In isolated rabbit lungs standardized amounts of edema were induced. Stimulation with the Ca ionophore A23187, leukotriene C4, Pseudomonas aeruginosa cytotoxin and human serum (activated complement) all resulted in protein leakage into the alveolar space with no change in the total phospholipid content. The pressure-volume characteristics of the lungs and the characteristics of the lavage surfactant (Wilhelmy balance) were markedly altered, correlating to the lavage protein content. The surfactant alterations were reproduced by addition of perfusion fluid protein to control surfactant in vitro. All changes were far less expressed or even missing in isolated lungs developing the same amount of edema due to omittance of proteins from the perfusion liquid. Different proteins added to control surfactant in the Wilhelmy balance showed a marked rank order of potency in interfering with surfactant function: immunoglobulins G and M and elastin less than albumin less than fibrinogen less than fibrin monomers. The fibrin monomer effect was reproduced by addition of thrombin to a surfactant fibrinogen mixture and was partly reversed by subsequent incubation with plasmin. In conclusion, high-permeability edema induced by different means results in alterations of lung mechanics and surface activity of lavaged surfactant, presumably due to protein surfactant interaction. Among different proteins, fibrin monomers are especially effective in interfering with surfactant function.
Islet cell antibodies were investigated in 127 non-diabetic children after mumps infection and in four out of seven children who developed diabetes mellitus shortly after active mumps vaccination. Twenty-one of the children who had mumps and all four vaccinated children who were tested had islet cell cytoplasmic antibodies. In contrast, islet cell surface antibodies were detected in 43 out of 68 patients with mumps infection and in 32 out of 44 patients with other viral diseases. All but one mumps-infected child and all the other viral infected patients investigated did not develop diabetes mellitus. The mumps-infected ICA positive children did not show those HLA-frequencies associated with Type 1 diabetes.
Two hundred patients were treated with tantalum stents, 2 in the aortoiliac bifurcation, 114 in the iliac, and 84 in the femoropopliteal arteries. The indications for stenting were technically unsuccessful percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) due to arterial recoil, dissection (156 patients), or acute occlusions (15 patients). Long iliac artery occlusions (29 patients) were indications for primary stenting. Life-table analysis revealed a 3-year patency rate of 95% for stented iliac arteries, and a 1-year patency rate of 80% for stented femoropopliteal arteries. Restenosis of the stented femoropopliteal lumen was particularly frequent in stents placed for restenosis following prior PTA (7 of 12 patients), in stents placed into the distal superficial femoral and popliteal arteries (14 of 24 patients), and in stents positioned over a longer than 4-cm artery segment (9 of 16 patients). For the aortic bifurcation and iliac arteries, arterial stenting has proved to be a valuable adjunct to PTA; for femoropopliteal arteries, stenting should be restricted to acute arterial occlusions or severe residual stenosis following PTA.
The balloon-expandable vascular prosthesis consists of a flexible, knitted tantalum wire mesh tube. To demonstrate its pliability, this prosthesis was tested experimentally in 10 mongrel dogs by implanting it into the proximal femoral arteries. The maximum follow-up time was 1 year. On the basis of the experimental results, in which there was no relevant stenosis, occlusion, or migration of the vascular prosthesis, nine patients were treated: one with iliac artery occlusive disease and eight with superficial femoral artery (SFA) occlusive disease (four reocclusions after angioplasty and four unsatisfactory primary angioplasty results). One SFA lesion was treated with the crossover method from the contralateral side. All implants remained patent without hemodynamically significant stenoses, with the longest observation time being 6 months. Flexible, expandable vascular prostheses are promising adjuncts to angioplasty.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.