 mg·h/L, respectively, and fAUC0-24/MIC was 100.9±62.9 and 86.5±38.3 h, respectively. Cmax for unbound moxifloxacin in plasma was 3.5±0.9 mg/L, AUC was 23.5±7.5 mg·h/L and fAUC0-24/MIC was 91.6±24.8 h. Key pharmacokinetic parameters on days 3 and 5 showed no significant differences. Clearance was higher than in healthy adults, but tissue concentrations were comparable, most likely due to a lower protein binding.Conclusions: Surprisingly, the first dose already achieved exposure comparable to steady-state conditions. The approved daily dose of 400 mg was adequate in our patient population. Thus, it seems that in septic patients a loading dose on the first day of treatment with moxifloxacin is not required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Experimental study of muscle permeability under various loading conditions.
- Author
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Nudel, Iftah, Hadas, Or, and deBotton, Gal
- Subjects
- *
PERMEABILITY , *MUSCLES , *COMPARTMENT syndrome , *PERMEABILITY measurement , *SKIN permeability - Abstract
The permeability of a few muscle tissues under various loading conditions is characterized. To this end, we develop an experimental apparatus for permeability measurements which is based on the falling head method. We also design a dedicated sample holder which directs the flow through the tissue and simultaneously enables to pre-compress it. Although outside of the scope of this work, we recall that the permeability of the muscle has a crucial role in the pathophysiology of various diseases such as the compartment syndrome. Following the measurements of porcine, beef, chicken and lamb samples, we find that the permeability decreases with the pre-compression of the tissue. Similar decrease is observed following dehydration of the tissue. Remarkably, we find that within a physiological pressure range the permeabilities of the various samples are quite similar. This suggests that the muscle permeability is governed by a common micro-mechanical mechanism in which the blood propagates through the interstitial spaces. Under physiological loading conditions, the muscle permeability is in the range between 80 and 230 mm 4 N s . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Three-Compartment Pharmacokinetic Model to Predict the Interstitial Concentration of Talaporfin Sodium in the Myocardium for Photodynamic Therapy: A Method Combining Measured Fluorescence and Analysis of the Compartmental Origin of the Fluorescence.
- Author
-
Yuko Uno, Emiyu Ogawa, Eitaro Aiyoshi, and Tsunenori Arai
- Subjects
- *
MYOCARDIUM , *PHOTODYNAMIC therapy , *FLUORIMETRY , *CONJUGATE gradient methods , *FLUORESCENCE , *SODIUM compounds - Abstract
To evaluate the effectiveness of photodynamic therapy occurring in the interstitial space of the myocardium, we estimated the interstitial concentration of talaporfin sodium in the canine myocardium by constructing a three-compartment pharmacokinetic model based on measured changes in talaporfin sodium plasma concentration and myocardial fluorescence. Differential rate equations of talaporfin sodium concentration in the plasma, interstitial space, and cell compartment were developed with individual compartment volume, concentration, and rate constants. Using measured volume ratios based on histological examinations, we defined that the myocardial fluorescence consisted of the linear addition of fluorescence generated from these three compartments. The rate constants were obtained by fitting to minimize the sum of the squared errors between the measured talaporfin sodium concentrations and the calculated concentrations divided by the number of data points using the conjugate gradient method in MATLAB. We confirmed that this fitting operation may be appropriate, because a coefficient of determination between the measured talaporfin sodium changes and the calculated concentrations using our equations was 0.99. Consequently, to estimate the interstitial concentration in the canine myocardium, we propose a three-compartment pharmacokinetic model construction methodology using measured changes in talaporfin sodium plasma concentration and changes in myocardial fluorescence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Stimulation Modeling on Three-Dimensional Anisotropic Diffusion of MRI Tracer in the Brain Interstitial Space.
- Author
-
Wang, Wei, He, Qingyuan, Hou, Jin, Chui, Dehua, Gao, Mingyong, Wang, Aibo, Han, Hongbin, and Liu, Huipo
- Subjects
MATHEMATICAL models ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging of the brain ,MAGNETIC anisotropy ,LAPLACE transformation ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Purpose: To build a mathematical model based magnetic resonance (MR) method to simulate drug anisotropic distribution in vivo in the interstitial space (ISS) of the brain. Materials and Methods: An injection of signal intensity-related gadolinium-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (Gd-DTPA), which is an exogenous drug, was administered, and its diffusion was traced in the ISS of the brain using MRI. Dynamic MRI scans were performed to monitor and record the changes in signal intensity in each pixel of the region of interest. The transport parameters were calculated using the modified equation to simulate three-dimensional anisotropic diffusion, which was resolved using a Laplace transform and a linear regressive model. Results: After Gd-DTPA was introduced into the caudate nucleus, its distribution was demonstrated in real time. As the Gd-DTPA gradually cleared, the associated hyperintensity attenuated over time. The average diffusion coefficient (D) and the clearance rate constant (k) were (1.305 ± 0.364) × 10
−4 mm2 /s and (1.40 ± 0.206) × 10−5 s−1 , respectively. Discussion: The combination of trace-based MRI and modified diffusion mathematical models can visualize and measure the three-dimensional anisotropic distribution of drugs in the ISS of the brain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Hypoalbuminemia: Pathogenesis and Clinical Significance.
- Author
-
Soeters, Peter B., Wolfe, Robert R., and Shenkin, Alan
- Subjects
SERUM albumin ,EXERCISE ,INTENSIVE care units ,MUSCLE mass - Abstract
Hypoalbuminemia is associated with inflammation. Despite being addressed repeatedly in the literature, there is still confusion regarding its pathogenesis and clinical significance. Inflammation increases capillary permeability and escape of serum albumin, leading to expansion of interstitial space and increasing the distribution volume of albumin. The half-life of albumin has been shown to shorten, decreasing total albumin mass. These 2 factors lead to hypoalbuminemia despite increased fractional synthesis rates in plasma. Hypoalbuminemia, therefore, results from and reflects the inflammatory state, which interferes with adequate responses to events like surgery or chemotherapy, and is associated with poor quality of life and reduced longevity. Increasing or decreasing serum albumin levels are adequate indicators, respectively, of improvement or deterioration of the clinical state. In the interstitium, albumin acts as the main extracellular scavenger, antioxidative agent, and as supplier of amino acids for cell and matrix synthesis. Albumin infusion has not been shown to diminish fluid requirements, infection rates, and mortality in the intensive care unit, which may imply that there is no body deficit or that the quality of albumin "from the shelf" is unsuitable to play scavenging and antioxidative roles. Management of hypoalbuminaemia should be based on correcting the causes of ongoing inflammation rather than infusion of albumin. After the age of 30 years, muscle mass and function slowly decrease, but this loss is accelerated by comorbidity and associated with decreasing serum albumin levels. Nutrition support cannot fully prevent, but slows down, this chain of events, especially when combined with physical exercise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Beyond Blood: African Trypanosomes on the Move.
- Author
-
Krüger, Timothy, Schuster, Sarah, and Engstler, Markus
- Subjects
- *
PARASITES , *TRYPANOSOMA , *RINDERPEST , *EPIDEMIC encephalitis , *PARASITOLOGY - Abstract
While the African trypanosomes are among the best-studied parasites, almost everything we know about them is based on the brucei group, which includes the human-infective sleeping sickness parasites and the causative agent of the cattle plague nagana. The past decades have seen an ever-more detailed molecular dissection of Trypanosoma brucei , which today is an accepted cell biological model system. Therefore, recent work on some fundamental aspects of trypanosome biology surprises, as we realise that our knowledge about parasite motility and tropism in the changing host microenvironments is far from definitive. In this review, we highlight a few examples of neglected parasitological questions, which may open (or reopen) a new chapter of trypanosome research. Highlights The bloodstream may not be the primary habitat for bloodstream trypanosomes. The interstitial system may serve as a systemic and well-connected trypanosome niche. The motion pattern of the diverse trypanosome life cycle stages represent adaptations to changing microenvironments. Little is known about life cycle stages in the brain. The tsetse fly is a tractable model system for studies on the mechanobiology of host–parasite interactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Показники кореляційної залежності в постраждалих із розвитком синдрому поліорганної недостатності
- Author
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I.R. Malysh and L.V. Zgrzheblovskaya
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Creatinine ,Pathology ,Innate immune system ,business.industry ,Cumulative dose ,Sodium ,Renal function ,chemistry.chemical_element ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Immune system ,Blood serum ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Interstitial space ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business - Abstract
Стаття присвячена вивченню кореляційної залежності між кумулятивними дозами колоїдів, кристалоїдів та показниками життєво важливих функцій на 12-ту добу посттравматичного періоду. Аналіз кореляційної залежності показав, що кумулятивна доза колоїдів тісно співвідносилася з показниками об’єму та балансу позаклітинної рідини, показниками вентиляції та газообміну. Це, можливо, пов’язано з тим, що проникнення молекул колоїдів у позасудинний простір на фоні синдрому капілярного витоку сприяло посиленню вираженості інтерстиціальної гідратації, порушенню процесів газообміну. При вивченні показників функцій нирок виявлено тісну негативну кореляцію між кумулятивною дозою колоїдів та показниками фільтраційного градієнта, швидкістю гломерулярної фільтрації та тісну позитивну — між рівнем креатиніну в сироватці крові. При дослідженні показників імунної відповіді виявилося, що відмічається тісна негативна кореляція між кумулятивною дозою колоїдів і фагоцитарним показником та величиною фагоцитарного числа. Мабуть, фагоцитування молекул колоїдів, що перебувають в інтерстиціальному просторі, клітинами моноцитарно-макрофагальної системи викликає в подальшому значні порушення фагоцитозу, а потім, ймовірно, і антигенної презентації. При вивченні кореляційної залежності між кумулятивною дозою кристалоїдів та показниками основних життєво важливих функцій виявлено, що практично була відсутня тісна кореляція, за винятком рівнів натрію та хлоридів у сироватці крові.
- Published
- 2022
44. The Glymphatic System: A Review of the Challenges in Visualizing its Structure and Function with MR Imaging
- Author
-
Shinji Naganawa and Toshiaki Taoka
- Subjects
Central Nervous System ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Central nervous system ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Meninges ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Interstitial space ,Interstitial fluid ,Normal pressure hydrocephalus ,medicine ,Animals ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,business.industry ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Glymphatic system ,Subarachnoid space ,business ,Glymphatic System ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Superior sagittal sinus - Abstract
The central nervous system (CNS) was previously thought to be the only organ system lacking lymphatic vessels to remove waste products from the interstitial space. Recently, based on the results from animal experiments, the glymphatic system was hypothesized. In this hypothesis, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) enters the periarterial spaces, enters the interstitial space of the brain parenchyma via aquaporin-4 (AQP4) channels in the astrocyte end feet, and then exits through the perivenous space, thereby clearing waste products. From the perivenous space, the interstitial fluid drains into the subarachnoid space and meningeal lymphatics of the parasagittal dura. It has been reported that the glymphatic system is particularly active during sleep. Impairment of glymphatic system function might be a cause of various neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, normal pressure hydrocephalus, glaucoma, and others. Meningeal lymphatics regulate immunity in the CNS. Many researchers have attempted to visualize the function and structure of the glymphatic system and meningeal lymphatics in vivo using MR imaging. In this review, we aim to summarize these in vivo MR imaging studies and discuss the significance, current limitations, and future directions. We also discuss the significance of the perivenous cyst formation along the superior sagittal sinus, which is recently discovered in the downstream of the glymphatic system.
- Published
- 2022
45. Electrokinetic Perfusion Through Three-Dimensional Culture Reduces Cell Mortality
- Author
-
Anyesha Sarkar and Mark A. Messerli
- Subjects
Cell Survival ,0206 medical engineering ,Cell ,Biomedical Engineering ,Bioengineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Biochemistry ,Biomaterials ,Extracellular matrix ,03 medical and health sciences ,Electrokinetic phenomena ,Bioreactors ,Interstitial space ,In vivo ,Mass transfer ,medicine ,Viability assay ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Tissue Engineering ,Cell growth ,Chemistry ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Extracellular Matrix ,Perfusion ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biophysics - Abstract
Cell proliferation and survival are dependent on mass transfer. In vivo, fluid flow promotes mass transfer through the vasculature and interstitial space, providing a continuous supply of nutrients...
- Published
- 2021
46. Measuring Oxygen in Living Tissue: Intravascular, Interstitial, and 'Tissue' Oxygen Measurements
- Author
-
Wilson, David F., Finikova, Olga S., Lebedev, Artem Y., Apreleva, Sophia, Pastuszko, Anna, Lee, William M. F., Vinogradov, Sergei A., LaManna, Joseph C., editor, Puchowicz, Michelle A., editor, Xu, Kui, editor, Harrison, David K, editor, and Bruley, Duane F., editor
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Edema
- Author
-
Vallo, Stefan, Bartsch, Georg, Merseburger, Axel S., editor, Kuczyk, Markus A., editor, and Moul, Judd W., editor
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. In vivo mimicking model for solid tumor towards hydromechanics of tissue deformation and creation of necrosis.
- Author
-
Dey, Bibaswan, Sekhar, G. P. Raja, and Mukhopadhyay, Sourav Kanti
- Subjects
- *
TUMORS , *FLUID mechanics , *NECROSIS , *EXTRACELLULAR fluid , *PECLET number - Abstract
The present work addresses transvascular and interstitial fluid transport inside a solid tumor surrounded by normal tissue (close to an in vivo mimicking setup). In general, biological tissues behave like a soft porous material and show mechanical behavior towards the fluid motion through the interstitial space. In general, forces like viscous drag that are associated with the fluid flow may compress the tissue material. On the macroscopic level, we try to model the motion of fluids and macromolecules through the interstitial space of solid tumor and the normal tissue layer. The transvascular fluid transport is assumed to be governed by modified Starling’s law. The poroelastohydrodynamics (interstitial hydrodynamics and the deformation of tissue material) inside the tumor and normal tissue regions is modeled using linearized biphasic mixture theory. Correspondingly, the velocity distribution of fluid is coupled to the displacement field of the solid phase (mainly cellular phase and extracellular matrix) in both the normal and tumor tissue regions. The corresponding velocity field is used within the transport reaction equation for fluids and macromolecules through interstitial space to get the overall solute (e.g., nutrients, drug, and other macromolecules) distribution. This study justifies that the presence of the normal tissue layer plays a significant role in delaying/assisting necrosis inside the tumor tissue. It is observed that the exchange process of fluids and macromolecules across the interface of the tumor and normal tissue affects the effectiveness factor corresponding to the tumor tissue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Understanding Qi Running in the Meridians as Interstitial Fluid Flowing via Interstitial Space of Low Hydraulic Resistance.
- Author
-
Zhang, Wei-bo, Jia, De-xian, Li, Hong-yan, Wei, Yu-long, Yan, Huang, Zhao, Peng-na, Gu, Fei-fei, Wang, Guang-jun, and Wang, Yan-ping
- Subjects
EXTRACELLULAR fluid ,ACUPUNCTURE points ,BLOOD circulation ,HUMAN body ,HERBAL medicine ,QI (Chinese philosophy) ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Qi, blood and the meridians are fundamental concepts in Chinese medicine (CM), which are components of the human body and maintain physiological function. Pathological changes of qi, blood and meridians may lead to discomfort and disease. Treatment with acupuncture or herbal medicine aims to regulate qi and blood so as to recover normal function of the meridians. This paper explores the nature of qi as well as compares and correlates them with the structures of the human body. We propose a conceptualization of qi as being similar to the interstitial fluid, and the meridians as being similar to interstitial space of low hydraulic resistance in the body. Hence, qi running in the meridians can be understood as interstitial fluid flowing via interstitial space of low hydraulic resistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. ‘As foreign as it gets’: indigenous immigrants, transnationality, and rage in Sherman Alexie’s The Business of Fancydancing.
- Author
-
Marciniak, Katarzyna
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,NATIVE Americans ,FILMMAKERS - Abstract
The article considers Sherman Alexie’s directorial debut, The Business of Fancydancing (2002), as an important contribution to transnational cinema. It invites us to review our conceptions of outside/ inside, liminality, borders, and interstitiality in the light of the complicated political status of Native Americans—as (un)belonging members of dependent nations. It asks what cinematic aesthetic might be adequate to the contingent sovereignty of Native Americans. I examine the way a form of mise-en-abyme (in a story featuring a Native American poet heralded by non-Natives but rejected as ‘selling out’ by his own people) informs the challenges Native American filmmakers face themselves in trying to avoid the exploitation of their own culture. The analysis acknowledges how the ‘redundancy’ of Native Americans is given expressive form through a sonic and visual play with ‘indigenous rage’ and through discontinuous narrative structure. I argue that the film attests to Alexie’s preparedness to risk potentially counterproductive representations of indigenous self-realization in the context of a damaging history of cultural appropriation, and explore how Fancydancing attempts to transgress borders without erecting new ones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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