scholarly journals A Novel Method for Calculating Mean Erythrocyte Age Using Erythrocyte Creatine

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masashi Kameyama ◽  
Masafumi Koga ◽  
Toshika Okumiya

AbstractBackgroundsErythrocyte creatine (EC) decreases reflecting erythrocyte age.MethodsWe developed an EC model, which showed a bi- or mono-exponential relationship between mean erythrocyte age (MRBC) andEC. We reanalyzed the previously published data of 21 patients with hemolytic anemia which includedECand51Cr half-life.ResultsMRBCand logeECshowed excellent significant linearity (r= −0.9475,p <0.001), showing that it can be treated as a mono-exponential relationship within the studied range (EC: 1.45 – 11.76µmol/g Hb). We established an equation to obtainMRBC(days) fromEC(µmol/g Hb),MRBC= −22.84 logeEC+ 65.83.ConclusionThis equation allows calculation ofMRBCbased on EC which has practical applications such as the diagnosis of anemia.

PeerJ ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. e11024
Author(s):  
Clive B. Beggs ◽  
Eldad J. Avital

There is increasing evidence that the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic has been influenced by variations in air temperature and humidity. However, the impact that these environmental parameters have on survival of the SARS-CoV-2 virus has not been fully characterised. Therefore, an analytical study was undertaken using published data to develop a psychrometric model to assess the biological decay rate of the virus in aerosols. This revealed that it is possible to describe with reasonable accuracy (R2 = 0.718, p < 0.001) the biological decay constant for the SARS-CoV-2 virus using a regression model with enthalpy, vapour pressure and specific volume as predictors. Applying this to historical meteorological data from London, Paris and Milan over the pandemic period, produced results which indicate that the average half-life of the virus in aerosols outdoors was in the region 13–22 times longer in March 2020, when the outbreak was accelerating, than it was in August 2020 when epidemic in Europe was at its nadir. However, indoors, this variation is likely to be much less. As such, this suggests that changes in virus survivability due the variations in the psychrometric qualities of the air might influence the transmission of SARS-CoV-2.


2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (04) ◽  
pp. 1950068 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tian-Bo Deng

This paper proposes a novel method for the design of a recursive second-order (biquadratic) all-pass phase compensator with controllable stability margin. The design idea stems from the generalized stability triangle (GST) derived by the author for the second-order biquadratic digital filter. Based on the GST, a parameter-transformation method is proposed on the transformations of the denominator coefficients of the transfer function of the biquadratic phase compensator. The transformations convert the original denominator coefficients to other new parameters, and any values of those new parameters can guarantee that the GST condition is always satisfied. Optimizing the new parameters yields a biquadratic phase compensator that definitely meets a prespecified stability margin. That is, a biquadratic all-pass phase compensator can be designed to have an arbitrarily specified stability margin. This in turn avoids the occurrence that a recursive phase compensator may become unstable in the practical applications. Thus, the resulting biquadratic phase compensator has robust stability, which is extremely important during the practical filtering operations. A design example is given to show the stability margin guarantee as well as the approximation accuracy.


1983 ◽  
Vol 100 (1) ◽  
pp. 211-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. E. L. Morris ◽  
I. E. Currah

SUMMARYFor many horticultural crops the distribution of weight over size grades is of more importance than the total weight. This paper shows how simply determined features of interrelationships of the weight, size and shape of an individual in the crop can be combined to provide estimates of various aspects of the distribution of crop weight over size grades. The two relationships required are (i) the probability density function of the grading variable for the crop; (ii) a function relating the weight of an individual to the corresponding value of the grading variable.The paper shows how each of these can be determined either from published data or by simple experiment. Examples using data on onions and carrots are given to illustrate this and also to show some of the more important practical applications of the methods. For example, they allow the results of grading with one set of size grades to be extrapolated to a different set of grades without recourse to further measurement or experimentation and this is illustrated using published data on carrots. Other possible uses are also discussed and outlined.


Symmetry ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 166
Author(s):  
Eric Affum ◽  
Xiasong Zhang ◽  
Xiaofen Wang ◽  
John Bosco Ansuura

In line with the proposed 5th Generation network, content centric network/named data networking (CCN/NDN) has been offered as one of the promising paradigms to cope with the communication needs of future realistic network communications. CCN/NDN allows network communication based on content names and also allows users to obtain information from any of the nearest intermediary caches on the network. Due to that, the ability of cached content to protect itself is essential since contents can be cached on any node everywhere, and publishers may not have total control over their own published data. The attribute based encryption (ABE) scheme is a preferable approach, identified to enable cached contents to be self-secured since it has a special property of encryption with policies. However, most of the proposed ABE schemes for CCN/NDN suffer from some loopholes. They are not flexible in the expression of access policy, they are inefficient, they are based on bilinear maps with pairings, and they are vulnerable to quantum cryptography algorithms. Hence, we propose the ciphertext policy attribute based encryption access control (CP-ABE AC) scheme from a lightweight ideal lattice based on ring learning with error (R-LWE) problem, and demonstrated its use in practical applications. The proposed scheme is proved to be secure and efficient under the decision ring LWE problem in the selective set model. To achieve an efficient scheme, we used an efficient trapdoor technique and the access tree representation of access structure describing the access policies was modified into a new structure, based on a reduced ordered binary decision diagram (reduce-OBDD). This access structure can support Boolean operations such as AND, NOT, OR, and threshold gates. The final result showed that the proposed scheme was secure and efficient for applications, thereby supporting CCN/NDN as a promising paradigm.


1969 ◽  
Vol 47 (8) ◽  
pp. 949-951 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. S. Geiger ◽  
R. L. Graham ◽  
M. W. Johns

A delayed γ activity, Eγ = 122.2 ± 0.2 keV, t1/2 = 18.82 ± 0.09 s, is observed following 10 MeV proton bombardment of targets of natural Zr and of natural Hf in which Zr is present as a contaminant. The present results taken together with other recently published data show that this activity arises from 90Zr(p,n)90Nbm. The tentative assignment of this 122 keV γ activity to 179Ta, which we proposed in an earlier publication, is withdrawn.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 3669-3669 ◽  
Author(s):  
András Gézsi ◽  
Gábor Balázsi ◽  
Krisztina Sallai ◽  
Adrienn Mohl ◽  
Eszter Nagy ◽  
...  

Abstract The pathogenesis of VWD Vicenza has remained elusive. VWD Vicenza is characterized by low plasma but normal platelet VWF concentration, the presence of ultra-large plasma multimers, and a heterozygous R1205H mutation. VWF Vicenza is reported to have a decreased half-life in the circulation. When we expressed rVWF Vicenza R1205H in 293T cells, it was secreted with wild type efficiency and multimer distribution, suggesting that the primary defect is accelerated clearance. To evaluate this hypothesis, we developed a pharmacokinetic model of VWF multimer catabolism. The initial assumptions are: 1. Secretion occurs at a fixed rate with the initial “ultra-large” multimer distribution seen in platelet alpha granules. 2. Cleavage of multimers occurs with a probability p that increases with increasing multimer size. 3. Clearance occurs with a time constant determined by the plasma half life and is independent of multimer size. Modeled multimer distributions were compared to those determined experimentally for patient plasma samples. The effects of DDAVP infusion also were modeled and compared to published data (Casonato et al, Blood2002; 99:180). For p = 7.5 x 10−4 min−1 and a half life of 12 h, the modeled multimer patterns were comparable to the observed steady-state distribution of normal VWF. Decreasing the half life to 2 hours produces a low plasma concentration of “ultra-large” multimers typical of VWD Vicenza without a change in any other parameter. Conversely, increasing the probability of cleavage by only thirty percent produces typical VWD 2A multimer distributions. The model also reproduces the triplet patterns of normal and type 2A VWF. Finally, the DDAVP simulations reproduced the time course of VWF plasma concentrations and multimer distributions of DDAVP-treated patients. We conclude that increased clearance alone can explain the ultra-large multimer distribution of VWD Vicenza. Similar modeling should allow the estimation of VWF cleavage and clearance rates in other variants of VWD and in other clinical situations including thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. Figure Figure Figure Figure


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 3168-3168
Author(s):  
Natalia Schutz ◽  
Jorge Arbelbide ◽  
Walter Skordo ◽  
Susana Viñuales ◽  
Elsa Nucifora ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3168 INTRODUCTION: Steroids are the first line treatment for Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia (AHA) and Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP). Second line treatments for patients with partial reponses or steroid dependence are controversial and have changed during the last decades. Several authors have proposed the use of Rituximab in these patients although published data are still sparse. OBJECTIVES: We reviewed the medical records of all the patients treated in our hospital with Rituximab in order to evaluate the response rate and security of this treatment. MATHERIALS AND METHODS: We included in the study all the patients older than 18 years with diagnoses of Immune Thrombocytopenia or Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia treated with Rituximab. Patients with oncologic diseases that required specific chemotherapy apart from AHA or ITP were excluded. Rituximab was administered at a dose of 375mg/m3 weekly for 4 weeks. In patients with AHA we assessed the response according to the following criteria: complete response a hemoglobin level higher than 12 g/dl without hemolysis (normal bilirubin, LDH and haptoglobin) and partial response at least 2g/dl increase from the basal hemoglobin level with improvement in the hemolysis parameters. In patients with ITP we defined complete response as >100.000 platelets/mm3 and partial response >50.000 platelets/mm3. In both cases patients should be tapering steroids (less than 10mg/day of prednisone) and without transfusions. RESULTS: We performed 55 treatments with Rituximab in 37 pts., 19 AHA (12 cold hemolytic anemia) and 18 ITP. The median age was 60 years (26 – 86) and 31 pts. were female. Five patients had other autoimmune diseases (lupus, sjogren, autoimmune hepatitis), and six patients had an underlying onco-hematologyc disease (CLL, indolent lymphoma). All patients had been treated with steroids before and most of them had also received azathioprine, cyclophosphamide or gamaglobuline. The median of previous treatments was 3. Eight patients had undergone also splenectomy. The reason for the treatment was steroid dependence in 16 patients, partial response 6 patients and no response to previous treatment in 15 patients. The overall response rate was 79% for AHA and 94% for ITP, with 8pts (42%) and 13pts (72%) achieving a complete response and 7pts (37%) and 4pts (22%) achieving a partial response respectively. The median time to the complete response was 14 days for ITP and 28 days for AHA. The treatment was well tolerated with only one infusion related serious adverse event and one pulmonary thromboembolism during the period of treatment. Fourteen patients relapsed (8 AHA and 6 PTI). The response rate to Rituximab at relapsed for those patients that received a second or even third course of treatment were similar to the observed before. The median time of follow up was 50 months with and event free survival at 1 year of 34% (median 11,9 months) for AHA vs. 60% for PTI (median 38 months) (p 0,23). The overall survival at 5 years was 39% (median 53 months) vs. 86% (median not reached) (p 0,18) respectively. Seven patients with AHA and 2pts with ITP died, mostly of infectious complications. CONCLUSIONS: Rituximab is an effective treatment for ITP and AHA patients with no response to previous treatments or corticoid dependence. There were few serious adverse effects related to the treatment with Rituximab itself. The mortality rate was higher in patients with AHA although it wasn`t statistically significant. The main cause of death was related to infectious complications but most of the patients had a long history of immunosuppression treatment. Patients who relapsed and were treated again with rituximab had very good response rate. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 157-157
Author(s):  
Yunzhe Lu ◽  
Toshihiko Hanada ◽  
Athar H. Chishti

Abstract Dematin is an actin binding and bundling protein originally identified as a component of the erythrocyte membrane junctional complex. A widely expressed member of the villin-family of adaptor proteins, dematin regulates RhoA activity and cell shape in fibroblasts. Actin binding and bundling activity of dematin is regulated by phosphorylation of its headpiece domain by the cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Despite its extensive biochemical characterization, the physiological function of dematin in mature erythrocytes remains unknown. We used a conditional gene disruption strategy by generating a targeting construct that has the potential for full body gene knockout as well as tissue-specific deletion of dematin gene using the Cre-lox gene deletion system. Wild type, heterozygous, and homozygous progeny were obtained in a typical Mendelian ratio of 1:2:1. Dramatic splenomegaly in 7-week old full length dematin knockout (FLKO) mice was observed with the average spleen weight 10-fold higher than those of the wild type littermates. Flow cytometry showed a ~16-fold increase in reticulocytes (Fig.1A), which was also seen in the blood smear (Fig.1B,C). Severe hemolytic anemia is most likely the cause of relative pallor observed in FLKO mice at day 1 after birth. The adult FLKO mice continue to show relatively smaller body size as compared to wild type and heterozygous mice. These findings are consistent with severe anemia and compensatory erythropoiesis. FLKO mice exhibit typical signs of anisocytosis, microcytosis, macrocytosis, and polychromasia, which are indicative of tremendous variation in RBC cell size and the premature release of reticulocytes from the bone marrow. Moreover, additional RBC abnormalities, including poikilocytosis, acanthocytosis, fragmented RBC, and spherocytes, are consistent with severe hemolytic disease. By scanning EM, the FLKO erythrocytes showed dramatic variation in shape and size. The spherocytes, microcytic vesiculation, and the protruding structures are observed in FKLO mice, as well as extensive intravascular hemolysis (Fig. 1D,E). RBC half-life measurements in vivo by NHS-biotin labeling and flow cytometry showed mutant cells almost immediately cleared from the circulation in FLKO mice. A seven-week chase experiment showed that the half-life of RBCs was reduced from 22 days in wild type and heterozygous mice to less than 3 days in FLKO mice. The hematological phenotype of FLKO mice indicated reduced RBC count, hemoglobin, and hematocrit with increase in the RBC distribution width. Collectively, these findings indicate that the mechanical strength of RBC membrane strictly relies on the presence of full length dematin. We employed membrane fractionation, in vitro protein domain mapping, transmission/scanning electron microscopy, and dynamic deformability measurements to investigate the underlying mechanisms of extreme membrane fragility in FLKO erythrocytes. We also examined the protein profile of RBC ghosts. Surprisingly, the major cytoskeletal proteins remained unchanged in the FLKO ghosts; however, a marked reduction of spectrin, adducin, and actin was observed. When normalized against band 3, these proteins were reduced by 60%, 90%, and 90%, respectively. Since these membrane proteins are essential for RBC stability, our findings suggest a specific role of dematin in recruiting or maintaining a stable association of essential cytoskeletal proteins in the plasma membrane. These results raise the possibility that dematin may directly interact with adducin, and together anchor the spectrin molecules to the plasma membrane. Our findings provide the first in vivo evidence that dematin is essential for the maintenance of erythrocyte shape and membrane mechanical properties by regulating the integrity of the spectrin-actin junctions. Figure 1. Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (18_suppl) ◽  
pp. 1548-1548 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. J. Olson ◽  
J. O. Blakeley ◽  
S. A. Grossman ◽  
J. Weingart ◽  
A. Rashid ◽  
...  

1548 Background: Microdialysis (MD) is an accepted technique to monitor neurochemicals in pts with traumatic brain injury. This study was conducted to evaluate the use of MD to define the time course of intratumoral drug concentrations in pts with high grade gliomas (HGG) receiving systemic chemotherapy. Methods: MD catheters were placed in residual HGG following tumor debulking and infused with Ringer’s solution at 1 μL/min. MD probe location and integrity of the blood brain barrier (BBB) in adjacent tissue were determined by fused MRI/CT. Highdose (12g/m2) methotrexate (MTX), was given as a 4 h iv infusion the next day. MTX was measured in plasma and dialysate samples, collected at 30 min intervals from 1 h before to 24 h after dosing, with an LC/MS assay. Results: Six pts have been enrolled without any adverse events attributed to the MD catheter. Adequate pharmacokinetics (PK) were obtained in 4/6pts. MTX plasma pharmacokinetics (PK) were very consistent between the 4 evaluable pts and similar to published data. Time courses of the uncorrected MTX concentration in extracellular fluid (CECF) exhibited two distinctly different kinetic profiles. For 2pts in whom the MD probe resided within contrast enhancing tumor, CECF increased and decreased in parallel with drug levels in plasma, with a peak CECF of 189 ± 6 μM, an apparent elimination half-life in ECF of 4.44 ± 0.07 h, and an ECF/plasma AUCratio of 0.13 ± 0.01. The other 2pts had a much lower peak CECF (10.4 ± 0.4 μM) and AUC ratio (0.028 ± 0.020), with a more prolonged ECF half-life (11.4 ± 4.5 h). Fused images from 2 of these pts showed that the MD probe was located in nonenhancing tissue. Conclusions: MD is a clinically practical technique to monitor the distribution of systemically administered drugs to brain tumors in pts. It has the capability to elucidate variations in kinetic behavior that are consistent with regional differences in BBB integrity. Appropriate interpretation of data from MD studies to evaluate the distribution of investigational new drugs into brain tumors necessarily requires radiographic determination of the region of the tumor into which the probe has been placed. No significant financial relationships to disclose.


2014 ◽  
Vol 215 ◽  
pp. 459-461
Author(s):  
Alexander S. Samardak ◽  
Margarita V. Anisimova ◽  
Alexey V. Ognev ◽  
Vadim Yu. Samardak ◽  
Liudmila A. Chebotkevich

We present a novel method of pattern nanofabrication with high resolution and small shape defects using the traditional electron-beam lithography (EBL) or only a scanning electron microscope (SEM). Our method of Spot EBL is extremely fast, highly scalable on big areas, capable of sub-20 nm resolution and fabrication of polymer patterns with complicated shapes. We show the nanostructure images fabricated by Spot EBL and propose practical applications of the novel method.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document