There is a growing body of evidence that laparoscopic surgery is physiologically less injurious than open surgery. We hypothesized that the open technique results in a greater impairment of peritoneal and systemic defense mechanisms than does the laparoscopic technique. Nissen fundoplication, standardized in technique and duration, was performed in 16 pigs. The procedure was performed through a standard midline incision (OPEN, n = 8) or with laparoscopic technique and CO2 pneumoperitoneum (LAP, n = 8). The peritoneal cavity was instilled with 400 cc of normal saline, either alone (not contamined, n = 8) or containing 10(9) E. coli/ml (contaminated, n = 8). Quantitative cultures, cell count, and flow cytometry were performed on blood and peritoneal fluid samples obtained at timed intervals. We found that host defense processes were better preserved after LAP than by OPEN surgery. Peritoneal and systemic monocyte class II antigen expression, and serum tumor necrosis factor-alpha activity was greater in the OPEN group compared with the LAP group, but peritoneal bacterial clearance was more efficient in the LAP group. These data may illustrate a potential benefit of laparoscopic surgery in cases of peritoneal contamination.
Dietary manipulation, including caloric restriction, has been shown to significantly impact host response capabilities, particularly associated with aging. This investigation compared systemic inflammatory and immune response molecules in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) on continuous long term calorie-restricted (CR) diets with a matched group of animals on a control diet, examining the effects of both gender and aging. The results demonstrated that haptoglobin and α 1 antiglycoprotein were elevated in serum of male monkeys. Serum IgG antibody responses to C. rectus, A. actinomycetemcomitans, and P. gingivalis were significantly elevated in female monkeys. While only the antibody to F. nucleatum was significantly affected by the calorie-restricted diet in females, antibody levels to P. intermedia, C. rectus and T. denticola demonstrated a similar trend. In this investigation, only selected serum antibody levels were influenced by the age in male animals, seemingly related to increasing clinical disease in this gender. More generally, analytes were modulated by gender and/or diet in this oral model system of mucosal microbial challenge.
Abstract. Ground magnetometer measurements of total magnetic field strength from 6 stations at low latitudes were analyzed using power spectrum and Hurst range scaling techniques. The Hurst exponents for most of these time-series were near 0.5, which indicates stochasticity, with the highest latitude stations exhibiting some persistence with Hurst exponents greater than 0.6. Although no definite correlations are evident, the relative increase of the Hurst exponent with latitude suggests the possibility that the underlying dynamics of the magnetosphere change with latitude. This result may help quantify the dynamics of the inner magnetosphere itself without the direct presence of the solar wind driver.
F. nucleatum is the most commonly isolated microorganism from subgingival plaque, but the role of this microorganism in periodontal diseases remains undefined. Arbitrarily primed polymerase chain reaction (AP-PCR) was evaluated as a method for fingerprinting F. nucleatum isolates and for use in clonal analysis. Pulsed field gel electrophoresis was used to further differentiate F. nucleatum isolates, with identical AP-PCR patterns. Extremely heterogeneous AP-PCR fingerprints were observed among the 98 F. nucleatum isolates, with 36 different genotypes observed with primer C1 and 30 different genotype detected with primer C2. Combining the results of the AP-PCR genotype analysis from C1 and C2 primer amplifications revealed that up to 7 different genotypes could be distinguished from isolates from the same oral cavity and that up to 4 different genotypes were observed within a single site. An intense amplicon at approximately 450 bp generated in AP-PCR amplification with primer C2 was associated with F. nucleatum subsp. nucleatum (ATCC 25586) and with 15 F. nucleatum isolates from diseased sites and 2 isolates from healthy sites. Pulsed field gel electrophoresis confirmed the AP-PCR genotypes and demonstrated increased discriminatory power over AP-PCR. The results indicated that AP-PCR and pulsed field gel electrophoresis provide a simple and sensitive means for differentiating oral F. nucleatum isolates and further demonstrate the heterogeneity of this species. These techniques may serve as useful tools in the clonal and epidemiological analysis of F. nucleatum isolates, which may help define the role of these microorganisms in periodontal diseases.
Human polymorphonuclear cell (PMN) viability, morphology, adherence, chemotaxis, oxidative metabolism, degranulation and phagocytosis were evaluated following treatment with sanguinarine (SANG). SANG was noncytotoxic to PMNs at all concentrations tested (0.31-200 microM). SANG entered the PMNs rapidly without altering the membrane fluidity and localized in the nuclear matrix. SANG (1.56-6.21 microM) inhibited chemotaxis, chemokinesis and adhesion in a dose-dependent manner, with a complete inhibition at 6.2 microM concentration. Concentrations of SANG up to 1.56 microM did not affect PMN oxidative burst; however, higher concentrations were found to inhibit basal as well as PMA-induced superoxide anion generation. The effect of SANG was time- and dose-dependent, and could be reversed if the PMNs were exposed to 12.5 microM or lower concentrations of SANG for less than 5 min. Autologous serum increased the tolerance of PMNs to SANG. Exogenous Ca2+ or Mg2+ did not alter the SANG-mediated inhibition of PMN functions. Treatment of PMNs with 3.12 microM or higher concentrations of SANG also resulted in inhibition of PMN degranulation and phagocytosis. The results suggest that SANG-mediated inhibition of PMN functions, without cytolysis or resultant release of inflammatory mediators, may have clinical implications.
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