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1.
Photochem Photobiol Sci ; 17(8): 1127-1135, 2018 Aug 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30019049

ABSTRACT

Ultraviolet (UV) light produces an immunomodulatory effect on the skin and is widely used for the treatment of chronic inflammatory skin diseases. UV light emitting diodes (UV-LEDs) are a new and promising source of UV radiation. However, their mechanism of action remains largely unknown. In this study, we tested the safety and effectiveness of UV-LED irradiation for the treatment of atopic dermatitis (AD) in an NC/Nga mouse model. Mice were divided into seven groups of eight mice each. Application of Dermatophagoides farinae (Df) extract ointment for four weeks induced AD-like skin lesions. Subsequently, the mice were exposed to UV-LEDs, narrow band UVB, or UVA irradiation three times per week. We assessed the immunosuppressive effects of 310 nm (50 mJ cm-2) and 340 nm (5 J cm-2) UV-LED irradiation. Histological analyses using hematoxylin-eosin, toluidine blue, and immunohistochemical staining were performed. In addition, the serum levels of IgE, inflammatory cytokines and chemokines were measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs). UV-LED irradiation significantly alleviated AD-like skin symptoms, including edema, erythema, dryness, and itching, by modulating Th1 and Th2 responses, transepidermal water loss (TEWL), and scratching behavior in NC/Nga mice. These results suggest that UV-LEDs can improve the treatment of inflammatory skin diseases.


Subject(s)
Dermatitis, Atopic/prevention & control , Skin/radiation effects , Ultraviolet Rays , Allergens/adverse effects , Animals , Chemokines/blood , Cytokines/blood , Dermatitis, Atopic/etiology , Dermatitis, Atopic/pathology , Dermatophagoides farinae/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Immunoglobulin E/blood , Male , Mice , Severity of Illness Index , Signal Transduction/radiation effects , Skin/pathology
2.
Lasers Surg Med ; 50(9): 940-947, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29733104

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Various studies have investigated treatment for vaginal laxity with microablative fractional carbon dioxide CO2 laser in humans; however, this treatment has not yet been studied in an animal model. Herein, we evaluate the therapeutic effects of fractional CO2 laser for tissue remodeling of vaginal mucosa using a porcine model, with the aim of improving vaginal laxity. STUDY DESIGN/MATERIALS AND METHODS: The fractional CO2 laser enables minimally invasive and non-incisional procedures. By precisely controlling the laser energy pulses, energy is sent to the vaginal canal and the introitus area to induce thermal denaturation and contraction of collagen. We examined the effects of fractional CO2 laser on a porcine model via clinical observation and ultrasound measurement. Also, thermal lesions were histologically examined via hematoxylin-eosin staining, Masson's trichrome staining, and Elastica van Gieson staining and immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: The three treatment groups, which were determined according to the amount of laser-energy applied (60, 90, and 120 mJ), showed slight thermal denaturation in the vaginal mucosa, but no abnormal reactions, such as excessive hemorrhaging, vesicles, or erythema, were observed. Histologically, we also confirmed that the denatured lamina propria induced by fractional CO2 laser was dose-dependently increased after laser treatment. The treatment groups also showed an increase in collagen and elastic fibers due to neocollagenesis and angiogenesis, and the vaginal walls became firmer and tighter because of increased capillary and vessel formation. Also, use of the fractional CO2 laser increased HSP (heat shock protein) 70 and collagen type I synthesis. CONCLUSION: Our results show that microablative fractional CO2 laser can produce remodeling of the vaginal connective tissue without causing damage to surrounding tissue, and the process of mucosa remodeling while under wound dressings enables collagen to increase and the vaginal wall to become thick and tightened. Lasers Surg. Med. 50:940-947, 2018. © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Subject(s)
Laser Therapy , Lasers, Gas/therapeutic use , Vagina/radiation effects , Animals , Female , Models, Animal , Swine , Vagina/diagnostic imaging , Vagina/pathology
3.
BMC Bioinformatics ; 18(1): 372, 2017 Aug 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28818042

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Coreference resolution is the task of finding strings in text that have the same referent as other strings. Failures of coreference resolution are a common cause of false negatives in information extraction from the scientific literature. In order to better understand the nature of the phenomenon of coreference in biomedical publications and to increase performance on the task, we annotated the Colorado Richly Annotated Full Text (CRAFT) corpus with coreference relations. RESULTS: The corpus was manually annotated with coreference relations, including identity and appositives for all coreferring base noun phrases. The OntoNotes annotation guidelines, with minor adaptations, were used. Interannotator agreement ranges from 0.480 (entity-based CEAF) to 0.858 (Class-B3), depending on the metric that is used to assess it. The resulting corpus adds nearly 30,000 annotations to the previous release of the CRAFT corpus. Differences from related projects include a much broader definition of markables, connection to extensive annotation of several domain-relevant semantic classes, and connection to complete syntactic annotation. Tool performance was benchmarked on the data. A publicly available out-of-the-box, general-domain coreference resolution system achieved an F-measure of 0.14 (B3), while a simple domain-adapted rule-based system achieved an F-measure of 0.42. An ensemble of the two reached F of 0.46. Following the IDENTITY chains in the data would add 106,263 additional named entities in the full 97-paper corpus, for an increase of 76% percent in the semantic classes of the eight ontologies that have been annotated in earlier versions of the CRAFT corpus. CONCLUSIONS: The project produced a large data set for further investigation of coreference and coreference resolution in the scientific literature. The work raised issues in the phenomenon of reference in this domain and genre, and the paper proposes that many mentions that would be considered generic in the general domain are not generic in the biomedical domain due to their referents to specific classes in domain-specific ontologies. The comparison of the performance of a publicly available and well-understood coreference resolution system with a domain-adapted system produced results that are consistent with the notion that the requirements for successful coreference resolution in this genre are quite different from those of the general domain, and also suggest that the baseline performance difference is quite large.


Subject(s)
Data Mining/methods , Periodicals as Topic , Semantics
4.
J Org Chem ; 81(20): 9878-9885, 2016 10 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27680096

ABSTRACT

The rhodium(III)-catalyzed direct C-H functionalization of various indolines with 1,4,2-dioxazol-5-ones as new amidating agents is described. This transformation provides efficient preparation of C7-amidated indolines known to display potent anticancer activity. The synthetic compounds were evaluated for in vitro anticancer activity against human prostate adenocarcinoma cells (LNCaP), human endometrial adenocarcinoma cells (Ishikawa), and human ovarian carcinoma cells (SKOV3). Compound 4f was found to be highly cytotoxic, with activity competitive with that of anticancer agent doxorubicin.


Subject(s)
Amides/chemistry , Indicators and Reagents/chemistry , Indoles/chemistry , Rhodium/chemistry , Catalysis , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Proliferation/drug effects , Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor , Female , Humans , Indoles/pharmacology , Male , Spectrum Analysis/methods
5.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27374122

ABSTRACT

We describe a system that automatically extracts biological events from biomedical journal articles, and translates those events into Biological Expression Language (BEL) statements. The system incorporates existing text mining components for coreference resolution, biological event extraction and a previously formally untested strategy for BEL statement generation. Although addressing the BEL track (Track 4) at BioCreative V (2015), we also investigate how incorporating coreference resolution might impact event extraction in the biomedical domain. In this paper, we report that our system achieved the best performance of 20.2 and 35.2 in F-score for the full BEL statement level on both stage 1, and stage 2 using provided gold standard entities, respectively. We also report that our results evaluated on the training dataset show benefit from integrating coreference resolution with event extraction.


Subject(s)
Data Mining/methods , Databases, Factual , Programming Languages
6.
J Org Chem ; 81(11): 4771-8, 2016 06 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27187625

ABSTRACT

The rhodium(III)-catalyzed γ-trifluoromethylallylation of various heterocyclic C-H bonds with CF3-substituted allylic carbonates is described. These reactions provide direct access to linear CF3-containing allyl frameworks with complete trans-selectivity via C-H bond activation followed by a formal SN-type reaction pathway.

7.
J Biomed Inform ; 60: 309-18, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26925515

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Coreference resolution is an essential task in information extraction from the published biomedical literature. It supports the discovery of complex information by linking referring expressions such as pronouns and appositives to their referents, which are typically entities that play a central role in biomedical events. Correctly establishing these links allows detailed understanding of all the participants in events, and connecting events together through their shared participants. RESULTS: As an initial step towards the development of a novel coreference resolution system for the biomedical domain, we have categorised the characteristics of coreference relations by type of anaphor as well as broader syntactic and semantic characteristics, and have compared the performance of a domain adaptation of a state-of-the-art general system to published results from domain-specific systems in terms of this categorisation. We also develop a rule-based system for anaphoric coreference resolution in the biomedical domain with simple modules derived from available systems. Our results show that the domain-specific systems outperform the general system overall. Whilst this result is unsurprising, our proposed categorisation enables a detailed quantitative analysis of the system performance. We identify limitations of each system and find that there remain important gaps in the state-of-the-art systems, which are clearly identifiable with respect to the categorisation. CONCLUSION: We have analysed in detail the performance of existing coreference resolution systems for the biomedical literature and have demonstrated that there clear gaps in their coverage. The approach developed in the general domain needs to be tailored for portability to the biomedical domain. The specific framework for class-based error analysis of existing systems that we propose has benefits for identifying specific limitations of those systems. This in turn provides insights for further system development.


Subject(s)
Data Mining/methods , Electronic Health Records , Language , Natural Language Processing , Algorithms , False Negative Reactions , Humans , Medical Informatics , Pattern Recognition, Automated , Problem Solving , Publications , Reproducibility of Results , Semantics
8.
J Org Chem ; 80(21): 11092-9, 2015 Nov 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26440560

ABSTRACT

The rhodium(III)-catalyzed site-selective C-H alkylation of various N-heterocycles, such as indolines, carbazoles, and pyrroles with readily available allylic alcohols is described. This protocol allows the generation of a heterocyclic scaffold containing a ß-aryl carbonyl moiety, which is known to be a crucial structural unit of biologically active compounds.

9.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 51(97): 17229-32, 2015 Dec 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26458276

ABSTRACT

The rhodium(III)-catalyzed direct functionalization of aniline C-H bonds with α-diazo compounds is described. These transformations provide a facile construction of ortho-alkylated anilines with diazo malonates or highly substituted indoles with diazo acetoacetates.

10.
J Org Chem ; 80(16): 8026-35, 2015 Aug 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26194785

ABSTRACT

The rhodium(III)-catalyzed ortho-C-H amidation of azobenzenes with arylsulfonyl and aryl and alkyl isocyanates is described. The N-sulfonyl amidation reaction using arylsulfonyl isocyanates is first reported in the C-H activation strategy. These transformations provide the facile and efficient construction of a range of amide moieties into azobenzenes.


Subject(s)
Amides/chemical synthesis , Azo Compounds/chemical synthesis , Organometallic Compounds/chemistry , Rhodium/chemistry , Sulfonic Acids/chemical synthesis , Amides/chemistry , Azo Compounds/chemistry , Catalysis , Molecular Structure , Sulfonic Acids/chemistry
11.
J Cheminform ; 7(Suppl 1 Text mining for chemistry and the CHEMDNER track): S2, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25810773

ABSTRACT

The automatic extraction of chemical information from text requires the recognition of chemical entity mentions as one of its key steps. When developing supervised named entity recognition (NER) systems, the availability of a large, manually annotated text corpus is desirable. Furthermore, large corpora permit the robust evaluation and comparison of different approaches that detect chemicals in documents. We present the CHEMDNER corpus, a collection of 10,000 PubMed abstracts that contain a total of 84,355 chemical entity mentions labeled manually by expert chemistry literature curators, following annotation guidelines specifically defined for this task. The abstracts of the CHEMDNER corpus were selected to be representative for all major chemical disciplines. Each of the chemical entity mentions was manually labeled according to its structure-associated chemical entity mention (SACEM) class: abbreviation, family, formula, identifier, multiple, systematic and trivial. The difficulty and consistency of tagging chemicals in text was measured using an agreement study between annotators, obtaining a percentage agreement of 91. For a subset of the CHEMDNER corpus (the test set of 3,000 abstracts) we provide not only the Gold Standard manual annotations, but also mentions automatically detected by the 26 teams that participated in the BioCreative IV CHEMDNER chemical mention recognition task. In addition, we release the CHEMDNER silver standard corpus of automatically extracted mentions from 17,000 randomly selected PubMed abstracts. A version of the CHEMDNER corpus in the BioC format has been generated as well. We propose a standard for required minimum information about entity annotations for the construction of domain specific corpora on chemical and drug entities. The CHEMDNER corpus and annotation guidelines are available at: http://www.biocreative.org/resources/biocreative-iv/chemdner-corpus/.

12.
J Health Care Poor Underserved ; 22(2): 576-89, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21551935

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE/METHODS: We used national data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey and multivariate linear spline regression models to compare trends in children's health insurance coverage and access to care by income and race/ethnicity during (1998-2002) and after (2002-2006) major expansions of state insurance programs. RESULTS: During expansions, coverage and access for children in low-income and middle-income families improved, but these gains ceased thereafter for middle-income children, most of whom remained ineligible for public insurance. Racial and ethnic differences narrowed from 1998-2002, but persisted-and in at least one case tended to widen-from 2002-2006. Non-White children in families with incomes above most states' eligibility thresholds experienced significant declines in coverage and access to care after 2002. CONCLUSIONS: Gains in children's coverage and access to care during CHIP expansions have since stagnated or even reversed for some groups. Recent legislation to expand coverage for uninsured children (the PPACA of 2010) may redress these adverse changes in trends.


Subject(s)
Child Health Services , Ethnicity/statistics & numerical data , Health Services Accessibility/trends , Income/statistics & numerical data , Insurance Coverage/trends , Insurance, Health/trends , State Health Plans , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Eligibility Determination , Health Care Surveys , Health Services Accessibility/statistics & numerical data , Health Status Disparities , Humans , Infant , Insurance Coverage/statistics & numerical data , Insurance, Health/statistics & numerical data , Medically Uninsured/legislation & jurisprudence , Program Evaluation , United States
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