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1.
Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol ; 63(2): 222-229, 2024 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37519188

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Small-for-gestational-age (SGA) neonates are at increased risk of perinatal mortality and morbidity. We aimed to investigate the performance of uterine artery pulsatility index (UtA-PI) at 19-24 weeks' gestation to predict the delivery of a SGA neonate in a Chinese population. METHODS: This was a retrospective cohort study using data obtained between January 2010 and June 2018. Doppler ultrasonography was performed at 19-24 weeks' gestation. SGA was defined as birth weight below the 10th centile according to the INTERGROWTH-21st fetal growth standards. The performance of UtA-PI to predict the delivery of a SGA neonate was assessed using receiver-operating-characteristics (ROC)-curve analysis. RESULTS: We included 6964 singleton pregnancies, of which 748 (11%) delivered a SGA neonate, including 115 (15%) women with preterm delivery. Increased UtA-PI was associated with an elevated risk of SGA, both in neonates delivered at or after 37 weeks' gestation (term SGA) and those delivered before 37 weeks (preterm SGA). The areas under the ROC curve (AUCs) for UtA-PI were 64.4% (95% CI, 61.5-67.3%) and 75.8% (95% CI, 69.3-82.3%) for term and preterm SGA, respectively. The performance of combined screening by maternal demographic/clinical characteristics and estimated fetal weight in the detection of term and preterm SGA was improved significantly by the addition of UtA-PI, although the increase in AUC was modest (2.4% for term SGA and 4.9% for preterm SGA). CONCLUSIONS: This is the first Chinese study to evaluate the role of UtA-PI at 19-24 weeks' gestation in the prediction of the delivery of a neonate with SGA. The addition of UtA-PI to traditional risk factors improved the screening performance for SGA, and this improvement was greater in predicting preterm SGA compared with term SGA. © 2023 International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology.


Subject(s)
Ultrasonography, Prenatal , Uterine Artery , Pregnancy , Infant, Newborn , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Pregnancy Trimester, Third , Uterine Artery/diagnostic imaging , Retrospective Studies , Prospective Studies , Infant, Small for Gestational Age , Fetal Growth Retardation/diagnostic imaging , Gestational Age , Ultrasonography, Doppler , Pulsatile Flow
2.
Cell Struct Funct ; 15(6): 385-91, 1990 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2150790

ABSTRACT

tsJT60 is a nonlethal temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant of a Fischer rat cell line (3Y1) classified as a G0 mutant; i.e., the ts defect is not expressed within the cell growth cycle but is expressed only between the G0 and S phase. tsJT60 clones transformed with oncogenes such as adenovirus E1A, polyoma large T, polyoma middle T, v-Ki-ras, and LTR activated c-myc, or with a chemical carcinogen N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine, grew well at 34 degrees C. However, most of these clones grew slowly at 40 degrees C, producing many floating dead cells, and some clones were killed at 40 degrees C. When they were cultured under conditions inadequate for growth of untransformed cells, such as high cell density or serum restriction, they were killed at 40 degrees C. These and previous results from SV40- and adenovirus-transformed tsJT60 clones favour the idea that transformed tsJT60 cells occasionally enter the G0 phase and are metabolically imbalanced at 40 degrees C during self-stimulation from the G0 to S phase. We propose that a drug which exclusively block, G0-G1 transition would be cytocidal to transformed cells but cytostatic to normal cells.


Subject(s)
Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/genetics , Genes, Lethal , Resting Phase, Cell Cycle , Adenovirus Early Proteins , Animals , Antigens, Polyomavirus Transforming/genetics , Antineoplastic Agents/pharmacology , Carcinogens/pharmacology , Cell Division , Cell Line , Cell Line, Transformed , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/chemically induced , Cell Transformation, Viral , Drug Design , Genes, myc , Genes, ras , Methylnitronitrosoguanidine/pharmacology , Mutation , Oncogene Proteins, Viral/genetics , Oncogenes , Oncogenic Viruses/physiology , Rats , Rats, Inbred F344 , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/physiology , Temperature
3.
Exp Cell Res ; 179(1): 50-7, 1988 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3169150

ABSTRACT

tsJT60, a temperature-sensitive (ts) cell-cycle mutant of Fischer rats, is viable at both the permissive (34 degrees C) and nonpermissive (40 degrees C) temperatures. The cells grow normally in exponential growth phase at both temperatures, but when stimulated with serum from G0 phase they enter S phase at 34 degrees C but not at 40 degrees C. tsJT60 cells transformed with human adenovirus (Ad) 12 dl205, which lacks the E1B 19-kDa polypeptide gene, were lethal at 40 degrees C, whereas tsJT60 cells transformed with Ad12 wt, dl207, which lacks E1B 58-kDa protein gene, or in206B, which produces 19- to 58- kDa fused protein, were viable. Degradation of cell DNA occurred in dl205-transformed tsJT60 cultured at both 34 degrees C and 40 degrees C. Neither cytocidal phenotype nor degradation of DNA occurred in 3Y1 cells (a parental line of tsJT60) transformed with dl205. These results suggest that the lethal phenotype and degradation of DNA are related to the ts mutation in tsJT60 and also to the lack of Ad12 E1B 19kDa polypeptide.


Subject(s)
Adenoviridae , Cell Transformation, Viral , Fibroblasts/cytology , Mutation , Temperature , Animals , Cell Division , Cell Fusion , Cell Line , DNA/metabolism , Genes, Lethal , Interphase , Phenotype , Rats , Rats, Inbred F344
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