E266K CARD4/NOD1, but not the TLR4 gene polymorphism increases the risk of peptic ulceration in H. pylori-positive patients. The -251 IL-8 polymorphism was significantly associated with either gastritis or DU in H. pylori-infected subjects. Host factors including intracellular pathogen receptors and IL-8 production play an important role in H. pylori-induced gastric mucosal damage.
To study whether ventricular overdrive pacing (VOP) induces preconditioning, rabbits were equipped with right ventricular electrode catheters for pacing and intracavital recording and polyethylene cannulas in the left ventricle and right carotid artery to measure intraventricular pressure and blood pressure. One week after surgery in conscious animals, VOP at 500 beats/min over 2, 5, or 10 min resulted in an intracavital S-T segment elevation, shortening of ventricular effective refractory period, decrease in maximum rate of pressure development and blood pressure, and increase in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure proportional to the duration of stimulation. A 5-min preconditioning VOP applied 5 or 30 min before a 10-min VOP markedly attenuated ischemic changes, whereas a 2-min VOP had no effect. In anesthetized rabbits, a 5-min VOP slightly increased guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) and profoundly elevated adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) content in left ventricular samples. When this VOP was preceded (5 or 30 min) by a preconditioning VOP, the cAMP increase was significantly attenuated, whereas the cGMP increase was amplified. We conclude that a single 5-min VOP induces preconditioning in association with alterations in cardiac cyclic nucleotide contents.
In patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus and autonomic neuropathy gastrointestinal motility disorders were observed frequently, and in most of the cases simultaneously. While esophageal and ano-rectal symptoms correlated better with the manometric abnormalities, the lack of correlation between the impaired fasting gastric motility and dyspeptic symptoms shows that, on the basis of the clinical symptom analysis, the prevalence of such motor disorders could be underestimated. The early recognition of gastrointestinal motility disorders may be important for the better long-term management of patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus.
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