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JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31029
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Makino, Yasuhiro| Yamamoto, Kazuhide| Tsuji, Takao|
Abstract

The three-dimensional arrangement of ductular structures formed by oval cells in rats fed 2-acetylaminofluorene (2-AAF) was studied by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) of biliary tract casts and light microscopy of sections of liver injected with india ink via the biliary tract. Both resin and india ink were well injected up to bile ductules, and the findings of each method correlated with each other. By the second week after 2-AAF administration, a few oval cells appeared in the periportal areas forming ductular structures which connected with the portal bile ducts. At the 4th week, increased ductular structures occupied two thirds of the lobule and formed networks communicating with each other, and with the portal bile ducts. At the 8th week, such ductular structures were compressed around hyperplastic nodules and appeared like a basket in biliary casts examined by SEM. Although a histochemical study of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase revealed activity both on the luminal side of the ductular structures and hepatocytes in hyperplastic nodules, no transition was observed between these two cell populations. These results suggest that oval cells have characteristics more similar to those of biliary epithelia than of hepatocytes, and have no relation to the development of hyperplastic nodules.

Keywords oval cells biliary tract casts scanning electron microscopy hyperplastic nodules hepatocarcinogenesis
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-06
Volume volume42
Issue issue3
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 143
End Page 150
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 2899946
Web of Science KeyUT A1988P034000004
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31028
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Wakiguchi, Hiroshi| Fujieda, Mikiya| Matsumoto, Kenji| Ohara, Yuji| Wakiguchi, Akiko| Kurashige, Takanobu|
Abstract

Natural killer (NK) cell activity, lymphokine activated killer (LAK) activity and Epstein-Barr virus specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (EBV-CTL) activity were examined in 10 children with chronic active EB-virus infection and an adult with persistently positive early antigen-antibody to EB-virus. NK cell activity against erythroleukemia cell line K-562 was significantly (p less than 0.005) lower in the patients (22.3 +/- 8.5%, mean +/- SD) than in normal controls (40.4 +/- 15.9%). Spontaneous cytotoxicity against an EB-virus transformed autologous lymphoblastoid cell line was 15.0 +/- 7.6% in the patients, and was comparable to spontaneous cytotoxicity activity in normal controls (11.7 +/- 4.3%). LAK activity against Raji cells was significantly (p less than 0.02) lower in the patients (14.6 +/- 11.4%) than in normal controls (29.2 +/- 15.9%). EBV-CTL activity against an EB-virus transformed autologous lymphoblastoid cell line was significantly (p less than 0.005) lower in the patients (11.8 +/- 5.5%) than in seropositive normal controls (33.7 +/- 14.7%). No regression of the lymphoblastoid cell line was observed when EBV-CTL activity of the patients was tested by regression assay. It is conceivable that defects in both EB-virus specific and nonspecific killer cell activities play important roles in the pathogenetic abnormalities which allow EB-virus infection to progress to a chronic active state.

Keywords chronic active EB-virus infection EB-virus specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte natural killer lymphokine activated killer
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-06
Volume volume42
Issue issue3
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 137
End Page 142
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 2840801
Web of Science KeyUT A1988P034000003
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31027
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Jin, Ji-Guang| Neya, Toshiaki| Takaki, Miyako|
Abstract

To study the polarity of the efferent pathway of the myenteric plexus, recordings were made of the mechanical activity of the longitudinal muscle of isolated guinea-pig ileal segments upon stimulation with an electrical field around the myenteric plexus contained within strips of longitudinal muscle (LM-MP) continuous with each end of ileal segment. The amplitude of the contractile response to stimulation of the anal LM-MP was always larger than that to the oral LM-MP. After cholinergic and adrenergic transmission was suppressed by atropine (10 microM) and guanethidine (1 microM), and the tone of the segment was enhanced by histamine (1 microM), the LM-MP stimulation produced non-cholinergic, non-adrenergic (NCNA) ascending contraction and NCNA descending relaxation. The NCNA contraction, but not the NCNA relaxation, was abolished or reduced by desensitization to substance P. The present results suggest that the NCNA innervation of the myenteric plexus participates in the polar effects observed in the guinea-pig ileum, that the NCNA excitatory response may be mediated at least in part by myenteric substance P neurons, and that the NCNA inhibitory response is mediated by non-adrenergic neurons.

Keywords ileal motility intrinsic reflex myenteric plexus substance P guinea pig
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-06
Volume volume42
Issue issue3
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 129
End Page 136
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 2456670
Web of Science KeyUT A1988P034000002
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31026
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Senoo, Yoshimasa| Katoh, Kazuo| Nakai, Yumi| Hashimoto, Yutaka| Bando, Ko| Teramoto, Shigeru|
Abstract

The stability of recombinant human superoxide dismutase (r-hSOD) in buffer solutions was studied in solutions at various pH and temperatures. Additionally, we studied the effects of incubation with proteases, serum and two types of hypothermic perfusates. R-hSOD was stable in the pH range of 6-11 and at temperatures up to 80 degrees C for 30 min. R-hSOD activity was not affected by incubation with trypsin, aminopeptidase M or serum for 2 h. R-hSOD activity determined at various temperatures (4-37 degrees C) did not vary remarkably. R-hSOD in hypothermic perfusates was stable at 4-37 degrees C for 24 h.

Keywords recombinant human superoxide dismutase activity stability hypothermic perfusate
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-06
Volume volume42
Issue issue3
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 169
End Page 174
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3041738
Web of Science KeyUT A1988P034000007
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31025
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Wakita, Yoshiharu| Narahara, Kouji| Kimoto, Hiroshi|
Abstract

We studied the dermatoglyphics of 353 severe mental retardates (excluding those with chromosomal abnormalities and major limb malformations), using multivariate analysis, to determine how early intrauterine factors are related to the etiology of mental retardation. First, dermatoglyphics were compared between 140 individuals with undefined prenatal factors and 700 normal controls. After 6 and 9 dermatoglyphic traits were chosen as discriminative variables for males and females, respectively, the data were subjected separately for each sex to the constellation graphical method for discriminant analysis. The same formula as obtained in the idiopathic group was subsequently applied to data from cases in other etiological categories. When the misclassification rate was 0.03, the rates of correct classification of the male patients into the etiological categories of undefined prenatal, defined prenatal, perinatal, postnatal and unknown (no anamnestic data available) categories were 19.7% (13/66), 20.0% (3/15), 8.8% (5/57), 5.0% (1/20) and 7.7% (2/26), while the correct classification rates of females were 24.3% (18/74), 42.1% (8/19), 18.9% (7/37), 5.1% (1/16) and 13.0% (3/23), respectively. The results suggest that early intrauterine factors such as those producing dermatoglyphic deviations may contribute to the pathogenesis of severe mental retardation not only in patients with undefined prenatal etiological factors but also in those with perinatal factors, especially those of the female sex.

Keywords mental retardation dermatoglyphics multivariate analysis constellation graphical method
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-06
Volume volume42
Issue issue3
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 159
End Page 168
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3400482
Web of Science KeyUT A1988P034000006
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31024
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Ishii, Hirofumi|
Abstract

Patients with multiple myeloma were treated chemotherapeutically with a combination of melphalan, ifosfamide, prednisolone, nitrosourea and vincristine (MIP-NV therapy). The M-protein kinetics during the course of MIP-NV therapy was studied. The kinetics of serum and urinary M-protein in the first cycle of the chemotherapy was classified into four patterns, and the mode of change in the M-protein level over the entire course of chemotherapy was classified into four prototypes. There were intimate relationships among M-protein kinetics patterns in the first cycle of the chemotherapy, the effect of the chemotherapy on M-protein reduction, maturity of myeloma cells, pretreatment labeling index and clinical stage of the disease. Moreover, analyzing the prototypes, it was found that both the time for maximum M-protein reduction and the rate of increase in the M-protein level after maximum M-protein reduction affected the survival time. To predict the effect of the chemotherapy on M-protein reduction and survival time, it was useful to analyze subgroups, which were classified according to the M-protein kinetics pattern in the first cycle, the time for maximum M-protein reduction and the rate of increase in the M-protein level after maximum M-protein reduction.

Keywords multiple myeloma M-protein kinetics
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-10
Volume volume42
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 279
End Page 286
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3223339
Web of Science KeyUT A1988Q771900005
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31023
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Shiota, Yutaro| Kitade, Masahiro| Furuya, Keizo| Ueda, Nobuo|
Abstract

A 38-year-old female presented with cough and fever. A chest X-ray examination revealed an abnormal shadow in the posteroinferior portion of the left hemithorax, and a laboratory examination showed that the serum carbohydrate antigen 19-9 (CA19-9) level was markedly high (1000 U/ml). A left thoracotomy showed an intralobar pulmonary sequestration of the left lower lobe, and after a left lower lobe lobectomy, the serum level of CA19-9 decreased to normal. Increased CA19-9 activity was detected by immunohistochemistry in the epithelia of bronchioles in the pulmonary sequestration. This communication is the first to report a case of increased activity of CA19-9 in pulmonary sequestration.

Keywords intralobar pulmonary sequestration carbohydrate anitigen 19-9 monoclonal antibody immunohistochemistry benign lung disease
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-10
Volume volume42
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 297
End Page 300
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3223341
Web of Science KeyUT A1988Q771900008
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31022
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Masuoka, Noriyoshi| Ubuka, Toshihiko| Kinuta, Masahiro| Yoshida, Shigeko| Taguchi, Tazuko|
Abstract

A new gas chromatographic method for the determination of sulfate was developed. In this method, sulfate was quantitatively converted to a volatile derivative, dimethyl sulfate, by a two-step procedure. First, sulfate was converted to silver sulfate by reaction with silver oxide, and then to dimethyl sulfate by reaction with methyl iodide. The derivative was analyzed by gas chromatography. Methyl methanesulfonate was used as an internal standard. The method was applied to the determination of total urinary sulfate. Phosphate and chloride ions, which interfered with the present method, were eliminated with the use of basic magnesium carbonate and an excess of silver oxide, respectively. Recovery was over 96% when 5 to 40 mumol/ml of sulfate was added to human urine samples.

Keywords gas chromatography sulfate determination dimethy1 sulfate sulfuric acid urinary sulfate
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-10
Volume volume42
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 247
End Page 252
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3223336
Web of Science KeyUT A1988Q771900001
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31021
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Shigenobu, Masaharu| Senoo, Yoshimasa| Teramoto, Shigeru|
Abstract

Serial left ventricular (LV) echocardiographic studies were performed in 21 patients before and after aortic valve replacement for chronic aortic regurgitation. The effect of valve replacement on LV dimensions, cross-sectional area of the LV muscle and LV function was determined from the echocardiographic data. The relation between degeneration of the myocardium and surgical outcome was also investigated. The average LV end-diastolic dimension decreased from 66.0 +/- 8.3 mm to 46.3 +/- 5.7 mm twelve months postoperatively. The average LV end-systolic dimension also fell from 43.4 +/- 8.1 mm to 31.1 +/- 5.0 mm. The muscle cross-sectional area decreased from 33.1 +/- 5.1 cm2 to 24.5 +/- 4.0 cm2, indicating a decrease in LV mass. The indices of contractility (fractional shortening, ejection fraction and mean velocity of circumferential fibre shortening) had a tendency to decrease one month after surgery, but they subsequently increased to the normal level 12 months after surgery. Nineteen out of 21 patients showed a favorable outcome as to the functional status. The remaining two patients had a large LV dimension and subnormal contractility, and they failed to show a significant reduction in the follow-up period. The muscle score in the two patients was greater than 8 points, which indicated irreversible impairment of the myocardium. Patients with persistent postoperative LV enlargement have a poor prognosis and should be identified so that aggressive medical treatment can be instituted.

Keywords aortic regurgitation left ventricular function aortic valve replacement
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-10
Volume volume42
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 271
End Page 277
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3223338
Web of Science KeyUT A1988Q771900004
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31020
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Kobayashi, Tatsunori| Tsuge, Hiromu| Orita, Kunzo|
Abstract

We studied the effects of insulin and glucagon on energy and carbohydrate metabolism of rat hepatocytes in primary culture. The aim of this study is to elucidate the mechanism of the synergistic action of insulin and glucagon and to evaluate the combined effects of these hormones on liver injury. Insulin increased the level of adenosine triphosphate in hepatocytes in the presence of glucagon. Insulin increased the activities of glucokinase (EC 2.7.1.1), phosphofructokinase (EC 2.7.1.11), pyruvate kinase (EC 2.7.1.40) type L and glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49). Glucagon had no antagonistic effect on these increases. Glucagon increased the activity of glucose 6-phosphate (EC 3.1.3.9) (G6Pase) in the presence or absence of insulin, while insulin had no effects on the levels of G6Pase and fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase (EC 3.1.3.11) in the presence or absence of glucagon. Metabolite analysis of cultured hepatocytes indicated that insulin and glucagon have antagonistic effects on the glycolytic activity of hepatocytes. These combined effects of insulin and glucagon may partially explain the preventive effects of these hormones on liver injury.

Keywords cultured rat hepatocytes energy metabolism carbohydrate metabolism insulin glucagon
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-10
Volume volume42
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 259
End Page 269
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3066123
Web of Science KeyUT A1988Q771900003
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31019
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Shinozawa, Shinya| Gomita, Yutaka| Araki, Yasunori|
Abstract

The effect of alpha-tocopherol acetate (VE) on the toxicity and tissue distribution of adriamycin (ADM) in mice was studied. After the administration of ADM in 2 doses of 15 mg/kg, mice pretreated with olive oil survived 7.1 +/- 1.0 days, while mice pretreated with VE in ten doses of 500 mg/kg/day (subcutaneously) survived 5.5 +/- 1.7 days (p less than 0.01). The total concentration of ADM and its major metabolite, aglycone I in the liver (1, 3, 5 h), kidneys (1, 3 h), and heart (3 h), as determined by high performance liquid chromatography was significantly higher in the VE-pretreated group (four doses of 500 mg/kg/day) than in the olive oil-pretreated group. The aglycone levels of the VE-pretreated group were significantly higher than those of the olive oil-pretreated group in the liver, kidney and heart, but there was no significant difference between the groups in the levels of the unmetabolized form. Considering these results, the administration of VE concomitant with anti-tumor drugs, including ADM, requires great caution.

Keywords adriamycin doxorubicin toxicity ?-tocopherol acetate aglycone tissue concentrarion
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-10
Volume volume42
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 253
End Page 258
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3223337
Web of Science KeyUT A1988Q771900002
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31018
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Hayashi, Yasushi| Hattori, Yukio| Moriwaki, Akiyoshi| Asaki, Hideki| Hori, Yasuo|
Abstract

The effects of prolonged weak anodal direct current (DC) on the electrocorticogram (ECoG) were investigated in awake rabbits. When the current (20-40 microA) was applied to the motor region of the cerebral cortex, seizure activity in the ECoG appeared from the frontal cortex. Repeated application of the DC decreased the threshold current for producing the seizure activity. Diazepam significantly elevated the threshold of the seizure activity. In contrast to the marked changes in the ECoG, no behavioral changes were observed during or after the application of weak anodal DC. The changes in the ECoG are discussed in relation to the intensity and duration of the DC.

Keywords rabbit cerebral cortex anodal direct current electrocorticogram seizure activity diazepam
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-10
Volume volume42
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 293
End Page 296
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3223340
Web of Science KeyUT A1988Q771900007
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31017
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Toki, Hironobu| Okabe, Ken-ichi| Kamei, Haruhito| Segawa, Yoshihiko| Koike, Satoshi|
Abstract

We studied the correlation between the cell surface markers and prognosis of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) patients treated in the Shikoku Cancer Center Hospital from 1980 to 1986. Thirty-one cases were selected on the basis of having a lymphnode as a primary lesion, having been immunophenotyped before chemotherapy, being in the intermediate histologic grade and being in stage II, III or IV. Thirteen cases of the T-cell type (T-lymphomas) and 18 cases of the B-cell type (B-lymphoma) were identified. The complete remission rate was 54% among T-lymphoma patients and 78% among B-lymphoma patients. The median length of survival was 12+ months in T-lymphoma and 26+ months in B-lymphoma. The survival rate of T-lymphoma patients was significantly lower than that of B-lymphoma patients. The importance of making surface marker studies was reappraised in our study.

Keywords surface marker prognosis non-Hodgkin's lymphoma T-cell type B-cell type
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-10
Volume volume42
Issue issue5
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 287
End Page 292
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3265575
Web of Science KeyUT A1988Q771900006
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31016
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Takasugi, Shigeki| Inoue, Hajime|
Abstract

The cartilage-synovium junction of knees afflicted with rheumatoid arthritis was observed light microscopically using formalin-fixed, decalcified and immunohistochemically stained tissues. Decalcification had little or no influence on immunoreactivity for lysozyme and S-100 protein. All the specimens had pannus formation, which was classified into four types: A) cellular pannus with homogeneous cell pattern, B) cellular pannus of inflammatory cells, C) fibrous pannus with many fibrous bundles, D) fibrous pannus including round cells with scattered fibrous bundles. Type A pannus may be responsible for extensive cartilage degradation, and may occur at the first stage of pannus formation. Type B pannus may occur afterwards, and may be followed by type C pannus at a later stage. Type D pannus was found in two out of 19 specimens. Round cells in type D were positive for S-100 protein and lysozyme, and were probably chondrocytes. The findings indicated that chondrocytes were responsible for cartilage degradation and pannus formation.

Keywords rheumetoid arthritis cartilage-synovium junction pannus S-100 protein lysozyme
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-04
Volume volume42
Issue issue2
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 83
End Page 95
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3389200
Web of Science KeyUT A1988N237200005
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31015
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Takahashi, Isao| Sekito, Noriko| Takeuchi, Makoto| Osada, Ken| Matsuzaki, Toshiro| Fukuda, Shunichi| Lai, Minyu| Uchida, Kozaburo| Kimura, Ikuro| Miyamoto, Kanji| Kitajima, Koichi| Sanada, Hiroshi|
Abstract

The rearrangement of breakpoint cluster region (ber) was examined in leukemic cells obtained from 3 patients initially diagnosed as having Ph+ acute leukemia, 2 with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) and one with acute mixed leukemia. DNA was digested with Bgl II and BamH I. The ber rearrangement was present in the case of acute mixed leukemia (Case 1), but was absent in the 2 cases of ALL (Cases 2 and 3). These results suggest that Case 1 represented a type of blast crisis of chronic myelocytic leukemia which was unusual in the sense of the occurrence of a myeloid-lymphoid conversion and lack of an apparent chronic phase. Cases 2 and 3 appeared to be de novo Ph+ ALL.

Keywords Ph-positive acute leukemia blast crisis with a silent chronic phase myeloidlymphoid conversion chronic myelocytic leukemia bcr-rearrangement
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-04
Volume volume42
Issue issue2
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 117
End Page 120
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3164571
Web of Science KeyUT A1988N237200008
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31014
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Makino, Hirofumi| Soda, Kenji| Komoda, Keizo| Ota, Zensuke|
Abstract

In order to explore the pathogenic mechanism of proteinuria in glomerulonephritis, ultrastructural changes of the glomerular basement membrane were investigated in rats with chronic serum sickness induced by repeated intravenous injections of bovine serum albumin (experimental rats). Rats injected with saline served as controls. The animals were sacrificed and examined 13 weeks after treatment, when the mean urinary protein of experimental animals reached 206 mg/24h/100g body weight. Enhanced transcapillary passage of anionic ferritin was observed in experimental rats. Purified glomerular basement membranes of control and experimental rats were examined by electron microscopy after negative staining. The glomerular basement membrane of experimental rats had enlarged pores. The results suggest that an increase in the radius of glomerular pores may be responsible for proteinuria in glomerulonephritis.

Keywords glomerular basement membrane proteinuria glomerular permeability ultrastructure glomerulonephritis
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-04
Volume volume42
Issue issue2
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 53
End Page 60
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3389199
Web of Science KeyUT A1988N237200001
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31013
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Osaki, Toshihide| Sakagami, Kenichi| Orita, Kunzo|
Abstract

Interleukin-2 (IL2) is the obligatory signal for both T cell mitogenesis and in vitro generation of alloreactive cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). An investigation was made to determine whether an antibody directed against IL2 would suppress the rejection reaction of rat cardiac allografts. Rabbit anti-interleukin 2 (anti-IL2) antiserum was obtained by immunizing at 2 week intervals over a period of 8 weeks with 10(6) U of recombinant human IL2 along with complete Freund's adjuvant. The bioassay for inhibition of IL2 activity by anti-IL2 antiserum was carried out in conjunction with the IL2-dependent cytotoxic T cell (CTLL cell) assay. Cardiac allografts of F344 rats were heterotopically transplanted into ACI rats. Seven daily doses of 1 ml of anti-IL2 antiserum were administered intravenously following transplantation. IL2-driven [3H]thymidine incorporation in CTLL cells was significantly inhibited by rabbit anti-IL2 antiserum. Graft survival in the anti-IL2 serum-treated group was significantly prolonged in a dose-dependent fashion compared to control groups. In conclusion, these results indicate that rabbit anti-IL2 antiserum may prove to be of significant value as an immunosuppressive agent in clinical organ transplantation.

Keywords anti-interleukin 2 antiserum rat cardiac allograft immunosuppressive agent
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-04
Volume volume42
Issue issue2
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 77
End Page 81
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3291556
Web of Science KeyUT A1988N237200004
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31012
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Kondo, Hidenori| Tanaka, Noriaki| Naomoto, Yoshio| Orita, Kunzo|
Abstract

The development of useful therapy for intraabdominal carcinomatosis originating from gastrointestinal cancer is an important theme in cancer therapy. We developed recently an experimental model of intraabdominal carcinomatosis in nude mice by intraperitoneal transplantation of human colon cancer cells (RPMI 4788). Using this model, we investigated the antitumor effects of recombinant human interferon (rIFN)-beta and rIFN-gamma administered singly or in combination. Treatment was initiated 2 days after CD-1 nude mice were inoculated intraperitoneally with 5 X 10(6) RPMI 4788 cells. Intraperitoneal administration for 10 consecutive days of either rIFN-beta (2.5 X 10(5) IU/mouse/day) or rIFN-gamma (2.5 X 10(5) JRU/mouse/day) resulted in a significant prolongation of survival compared with the saline control group [survival in the control: 41.8 +/- 5.6 days (mean +/- SD)]. Combined administration of rIFN-beta and rIFN-gamma for 10 days yielded a marked synergistic effect on the prolongation of survival (114.0 +/- 8.2 days). However, combined administration of rIFN-beta and rIFN-gamma in a single dose equal to the total dose given fractionally over 10 days did not yield a synergistic effect. These results suggest that daily administration of rIFN-beta and rIFN-gamma combined may provide a highly potent antitumor effect against human peritoneal carcinomatosis.

Keywords antitumor effect human recombinant interferon synergistic effect intrabdominal carcinomatosis mude mice
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-04
Volume volume42
Issue issue2
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 69
End Page 75
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3133927
Web of Science KeyUT A1988N237200003
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31011
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Inoue, Hiroshi| Hashimoto, Kozo| Ota, Zensuke|
Abstract

In vitro release of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) from atria was examined by ANP radioimmunoassay. Isolated right rat atria were incubated in Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate buffer, and test substances were added to the incubation medium. The fluid was assayed for rat ANP by a radioimmunoassay method recently developed in our laboratory. We produced an antiserum to human ANP(99-216) (alpha-hANP(1-28)) which showed a good cross-reactivity of 63% with rat ANP(99-126) (alpha-rANP(1-28)) and was useful for measuring rat ANP concentrations of the medium. Application of the medium to a reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) system resulted in a single peak of immunoreactive rat ANP corresponding to a small molecular weight synthetic rat ANP of 28 amino acid residues. Catecholamines (epinephrine, norepinephrine and isoproterenol) reduced the basal secretion of ANP, whereas acetylcholine stimulated the release of ANP. Forskolin and dibutyryl cyclic AMP did not affect the release of ANP. These results suggest the possibility that the regulation of ANP release may be partially associated with adrenergic and cholinergic mechanisms.

Keywords atrial natriuretic peptide catecholamine acetylcholine radioimmunoassay
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-04
Volume volume42
Issue issue2
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 61
End Page 67
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 2839012
Web of Science KeyUT A1988N237200002
JaLCDOI 10.18926/AMO/31010
FullText URL fulltext.pdf
Author Fukuda, Tomio| Aji, Toshiki| Tongu, Yasumasa|
Abstract

The surface ultrastructure of larval Anisakis type I, Anisakis type II, Raphidascaris, Contracaecum type A, Thynnascaris type A and Thynnascaris type B was examined by scanning electron microscopy. These species were identified clearly by the presence of a boring tooth, a mucron, and other morphological features. The means of the distances between transverse striations (DBTS) of larval Anisakis type I (5.45 +/- 0.125 micron), larval Raphidascaris (2.92 +/- 0.051 micron), and larval Contracaecum type A (1.68 +/- 0.056 micron) are significantly different (p less than 0.05). There was a correlation between the diameter of worm trunk (DOWT) and DBTS among these three larval types. In most cases a larva could be identified from the mean value of DBTS and DOWT even if obtained as a fragment from a patient.

Keywords Anisakidae ultrastructure surface striation scanning ekectron microscopy
Amo Type Article
Publication Title Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date 1988-04
Volume volume42
Issue issue2
Publisher Okayama University Medical School
Start Page 105
End Page 116
ISSN 0386-300X
NCID AA00508441
Content Type Journal Article
language English
File Version publisher
Refereed True
PubMed ID 3389198
Web of Science KeyUT A1988N237200007