Abstract Although 30-min transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (30-min tMCAo) causes reproducible subcortical infarction in rats, it is difficult to evaluate the resulting neurological deficit ...using common behavioral tests such as the rota-rod test, adhesive-removal test, or narrow beam test. Establishment of a method of quantitative evaluation would help to develop a novel therapeutic approach to treat cerebral infarction. To solve this problem, we examined whether the neurological deficit could be detected by the Montoya staircase test or methamphetamine-induced rotation, which are commonly used in a Parkinson disease model induced by intrastriatal injection of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA). From 10 to 14 days after tMCAo, the Montoya staircase test showed significant clumsiness in forelimb tasks contralateral to the lesion side, whereas sham-operated rats showed no significant clumsiness in both forelimbs. The number of ipsilateral rotations induced by methamphetamine was also increased in tMCAo-rats at 21 days after tMCAo. Although Pearson's correlations coefficient showed that the results of these tests were correlated with the infarction volume, there was no significant correlation between the results of these two tests. These findings imply that the neurological deficit detected by both tests might reflect the severity of ischemic injury, but each test might evaluate different aspects of neurological deficit. Thus, the Montoya staircase test and methamphetamine-induced rotation are useful to evaluate neurological deficit in the chronic stage of subcortical infarction induced by 30-min tMCAo.
A total of 850 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma seen during the last 8 years were analyzed retrospectively for survival in relation to treatment and disease stage. A new staging scheme based on ...tumor size, ascites, jaundice and serum albumin was used. Clearly, the prognosis depended on disease stage. The median survival of 229 patients who received no specific treatment was 1.6 months, 0.7 month for Stage III patients, 2.0 months for Stage II, and 8.3 months for Stage I. The median survival of Stage I patients who had hepatic resection (n = 115) was 25.6 months and Stage II patients with resection (n = 42) was 12.2 months. In patients who had a small cancer (≤25% of liver area in size) the median survival was 29.0 months. Survival of the surgically treated patients, which represented a highly selected group, was better than that of medically treated patients of a comparable stage. Median survival of Stage I medically treated patients (n = 124) was 9.4 months, for Stage II (n = 290) 3.5 months, and for Stage III (n = 50) 1.6 months. Medical treatment prolonged survival in Stage II and III patients, but not in Stage I. Transcatheter arterial embolization gave a better survival compared with chemotherapy, whether intra‐arterial bolus administration of mitomycin C, systemic mitomycin C, or oral/rectal tegafur, in Stage II. Among various chemotherapeutic modalities, intra‐arterial bolus injection was superior to systemic chemotherapy in survival in Stage II. In Stage III, chemotherapy improved survival as compared with no specific treatment. The major causes of death were hepatic failure and gastrointestinal bleeding, probably due to the coexistent advanced cirrhosis. These results in survival are much improved over the past reports, and the differences are probably a result of earlier diagnosis and frequent hepatic resections.
The performance and mechanism of an acoustic feedback control applied to flow oscillation in a jet–wedge system were investigated experimentally. The self-sustained oscillations were effectively ...suppressed by imposing velocity fluctuations near the nozzle exit, which were fed by the fluctuating pressure signal at the wedge with a certain phase lag and feedback gain. The optimum condition for the imposed velocity amplitude was found to be as small as 1.2% of the jet velocity. The variation of the flow field with and without control was studied by flow visualization with high-speed camera and by flow-field measurements with particle image velocimetry. These observations indicate that the primary mode of the jet oscillation in the jet–wedge system is weakened by the feedback control to a level of secondary mode. This is mainly due to the destruction of the synchronized flow structure of the jet–wedge system by the active control, which is found in the mean and fluctuating velocity distribution and the velocity correlation over the wedge and along the jet shear-layers.
The small intestinal damage induced by the methotrexate (MTX) treatment results in malabsorption and diarrhea. The fluoresceinated methotrexate (F-MTX) may possibly be useful to study such effects of ...MTX on the small intestine. The purpose of this study is to characterize the transport of F-MTX in the small intestine in order to use it as a membrane transport and cellular marker of MTX. The transport of F-MTX in the rat small intestine (jejunum) was examined in the
in vitro everted segments of the intestine. The uptake was pH-dependent and showed a maximal effect at pH 6.0, which was the same as the results of MTX previously reported. Further, it was temperature-dependent and was inhibited by metabolic inhibitors, dinitrophenol and sodium azide, and by MTX. The transport kinetics at pH 6.0 in the mucosal solution and at pH 7.4 in the serosal solution was saturable with K
m of 0.48 ± 0.23 μM and V
max of 0.66 ± 0.24 pmol/cm/min and in addition, the passive diffusion was observed there. These results suggested that the transport of F-MTX was energy-dependent and was mediated by the same transporter as that of MTX, although, in addition to it, other transport mechanism might contribute to the F-MTX transport. Therefore F-MTX will be of great use to investigate the MTX transport system in the normal and diseased states of small intestine, using various fluorescence techniques like visualization of membrane-associated transport proteins.
Scant evidence has been reported on the evaluation of quality-of-life (QOL) in patients who had undergone surgical treatment due to pelvic floor prolapse including cystocele. The aim of this study is ...to evaluate the impact of surgical intervention on patients' QOL before and after surgery.
Between 1997 and 2007, 135 patients (median age: 66.6 years) with pelvic floor prolapse including cystocele underwent bladder neck suspension with anterior/posterior colporrhaphy. The follow-up period was 39.6 months. Seventy-two patients (53 %) had urinary incontinence. The cystocele was graded as mild (grade 2), moderate (grade 3), and severe (grade 4) in 35, 60, and 40, respectively, according to the Baden-Walker classification. A urodynamic study was performed in 69 patients (51 %) who had obstructive symptoms with 100 ml or more of postvoid residual urine. Postoperative QOL was longitudinally assessed in 114 patients by scoring three disease-specific items (sensation of vaginal bulging, obstructive symptoms, urinary incontinence), and one overall health-related QOL (HR-QOL), and compared with corresponding baseline scores.
A longitudinal study demonstrated that a significant improvement in these symptoms was sustained at a median follow-up of 62.2 months. HR-QOL was significantly associated with vitality assessed by SF 36 (p = 0.036). Multivariate analysis revealed that update urinary incontinence, pre-operative HR-QOL was independent prognostic factors for predicting postoperative patient's satisfaction.
Although surgical repair of pelvic floor prolapse can achieve acceptable results with intermediate-term durability as well as improving the QOL, preoperative patients' HR-QOL may be considered in the decision making process for treatment.
In an attempt to establish more sensitive long-term neurofunctional measurements for neonatal hypoxic–ischemic brain injury, we examined skilled motor task and brainstem functions in adult rats after ...neonatal cerebral hypoxia–ischemia (H-I), using a staircase test and auditory brainstem response (ABR), respectively. Seven-day-old rats underwent a combination of left common carotid artery ligation and exposure to 8% O
2 for 1 h (
n=16). The control animals only received sham operation (
n=16). At 3 months of age, the staircase test and ABR were performed. In the staircase test, H-I animals showed marked impairment of skilled forelimb use in the side contralateral to the occluded artery, and the degree of brain damage correlated significantly to skilled forelimb use. In the ABR, H-I animals showed brainstem dysfunction assessed by measuring interpeak latencies for waves III–V and I–V. We also examined the brainstem with antibodies specific for activated caspase-3, a protein involved in initiation of apoptosis, and observed that caspase-3 was activated in the ipsilateral inferior colliculus at 24 h after H-I. The present study shows that both the staircase test and ABR are sensitive and objective long-term neurofunctional measurements that can be used in future studies to assess therapeutic intervention in this neonatal cerebral H-I model.
The patient, a 61-year-old man, had sustained injuries in a traffic accident at the age of 26, for which he received a blood transfusion. Since 1988 (age, 49 years), abnormal hepatic function had ...been detected, and, because of the presence of hepatitis C virus antibodies, he was diagnosed as having type C chronic hepatitis. Based on a liver biopsy that was conducted in July 1992 (age, 53), a histological diagnosis of chronic active hepatitis (F(1)/A(2)) was made. Over a period of 6 months, starting in 1992, the patient was treated with interferon (IFNalpha-2a; total dosage, 720 MU). At the end of this regimen, the alanine aminotransferase level was normalized and serum hepatitis C virus-ribonucleic acid was negative. This condition was maintained until August 1996 (age, 57), after which the patient stopped reporting to our hospital. In June 2000 (age, 61) when he was hospitalized for an adhesive ileus, a small hepatocellular carcinoma (a solitary lesion measuring 18 mm in diameter) at S(8) was found, and it was extirpated by a segmental excision in July. The case is introduced to call attention to the need for longterm follow-up observation, even after effective IFN therapy.