RICE FLOWERING LOCUS T 1 (RFT1/FT-L3) is the closest homologue of Heading date 3a (Hd3a), which is thought to encode a mobile flowering signal and promote floral transition under short-day (SD) conditions. RFT1 is located only 11.5 kb from Hd3a on chromosome 6. Although RFT1 RNAi plants flowered normally, double RFT1-Hd3a RNAi plants did not flower up to 300 days after sowing (DAS), indicating that Hd3a and RFT1 are essential for flowering in rice. RFT1 expression was very low in wild-type plants, but there was a marked increase in RFT1 expression by 70 DAS in Hd3a RNAi plants, which flowered 90 DAS. H3K9 acetylation around the transcription initiation site of the RFT1 locus had increased by 70 DAS but not at 35 DAS. In the absence of Hd3a and RFT1 expression, transcription of OsMADS14 and OsMADS15, two rice orthologues of Arabidopsis APETALA1, was strongly reduced, suggesting that they act downstream of Hd3a and RFT1. These results indicate that Hd3a and RFT1 act as floral activators under SD conditions, and that RFT1 expression is partly regulated by chromatin modification.
Cases of sprue-like enteropathy associated with olmesartan have sporadically been encountered since it was first reported in 2012, and their most characteristic manifestation is severe diarrhea. We herein report the first case of sprue-like enteropathy manifesting as Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome due to vitamin B1 malabsorption with only minimally increased bowel movements. When patients are receiving olmesartan and they complain of nonspecific chronic gastrointestinal symptoms, it is important to consider changing the drugs before any serious malabsorption syndrome develops.
TD can provide the same level of diagnostic accuracy as FD among general medicine outpatients for adults. The help of medical assistants and the utilization of physical examination devices might enable medical staff to provide TD care similar in quality to FD. TD could be a useful diagnostic tool when medical work force is limited (e.g., in remote areas, during natural disasters, and in at-home care).
ObjectivesWe examined whether problem-based learning tutorials using patient-simulated videos
showing daily life are more practical for clinical learning, compared with traditional
paper-based problem-based learning, for the consideration rate of psychosocial issues
and the recall rate for experienced learning. MethodsTwenty-two groups with 120 fifth-year students were each assigned paper-based
problem-based learning and video-based problem-based learning using patient-simulated
videos. We compared target achievement rates in questionnaires using the Wilcoxon
signed-rank test and discussion contents diversity using the Mann-Whitney U test. A
follow-up survey used a chi-square test to measure students’ recall of cases in
three categories: video, paper, and non-experienced. ResultsVideo-based problem-based learning displayed significantly higher achievement rates for
imagining authentic patients (p=0.001), incorporating a comprehensive approach including
psychosocial aspects (p<0.001), and satisfaction with sessions (p=0.001). No
significant differences existed in the discussion contents diversity regarding the
International Classification of Primary Care Second Edition codes and chapter types or
in the rate of psychological codes. In a follow-up survey comparing video and paper
groups to non-experienced groups, the rates were higher for video
(χ2=24.319, p<0.001) and paper (χ2=11.134,
p=0.001). Although the video rate tended to be higher than the paper rate, no
significant difference was found between the two. ConclusionsPatient-simulated videos showing daily life facilitate imagining true patients and
support a comprehensive approach that fosters better memory. The clinical
patient-simulated video method is more practical and clinical problem-based tutorials
can be implemented if we create patient-simulated videos for each symptom as teaching
materials.
During the dissection course for second year medical students at the University of Toyama in 2005, we encountered variations of the bilateral vertebral arteries: the left directly came off from the aortic arch as the third branch between the left common carotid artery and the left subclavian artery and entered the transverse foramen of C5, instead of C6, whereas the right originated from the right subclavian artery and entered the transverse foramen of C5. The present vertebral artery of each side was possibly formed by the 6th cervical intersegmental artery linked with the longitudinal anastomoses between the cervical intersegmental arteries. Detailed knowledge of vertebral artery variations is crucially important for surgical treatment of blood vessels in the brain, neck and chest.
We report a rare case of iliac vein compression syndrome caused by urethral calculus. A 71-year-old man had a history of urethral stenosis. He complained of bilateral leg edema and dysuria for 1 week. Physical examination revealed bilateral distention of the superficial epigastric veins, so obstruction of both common iliac veins or the inferior vena cava was suspected. Plain abdominal computed tomography showed a calculus in the pendulous urethra, distention of the bladder (as well as the right renal pelvis and ureter), and compression of the bilateral common iliac veins by the distended bladder. Iliac vein compression syndrome was diagnosed. Bilateral iliac vein compression due to bladder distention (secondary to neurogenic bladder, benign prostatic hyperplasia, or urethral calculus as in this case) is an infrequent cause of acute bilateral leg edema. Detecting distention of the superficial epigastric veins provides a clue for diagnosis of this syndrome.
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