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1.
Clin Hemorheol Microcirc ; 41(1): 57-66, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19136743

ABSTRACT

We investigated in patients with chronic venous insufficiency (CVI) and after compression therapy the fluxmotion within characteristic frequency bands, which were described earlier by Bracic and Stefanovska (Bull. Math. Biol. 60 (1998), 919-935).Therefore, the frequency spectra of laser Doppler flux data of the 36 patient's legs were compared with 41 legs of healthy subjects. In addition, 14 patients with CVI wore a compression stocking (interface pressure: 25-32 mmHg) or compression bandages and were measured after 4 weeks therapy. Data were analyzed by means of a Wavelet packet transformation (a combination of the Daubechies filter of order 4 and the Haar filter).We found significant differences between the patients and the healthy subjects in the frequency intervals of myogenic 0.06-0.16 Hz, respiratory 0.16-0.6 Hz and heart activity 0.6-1.6 Hz (p<0.05, Mann-Whitney U test). Furthermore, the main energy peak height in these frequency intervals increased with the severity of venous disease and was highest in patients with venous leg ulceration. Compression therapy had a significant influence in myogenic vessel activity, which has been proved by a positive frequency shift of 20% (p=0.007, one-sided by the exact Wilcoxon test).In venous disease fluxmotion was increased. Compression therapy over a period of 4 weeks improved myogenic vessel activity.


Subject(s)
Hemorheology/physiology , Microvessels/physiology , Skin/blood supply , Stockings, Compression , Venous Insufficiency/therapy , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Heart Rate/physiology , Humans , Leg/blood supply , Leg/physiopathology , Male , Middle Aged , Respiration , Venous Insufficiency/physiopathology , Young Adult
2.
Curr Med Res Opin ; 22(4): 739-50, 2006 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16684435

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) have an increased tendency to develop bacterial skin infections. Colonization with Staphylococcus aureus is known to be a major trigger and might also play a pathophysiological role. Because of their antiseptic action, silver-coated textiles suppress S. aureus colonization and toxin formation, thus damping the inflammatory reaction. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the clinical effectiveness and safety of a special silver textile in the treatment of patients suffering from acute AD. METHODS: In a randomized phase II monocenter parallel-group comparative study 30 patients were recruited (average age 25.5 years, min. 4 years, max. 70 years) who were affected by AD in an acute phase. During the first study phase from Day 1 to Day 14, 10 patients received a silver textile (Group 1), 10 a silver-free textile (Group 2), and 10 prednicarbate ointment (Group 3). In the second phase from Day 15 to Day 28 all patients wore the silver textile, and during the follow-up period from Day 28 to Day 56 no textiles were used. Prednicarbate ointment was allowed as emergency medication, but ointment consumption was measured. The overall severity of the disease was evaluated using the SCORAD index as the primary efficacy parameter. Secondary parameters included severity of pruritus and the patients' assessment of their disease control (uncontrolled, limited, good or complete). Safety tests included hematology, blood chemistry, urinalysis for silver, and physical examination for silver deposits in the skin and mucous membranes. RESULTS: The initial SCORAD was 61.6 (IQR 26.6, min. 30.6, max. 99.9). At the end of the Study Phase 1 the SCORAD had improved significantly in the patients of Groups 1 (74.6-29.9, p = 0.005) and 3 (57.8-24.0, p = 0.009). During Study Phase 2 healing of eczema continued in Group 1 (SCORAD 29.9-18.1, p = 0.037), was observed in Group 2 (48.2-24.1, p = 0.015), and remained at an improved level in Group 3 (SCORAD 24-23.5). Consumption of prednicarbate ointment (Phase 1, Phase 2, follow-up period, medians are given): Group 1: 135 g, 10 g, 45 g; Group 2: 13 g, 0 g, 0 g; Group 3: 145 g, 30 g, 90 g. Silver textiles reduced the severity of the pruritus (p = 0.031); silver-free textiles (n.s.) and prednicarbate (n.s.) were less effective. No undesired events were observed. CONCLUSION: The elastic silver textile worn directly against the skin led to an impressive improvement of AD and a reduction in the use of prednicarbate ointment.


Subject(s)
Dermatitis, Atopic/therapy , Silver/therapeutic use , Textiles , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Anti-Infective Agents, Local , Child , Child, Preschool , Dermatitis, Atopic/immunology , Dermatitis, Atopic/physiopathology , Female , Germany , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prednisolone/analogs & derivatives , Prednisolone/therapeutic use , Pruritus/drug therapy , Pruritus/etiology , Staphylococcal Skin Infections/etiology , Staphylococcal Skin Infections/prevention & control , Staphylococcus aureus/drug effects , Staphylococcus aureus/growth & development , Treatment Outcome
3.
Arch Microbiol ; 172(2): 116-24, 1999 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10415173

ABSTRACT

A green phototrophic bacterium was enriched with ferrous iron as sole electron donor and was isolated in defined coculture with a spirilloid chemoheterotrophic bacterium. The coculture oxidized ferrous iron to ferric iron with stoichiometric formation of cell mass from carbon dioxide. Sulfide, thiosulfate, or elemental sulfur was not used as electron donor in the light. Hydrogen or acetate in the presence of ferrous iron increased the cell yield of the phototrophic partner, and hydrogen could also be used as sole electron source. Complexed ferric iron was slowly reduced to ferrous iron in the dark, with hydrogen as electron source. Similar to Chlorobium limicola, the phototrophic bacterium contained bacteriochlorophyll c and chlorobactene as photosynthetic pigments, and also resembled representatives of this species morphologically. On the basis of 16S rRNA sequence comparisons, this organism clusters with Chlorobium, Prosthecochloris, and Pelodictyon species within the green sulfur bacteria phylum. Since the phototrophic partner in the coculture KoFox is only moderately related to the other members of the cluster, it is proposed as a new species, Chlorobium ferrooxidans. The chemoheterotrophic partner bacterium, strain KoFum, was isolated in pure culture with fumarate as sole substrate. The strain was identified as a member of the epsilon-subclass of the Proteobacteria closely related to "Geospirillum arsenophilum" on the basis of physiological properties and 16S rRNA sequence comparison. The "Geospirillum" strain was present in the coculture only in low numbers. It fermented fumarate, aspartate, malate, or pyruvate to acetate, succinate, and carbon dioxide, and could reduce nitrate to dinitrogen gas. It was not involved in ferrous iron oxidation but possibly provided a thus far unidentified growth factor to the phototrophic partner.


Subject(s)
Chlorobi/classification , Chlorobi/growth & development , Ferrous Compounds/metabolism , Gram-Negative Anaerobic Straight, Curved, and Helical Rods/classification , Bacteria, Anaerobic , Bacterial Typing Techniques , Chlorobi/genetics , Chlorobi/metabolism , Classification , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Darkness , Gram-Negative Anaerobic Straight, Curved, and Helical Rods/growth & development , Gram-Negative Anaerobic Straight, Curved, and Helical Rods/metabolism , Light , Molecular Sequence Data , Oxidation-Reduction , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Water Microbiology
4.
Neuromuscul Disord ; 8(8): 551-60, 1998 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10093061

ABSTRACT

For Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD, dystrophin deficiency) and Thomsen/Becker myotonia (muscular chloride channel deficiency) genetically homologous mouse models are available, the dystrophin-deficient MDX mouse and the myotonic ADR mouse. Whereas the latter shows more severe symptoms than human myotonia patients, the MDX mouse, in contrast to DMD patients, is only mildly affected. We have introduced, by appropriate breeding, the defect leading to myotonia (Clc1 null mutation, adr allele) into MDX mice, thus creating ADR-MDX double mutants. The expectation was that, due to mechanical stress during myotonic cramps, the ADR status should symptomatically aggravate the muscle fibre necrosis caused by the dystrophin deficiency. The overall symptoms of the double mutants were dominated by myotonia. Weight reduction and premature death rate were higher in ADR-MDX than in ADR mice. Sarcolemmal ruptures as indicated by influx into muscle fibres of serum globulins and injected Evans blue were found with great inter-individual variation in MDX and in ADR-MDX muscles. Affected fibres were found mainly in large groups in MDX but single or in small clusters in ADR-MDX leg muscles. The symptoms of myotonia (aftercontractions, shift towards oxidative fibres) were less pronounced in ADR-MDX than in ADR muscles. Conversely, numbers of damaged fibres as well as the percentage of central nuclei (an indicator of fibre regeneration) were significantly lower in ADR-MDX than in MDX skeletal muscles. Thus it appears that, at the level of the muscle fibre, myotonia and muscular dystrophy attenuate each other.


Subject(s)
Muscular Dystrophy, Animal/diagnosis , Muscular Dystrophy, Animal/genetics , Myotonia/diagnosis , Myotonia/genetics , Animals , Body Weight/genetics , Crosses, Genetic , Female , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Inbred mdx , Mice, Mutant Strains , Microscopy, Electron , Motor Activity/genetics , Muscle Contraction/genetics , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Muscle, Skeletal/physiology , Muscle, Skeletal/ultrastructure , Muscular Dystrophy, Animal/mortality , Muscular Dystrophy, Animal/physiopathology , Myotonia/mortality , Myotonia/physiopathology , Survival Rate
5.
Arch Microbiol ; 165(6): 397-401, 1996 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8661933

ABSTRACT

A rod-shaped, motile, phototrophic bacterium, strain SiCys, was enriched and isolated from a marine microbial mat, with cysteine as sole substrate. During phototrophic anaerobic growth with cysteine, sulfide was produced as an intermediate, which was subsequently oxidized to sulfate. The molar growth yield with cysteine was 103 g mol-1, in accordance with complete assimilation of electrons from the carbon and the sulfur moiety into cell material. Growth yields with alanine and serine were proportionally lower. Thiosulfate, sulfide, hydrogen, and several organic compounds were used as electron donors in the light, whereas cystine, sulfite, or elemental sulfur did not support phototrophic anaerobic growth. Aerobic growth in the dark was possible with fructose as substrate. Cultures of strain SiCys were yellowish-brown in color and contained bacteriochlorophyll a, spheroidene, spheroidenone, and OH-spheroidene as major photosynthetic pigments. Taking the morphology, photosynthetic pigments, aerobic growth in the dark, and utilization of sulfide for phototrophic growth into account, strain SiCys was assigned to the genus Rhodovulum (formerly Rhodobacter) and tentatively classified as a strain of R. sulfidophilum. In cell-free extracts in the presence of pyridoxal phosphate, cysteine was converted to pyruvate and sulfide, which is characteristic for cysteine desulfhydrase activity (l-cystathionine gamma-lyase, EC 4.4. 1.1).


Subject(s)
Cysteine/metabolism , Rhodobacter/metabolism , Cystathionine gamma-Lyase/metabolism , Photosynthesis
6.
FEMS Microbiol Lett ; 68(3): 267-72, 1991 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1804759

ABSTRACT

A Gram-negative nitrate-reducing bacterium, strain Asl-3, was isolated from activated sludge with nitrate and 3-hydroxybenzoate as sole source of carbon and energy. The new isolate was facultatively anaerobic, catalase- and oxidase-positive and polarly monotrichously flagellated. In addition to nitrate, nitrite, N2O, and O2 served as electron acceptors. Growth with 3-hydroxybenzoate and nitrate was biphasic: nitrate was completely reduced to nitrite before nitrite reduction to N2 started. Benzoate, 3-hydroxybenzoate, 4-hydroxybenzoate, protocatechuate or phenyl-acetate served as electron and carbon source under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. During growth with excess carbon source, poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate was formed. These characteristics allow the affiliation of strain Asl-3 with the family Pseudomonadaceae. Analogous to the pathway of 4-hydroxybenzoate degradation in other bacteria, the initial step in anaerobic 3-hydroxybenzoate degradation by this organism was activation to 3-hydroxy-benzoyl-CoA in an ATP-consuming reaction. Cell extracts of 3-hydroxybenzoate-grown cells exhibited 3-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA synthetase activity of 190 nmol min-1 mg protein-1 as well as benzoyl-CoA synthetase activity of 86 nmol min-1 mg protein-1. A reductive dehydroxylation of 3-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA could not be demonstrated due to rapid hydrolysis of chemically synthesized 3-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA by cell extracts.


Subject(s)
Gram-Negative Bacteria/metabolism , Hydroxybenzoates/metabolism , Nitrates/metabolism , Anaerobiosis , Coenzyme A Ligases/analysis , Gram-Negative Bacteria/enzymology , Gram-Negative Bacteria/isolation & purification , Nitrites/metabolism , Nitrous Oxide/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxygen/metabolism
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