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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
81

Experimental Studies on the Vasculature of Endogenous and Transplanted Islets of Langerhans

Mattsson, Göran January 2003 (has links)
The blood vessels of the pancreatic islets are of crucial importance for oxygen and metabolite supply as well as dispersal of secreted hormones. In addition to this, endothelial cells have an important role in the revascularization process after islet transplantation. Previous studies have reported signs of poor engraftment of transplanted islets, presumably due to impaired revascularization. The aims of this thesis were to investigate the revascularization process of transplanted islets and to examine the role of islet endothelial cells. In this context, the lectin Bandeiraea simplicifolia was found to stain endothelium of both endogenous and transplanted pancreatic islets. By using this lectin we investigated the vascular density of both endogenous and islets transplanted syngeneically beneath the renal capsule, into the spleen or intraportally into the liver of normoglycemic C57BL/6 mice. One month post-transplantation, a time point when the grafts are assumed to be completely revascularized, the vascular density was decreased at all three implantation sites when compared to endogenous islets. Furthermore, most of the blood vessels were located in the graft connective tissue stroma. Similar results were obtained when islet transplant vascular density was determined six months post-transplantation and in cured diabetic animals after one month. In order to evaluate the function of intraportally transplanted islets, we developed a method to retrieve such islets. We treated the implantation organ (liver) first enzymatically (collagenase) and then mechanically, thereafter we could re-isolate the transplanted islets for further in vitro studies. The retrieved islets had a decreased insulin relase, insulin content and glucose oxidation rate when compared to non-transplanted control islets. To understand the role of islet endothelium in the revascularization of transplanted islets we performed angiogenesis GEArray studies on islet endothelial cells, from non-cultured, cultured and transplanted islets. We found that the islet endothelium expressed mRNA for both inhibitors and inducers of angiogenesis, and that this expression differed with time. The functional consequences of this remain to be determined. In summary, the results presented above provide a useful platform for future studies of the morphology and function of islet endothelial cells, especially with a view for elucidating changes induced by islet transplantation.
82

Monocytes, Tissue Factor and Heparin-coated Surfaces : Clinical and Experimental Studies

Johnell, Matilda January 2003 (has links)
Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is associated with inflammatory response and activation of coagulation. Heparin coating of the CPB circuit is shown to improve the biocompatibility of the surface. The biological effects of a new heparin surface, the Corline Heparin Surface (CHS), prepared according to a new principle, have been studied. The CHS used during coronary artery bypass grafting with CPB in sixty patients prevented adhesion of cells to the extracorporeal device. The activation of inflammation, coagulation, and fibrinolysis was significantly reduced by the use of CHS. Both a reduced and an increased dose of systemic heparin in combination with the heparin-coated surface resulted in more activation of inflammation and coagulation. Photoelectron spectroscopy studies of the molecular structure of the CHS demonstrated that a single layer of the heparin surface, equivalent to what was used in the in vivo studies, did not completely cover the substrate surface. Additional layer of immobilized heparin has resulted in a complete coverage. We examined the biological effects, i.e. activation of inflammation and coagulation, by CHS in one and two layers in an in vitro-study. The data from this study clearly demonstrated that a uniform surface coating of the CHS results in only minor activation of coagulation, inflammation and cell activation. Monocytes do not normally express tissue factor (TF), initiator of the coagulation in vivo, but can be induced upon adhesion to artificial surfaces. TF is receptor for coagulation factor VIIa (FVIIa) and binding subsequently leads to formation of thrombin. Other biological effects beyond coagulation, as inflammation and angiogenesis, has recently been associated with the formation of TF·FVIIa. The TF∙FVIIa signal transduction induced an increased sensitivity to PDGF-BB-stimulated migration and an increased production of IL-8 and TNF-α in monocytes. These could be important mechanisms for continued recruitment of cells to sites of inflammation.
83

Acute lung injury : study of pathogenesis and therapeutic interventions

Rocksén, David January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
84

Islet Xenotransplantation : An Experimental Study of Barriers to Clinical Transplantation / Xenotransplantation av Langerhanska öar : Experimentiella studier av hinder för klinisk tillämpning

Schmidt, Peter January 2004 (has links)
In the field of transplantation, the increasing deficit of human donors have lead to an interest in animals as an alternative source of organs and tissues. Different in vitro systems and rodent models of xenotransplantation were used to examine the most significant barriers that have to be overcome, before isolated islets of Langerhans from pigs can be used as a cure for insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in humans. In clinical transplantation, islets are infused into the liver through the portal vein. During this procedure the islets are susceptible to harmful innate reactions triggered in blood. Adenoviral vectors generating transgenic expression of human complement regulatory proteins were evaluated in pig islets and shown to confer protection against acute complement-mediated damage. Transplanted islets escaping this immediate destruction will be targets of a cellular immune response. Using a new mouse model of islet xenograft rejection, it was demonstrated that macrophages, effector cells in the rejection, were part of an MHC-restricted xenospecific immune response mediated by T cells. In a strain of knockout mice it was further shown that this process can proceed in the absence of an important signalling system, mediated by Toll-like receptors, between cells in innate and adaptive immunity. These findings illustrate some of the mechanistic differences compared to cellular islet allograft rejection which partly explain why immunosuppressive drugs used in clinical allotransplantation is not sufficient for preventing xenograft rejection. Porcine endogenous retroviruses (PERV) remain a safety concern in xenotransplantation. Characterization of PERV in pig islets indicated that virus expression is low in vitro but increases during the immediate time period following transplantation. This suggests that antiviral therapies administered at the time of transplantation could be used for preventing the risk of PERV transmission after xenotransplantation.
85

Parental Involvement in Pediatric Hospital Care-Implications for Clinical Practice and Quality of Care

Ygge, Britt Marie January 2004 (has links)
The overall aim of this thesis was to gain a deeper understanding about parents’ perceptions of quality of care and their own involvement in pediatric hospital care. Parental involvement in the care of hospitalized children has gained increased attention in recent years. The aim of this thesis was to study parental involvement in pediatric hospital care and investigate its association to the work conditions of pediatric hospital staff. The first study validated a parent questionnaire that measured parents’ views of the quality of care. The questionnaire measures quality of care by means of eight indices and an overall quality grade. Results showed that the questionnaire demonstrated satisfactory validity and reliability. Study 2 examined whether there were differences in quality ratings between respondents and non-respondents to the parent questionnaire. The main parent questionnaire was distributed in hospital and a follow-up questionnaire was sent home to a random sample of parents three week after the hospital visit. This study pinpointed a number of difficulties that need to be considered when conducting investigations of non-response. The third study aimed at gaining a deeper understanding of factors that influence parents’ views of their own involvement in pediatric care. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with parents of chronically ill children. Four themes emerged from the interviews: support, professionalism, work environment and responsibility. Underlying these four themes is a need for a clear communication between staff and parents. The fourth study examined hospital staff’s perceptions of parental involvement and possible consequences for staff work environment. A questionnaire was sent out to hospital staff at oncology, neurology and surgery units at three university children’s hospitals. Hospital staff on oncology units gave higher ratings to their workplace routines for involving parents in the child’s care, and experienced less work strain from parental demands, compared to staff on the other units. The results of this thesis indicate a clear association between parental involvement in pediatric care and the work conditions of pediatric hospital staff.
86

Socioeconomic inequalities in health and disability. : Social epidemiology in the Nord-Trøndelag health study (HUNT), Norway

Krokstad, Steinar January 2004 (has links)
Socioeconomic inequalities in health and disability are found in all countries where social gradients have been studied. Despite rapid economic growth and expanding health care systems, aiming at providing services to people according to need rather than according to wealth, persistent and even widening health inequalities are found in Europe after the second World War. In this research project we wanted to establish a method for measuring socioeconomic status based on occupational groups and education in the HUNT Study, thereby providing tools for research in social medicine. A social gradient scale based on the occupational grouping from the HUNT study questionnaires had not been established. When this study was planned however, educational level, which might serve as a proxy for socioeconomic status, had been monitored in both HUNT I and HUNT II. Disability pension has been a central element in social security legislation in Norway, established as a universal right for all citizens in 1967. This public income-maintenance program protects workers in case of disability, and comprises both universal and earningrelated programs. The main eligibility criterion has been permanent impaired earning ability by at least 50 % for reasons of illness or disease, injury or disability. Despite objective health improvement in the population the last decades, incidence of disability pension has increased. In epidemiology, socioeconomic status is not only an important variable in itself. It is also a confounder that should be taken into consideration in discussing almost all causal relationships. Thus, in population based health studies, measures of socio-economic status are essential. Occupation, education and income together determine the socioeconomic status of a person. However, these factors are sufficiently distinct to require that they should also be studied separately in relation to health. To study them separately is often preferable since this can suggest hypotheses on causal relationships between exposure and disease.
87

Clinical Manifestations of Coronary Heart Disease and the Metabolic Syndrome : A Population-based Study in Middle-aged Men in Uppsala

Dunder, Kristina January 2004 (has links)
During the past decades the knowledge concerning risk factors and pathophysiology of coronary heart disease (CHD) has substantially increased. However, despite identification of important risk factors CHD remains the leading cause of death in the western world. The metabolic syndrome is a cluster of metabolic disorders such as hypertension, hypertriglyceridemia, low HDL-cholesterol, and glucose intolerance associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The studies in this thesis are epidemiological in their character, and examine the relationships between different aspects of CHD and the metabolic syndrome in a population-based study of middle-aged men (ULSAM). The findings indicated that serum lipids were important risk factors for the development of both angina pectoris demanding revascularisation and acute myocardial infarction (MI). Proinsulin and blood pressure were independent predictors of MI only, suggesting these factors to be involved in thrombosis and plaque rupture. It was also found that antihypertensive treatment with beta-blockers and thiazide diuretics resulted in increased fasting blood glucose concentrations in subjects with an insulin resistant state with elevated proinsulin concentrations. Both proinsulin concentrations and increase in fasting blood glucose were associated with increased risk of developing future MI. The finding of a new Q/QS-pattern on the resting ECG, regardless of history of MI, was associated with impaired insulin secretion and was an independent predictor of total and cardiovascular mortality. A risk prediction score for MI including proinsulin and the ratio between apolipoprotein B and apolipoprotein A1 was developed in middle-aged men. This score was predictive for future fatal and nonfatal MI, and proved to be at least as good as the Framingham and the PROCAM scores, being based on traditional risk factors. In summary these studies provide further knowledge about the associations between CHD and the metabolic syndrome and the possible importance of new markers of cardiovascular risk such as proinsulin and the apolipoproteins.
88

PET in Heart Failure - Methods and Applications / PET vid hjärtsvikt - metoder och tillämpningar

Sörensen, Jens January 2004 (has links)
Positron Emission Tomography (PET) permits regional myocardial perfusion, fibrosis and oxidative metabolism to be non-invasively quantified with radioactive tracers such as [15O]-water and [1-11C]-acetate. PET is an established research tool in congestive heart failure (CHF), a major cause of morbidity and mortality. However, as CHF is a syndrome that eventually affects all aspects of cardiac and systemic hemodynamic function, more clinically relevant information from a single PET scan is desirable. The aim of this thesis therefore was to develop and implement some new concepts in cardiac PET. A new method for the measurement of cardiac output with any tracer was validated in animal experiments and CHF patients. The early pulmonary retention of [1-11C]-acetate was inversely related to left ventricular (LV) function in animals and was directly proportional to lung water content and severity of LV diastolic dysfunction in patients. Eight patients with acute myocardial infarction were followed with serial PET from 3 hours to 3 weeks after trombolytic treatment. PET revealed that myocardial perfusion and the extraction and utilization of fuel substrates all decreased closer to the infarct centre. The rate of oxygen utilization within the infarct at 3 h predicted degree of myocardial fibrosis, pulmonary oedema and tissue viability at 3 weeks. Seventeen patients with CHF due to chronic ischemic cardiomyopathy and severely reduced LV function were evaluated with [1-11C]-acetate PET before and after coronary artery bypass surgery. There was a dramatic improvement in physical performance and symptoms, which was not correlated to the standard LV ejection indices. PET revealed that functional improvement was associated with improved LV loading conditions, reversed remodeling and homogenization of oxidative metabolism rather than increased output.
89

Reverse Transcriptase Activity Assays for Retrovirus Quantitation and Characterization

Malmsten, Anders January 2005 (has links)
Reverse transcriptase (RT) is a crucial enzyme for retrovirus replication, and its presence in the virion is indispensable for infectivity. This thesis illustrates the use of RT activity assays as tools for quantitation and characterization of different retroviruses, particularly HIV. A non radioactive assay, using microtiter plates, for the RT of Moloney murine leukemia virus (MMuLV) was developed. Assay conditions for MMuLV and HIV-1 RT, together with isozyme specific RT activity blocking antibodies, were shown useful for discrimination between RTs from different retrovirus genera. RT activity assay for HIV-1 was found to quantitate different subtypes more equally efficient than p24 antigen assays did. Viral load (VL), the amount of HIV particles in the blood, is an important marker of the clinical status of an infected person. A method for VL determination based on RT activity (ExaVir Load) was developed. After plasma pretreatment, to inactivate cellular DNA polymerases, virions in patient plasma were immobilized on a gel, which was washed to remove disturbing factors. The virions were lysed with a detergent containing buffer and the lysate eluted. Finally, the RT activity in the lysate was determined and found to correlate strongly to VL by RNA according to a PCR based standard method (Roche Amplicor 1.5). The second version of the method was able to measure VL down to approximately 400 HIV-1 RNA copies/ml. The usefulness of RT from the VL procedure for determination of susceptibility towards anti-HIV drugs was demonstrated, and the results were in agreement with genotypic data. Due to its technical simplicity, and ability to detect a broad range of HIV-1 subtypes, ExaVir Load and the drug susceptibility application are interesting for clinical use, particularly but not only in resource limited settings. The concept is also potentially useful for research purposes, e.g. in combination with specific RT assay conditions.
90

Intra-articular Glucocorticoid Treatment : Efficacy and Side Effects

Weitoft, Tomas January 2005 (has links)
Intra-articular glucocorticoid injection therapy is frequently used to relieve symptoms of arthritis, but there is considerable variation in injection routines among physicians. One issue of debate concerns the importance of synovial fluid aspiration during the injection procedure. In the present randomised controlled study of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), a significantly reduced risk for arthritis relapse was observed when arthrocentesis was included in the intra-articular injection procedure of the knee. Furthermore, there is no consensus about the post-injection regimes. Previous studies have shown beneficial effects of post-injection rest of the knee, but also injection routines for other joints often include such recommendations. The present randomised controlled trial showed that 48-hour rest in elastic orthosis after intra-articular injection in the wrist did not improve the outcome. Thus, the effect of post-injection rest varies between different joints. The improved treatment result of post-injection rest of the knee is supposed to be caused by retarded steroid resorption from the joint. In order examine the metabolic effects in cartilage, bone and the hypothalamic-piuitary-adrenal (HPA)-axis, resting and mobile RA patients were studied after intra-articular knee injections. Serum levels of the injected glucocorticoid, triamcinolone hexacetonide (THA), were analysed, as well as cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (COMP) as a marker of cartilage turnover, osteocalcin for bone formation and deoxypyridinoline for bone resorption. The HPA-axis was assessed using serum levels of cortisol and adrenocorticotropine hormone. The result showed a short term and reversible suppression of the HPA-axis and bone formation, whereas bone resorption was unaffected. No differences between mobile and resting patients were observed. In both groups reduction of COMP levels were seen, but these were significantly more pronounced in resting patients, suggesting a cartilage-protective effect. The THA levels increased similarly in both groups, indicating that rest did not affect glucocorticoid resorption. Consequently, another explanation for the beneficial effects of postinjection rest of knee synovitis should be considered. In the present material the incidence of infectious complications of intra-articular treatment was less than 1/12,000 injections. The findings in this thesis can be applied in the clinical practice and should be considered when new guidelines for intra-articular glucocorticoid therapy are created.

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