In vitro evaluation of hyperosmotic canine plasma suitable for infusion Edwards, Thomas H.; Meledeo, Michael A.; Peltier, Grantham C. ...
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care,
January/February 2024, 2024 Jan-Feb, 2024-01-00, 20240101, Letnik:
34, Številka:
1
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Odprti dostop
Objective
To determine the characteristics of canine freeze‐dried plasma (cFDP) as it is serially diluted with sterile water.
Design
In vitro experimental study.
Setting
Government blood and ...coagulation research laboratory.
Animals
cFDP from a commercial manufacturer.
Interventions
Ten units of cFDP were reconstituted to 100%, 90%, 80%, 70%, 60%, 50%, and 40% of the recommended volume with sterile water. The resultant solutions were analyzed for coagulation factor activity (factors II, V, VII, VIII, IX, X, and XII as well as antithrombin), fibrinogen concentration, prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, viscosity, osmolality, and kaolin‐activated thromboelastography.
Measurements and Main Results
Viscosity, osmolality, and turbidity properties of plasma were increased in a reconstitution volume‐dependent manner, with the 40% suggested volume generating approximately 2‐fold increases in each. Similarly, factor activity levels and fibrinogen concentration increased by approximately 2‐fold over this range in a concentration‐dependent manner. Prothrombin time declined from 11.4 seconds at 100% volume to 10.9 seconds at 70% before increasing to 11.9 seconds at 40%. Activated partial thromboplastin time increased exponentially from 21.8 seconds at 100% rehydration to 100.0 seconds at 40%. R‐time on TEG increased from 3.1 to 13.9 minutes at 50% rehydration, while alpha angle declined from 61.3° to 24.7° over the same range, and the maximum amplitude initially increased from 13.2 mm at 100% water to 18.6 mm at 70% water before dropping back down to 14.6 mm at 50% water. No clotting was observed with 40% rehydration.
Conclusions
The creation of hyperosmotic plasma from cFDP appears feasible with preservation of concentrated coagulation factors, although there are some unexplained effects that happen to coagulation functions at the highest concentrations tested using only 40%–50% of recommended rehydration volume. Further studies are needed to evaluate the hyperosmotic product in vivo.
Background
Pain is a frequent and disabling symptom in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients. In this study we assess the frequency and intensity of pain, as well as its impact on the quality of life and ...activities of daily living, in a sample of MS patients.
Methods
One hundred and twenty eight MS patients underwent a neurological examination, a structured interview designed to assess pain, and a Medical Outcome 36-item Short Form Health Survey. Functional status was assessed by means of the Barthel Index (BI) and Rivermead Mobility Index. We also assessed the presence of depression, by means of the Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale, and fatigue, by means of the Fatigue Severity Scale. An algometer was used to measure thermal and discomfort thresholds in all of the patients and a group of 61 age- and sex-matched healthy subjects.
Results
Pain was present in 61 patients. No differences were found between patients with and those without pain in disease duration, disease form or Expanded Disability Status Scale and its functional systems. Patients with pain had a lower vitality score (p = 0.008), mental health score (p = 0.03) and physical (p < 0.001) and mental composite scores (p = 0.01) than patients without pain. Furthermore, there was a significant difference between patients with and those without pain in the BI (p = 0.04). Both thermal and discomfort thresholds, as assessed by means of the algometer, were statistically lower in MS patients than in controls, whereas no difference was observed between patients with and those without pain. There was a statistically significant improvement in the thermal threshold in patients with pain who were treated pharmacologically when compared with those who were not treated (p = 0.049).
Conclusion
The results of this study provide further evidence of the negative impact that the presence of pain has on both the quality of life and activities of daily living in MS patients. The lower thermal and discomfort thresholds observed in our MS patients, compared with controls, may represent a predisposition to develop pain during the course of the disease.
In this paper, we review some past and present trends in biodiversity conservation in Mexico and explore possible explanations of why, in spite of this long history of depredation and ineffective ...conservation policies, the ecosystems have been able to cope with and retain most of their biological components. We suggest a hypothesis based on the persistence of a complex mosaic of past and present traditional land uses as a possible explanation for this resilience. We propose an agenda for the scope of future conservation research and policy, particularly the need to take the socioeconomic context of environmental degradation into account. We put forth a series of questions that we think need to be investigated if the conservation research community is to participate in developing solutions for the future welfare of the human species and of biodiversity on earth.
The chicozapote (Manilkara zapota) is a tropical fruit tree that occurs in two morphologically distinct populations in the Yucatan peninsula of Mexico. Forest populations consist of tall, straight ...trees, while swamp populations have a short, shrub‐like growth form. Swamp populations also have smaller leaves, fruit and seeds. We performed a random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis on four different populations of chicozapote to test if there was a genetic component to this variation. The populations differed in respect to habitat type (swamp vs. forest) and geographical location (east vs. west). We surveyed 80 random primers, nine of which revealed interpopulation band differences (28 band differences in total). Unweighted pair group method analysis (UPGMA) and neighbour‐joining dendrograms showed no separation of individuals between the different populations. Analysis of the RAPD data showed no significant differences between swamp and forest populations (P > 0.1). The lack of genetic differentiation suggests a failure to find a correlation between the RAPD loci and adaptive traits. The observed morphological differences between the swamp and forest populations of chicozapote may either be that gene flow has prevented a build‐up of neutral marker differences or a plastic response to differences in habitat.
Abstract
Background
Takotsubo Syndrome (TTS) is an acute and transient myocardial disfunction associated with chest pain, electrocardiographic changes and minimal myocardial enzymatic release ...mimicking acute myocardial infarction but without significant coronary artery disease. Physical or emotional stress play a central role in the pathogenesisof this cardiomyopathy. Several variants have been described including the classic type, reverse Takotsubo, midventricular type and focal type. Mid ventricular Takotsubo is characterized by circumferential mid–ventricular hypokinesia with hypercontractility of base and apex. This atypical variant is one of the most rare form that occurs in 15% of patients with Takotsubo syndrome. We report a Takotsubo case with mid–ventricular pattern in a postmenopausal woman with COVID–19 interstitial pneumonia.
Clinical case
A 56–year–old female patient was admitted to our intensive cardiac care unit for acute chest pain and dyspnea. In clinical history hypertension, dyslipidemia, anemia and schizophrenia were documented. COVID–19 molecular test was positive. CT scan showed multiple ground–glass opacities bilaterally. Hemodynamic parameters were normal but ECG showed ST–segment elevation and T waves inversion in the lateral precordial leads. Troponin–I was elevated and peaked at 1704 ng/mL. A transthoracic echocardiogram showed ballooning of the midventricular segments with hyperkinesis of the basal and apical segment. Coronary angiography showed normal coronaries. The patient was treated with beta–blockers and intravenous fluid infusion. After 10 days in hospital, echocardiography showed normalization of regional contractility and improvement of ejection fraction. The patient was discharged in good condition.
Conclusions
Recent studies have reported an increase in TTS incidence during the COVID–19 pandemic. SARS-CoV-2 infection induces physical and psychological stress in patients, which may lead to an increase in the risk of TTS development. The pathophysiology of COVID-19-induced TTS still remains unclear. The mortalityrate of TTS is higher (36.5%) in COVID–19 patients.
Neotropical tree crops are affected by a combination of biological and human factors that complicate the study of genetic diversity and crop evolution. Genetic diversity and relationships among ...southern Mexican populations and horticultural collections of Theobroma cacao(chocolate, cocoa, cacao) are examined in light of the agricultural practices of the Maya. Collections of cacao were obtained from the extremes of its geographic range including archeological sites in southern Mexico where cacao was first domesticated. Genetic diversity was assayed by 57 informative random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) marker loci. A unique sample of the total diversity found in this study exists in the southern Mexican populations. These populations are significantly different from all other cacao with regards to their profile of RAPD bands, including the 'criollo' variety, their morphological and geographical group. A population of cacao found in a sinkhole (cenote) in northern Yucatan with genetic affinities to populations in Chiapas suggests the Maya maintained plants far away from their native habitat. This finding concurs with known agroforestry practices of the Maya. Modern efforts to increase germplasm of tropical tree crops such as cacao should carefully examine archeological sites where genetic diversity, either deliberately or by chance, was collected and maintained by ancient cultures.
FADD (also known as Mort-1) is a signal transducer downstream of cell death receptor CD95 (also called Fas). CD95, tumor necrosis factor receptor type 1 (TNFR-1), and death receptor 3 (DR3) did not ...induce apoptosis in FADD-deficient embryonic fibroblasts, whereas DR4, oncogenes E1A and c-myc, and chemotherapeutic agent adriamycin did. Mice with a deletion in the FADD gene did not survive beyond day 11.5 of embryogenesis; these mice showed signs of cardiac failure and abdominal hemorrhage. Chimeric embryos showing a high contribution of FADD null mutant cells to the heart reproduce the phenotype of FADD-deficient mutants. Thus, not only death receptors, but also receptors that couple to developmental programs, may use FADD for signaling.
The purpose of this study was to describe the prenatal formation of the human mandibular canal. Since bony canals develop in prenatal life around the nerve paths, it was assumed that the canal ...pattern could reflect the pattern of innervation of the dentition. Mapping of this early canal pattern does not appear to have been undertaken before. The material consisted of anthropological mandibles from the National Institute of Anthropology and History, Mexico City. A total of 302 human hemimandibles from the latter half of the prenatal period was investigated. The length, measured from the mental symphysis to the mandibular condyle, ranged from 28 to 60 mm. The dento-alveolar maturity was classified in two stages according to the appearance of alveolar sockets of deciduous and first permanent molars. The mandibles were radiographed with guttapercha points inserted into the canal openings (foramina) on the lingual surfaces of the mandibular rami. The study showed that the canal to the incisors appeared first, followed by the canal to the primary molars, and last by the one or more canals to the first permanent molars. In the most mature group, three different canals always occurred in each hemimandible. The canals were directed from the lingual surface of the mandibular ramus toward the different tooth groups. The inferior alveolar nerve presumably occurs in the mandible as three individual nerve paths originating at different stages of development. It is suggested that rapid prenatal growth and remodeling in the ramus region result in a gradual coalescence of the canal entrances that is obvious at birth. It is hypothesized that the pattern of tooth agenesis within the three groups of teeth is related to the three separate paths of innervation of the dentition.