Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 8 de 8
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Psychopharmacology (Berl) ; 234(5): 845-855, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28070619

ABSTRACT

RATIONALE: The 5-choice serial reaction time task (5-CSRTT) is widely used to measure rodent attentional functions. In humans, many attention studies in healthy and clinical populations have used testing based on Bundesen's Theory of Visual Attention (TVA) to estimate visual processing speeds and other parameters of attentional capacity. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to bridge these research fields by modifying the 5-CSRTT's design and by mathematically modelling data to derive attentional parameters analogous to human TVA-based measures. METHODS: C57BL/6 mice were tested in two 1-h sessions on consecutive days with a version of the 5-CSRTT where stimulus duration (SD) probe length was varied based on information from previous TVA studies. Thereafter, a scopolamine hydrobromide (HBr; 0.125 or 0.25 mg/kg) pharmacological challenge was undertaken, using a Latin square design. Mean score values were modelled using a new three-parameter version of TVA to obtain estimates of visual processing speeds, visual thresholds and motor response baselines in each mouse. RESULTS: The parameter estimates for each animal were reliable across sessions, showing that the data were stable enough to support analysis on an individual level. Scopolamine HBr dose-dependently reduced 5-CSRTT attentional performance while also increasing reward collection latency at the highest dose. Upon TVA modelling, scopolamine HBr significantly reduced visual processing speed at both doses, while having less pronounced effects on visual thresholds and motor response baselines. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows for the first time how 5-CSRTT performance in mice can be mathematically modelled to yield estimates of attentional capacity that are directly comparable to estimates from human studies.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Choice Behavior/physiology , Reaction Time/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Animals , Attention/drug effects , Behavior, Animal , Choice Behavior/drug effects , Cholinergic Antagonists/pharmacology , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Models, Theoretical , Psychological Theory , Reaction Time/drug effects , Reward , Scopolamine/pharmacology , Visual Perception/drug effects
2.
Clin Anat ; 14(5): 349-53, 2001 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11754223

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study was to establish the feasibility of laparoscopy in embalmed cadavers to teach abdominal gross anatomy. One cadaver was selected based on body habitus and absence of previous abdominal operations. A standard trocar was used to enter the abdomen at the umbilicus. Two trocars were placed in the left upper quadrant. Pneumoperitoneum was achieved with continuous CO(2) pressure. Liver retraction was achieved percutaneously, exposing the porta hepatis and the gallbladder. The dissection was done with four first-year medical students using standard laparoscopic equipment. Following this, the demonstration was projected over multiple monitors so that all students could participate. Laparoscopic dissection in an embalmed cadaver is feasible and an excellent educational tool for both the medical student and the dissector. The dissector has the opportunity to manipulate laparoscopic tools in a human model closely paralleling operative experience, and the students have an opportunity to learn abdominal anatomy from a clinical perspective. Laparoscopic examination and dissection of fresh cadavers has been used for training surgeons on new procedures such as colon resection, antireflux procedures, and cholecystectomy. There is no report of this same technology used in embalmed cadavers to teach basic anatomy. This approach allows first-year medical students to learn the anatomy while exposing them to the technology currently used in surgical practice, and it affords surgical residents and students additional opportunities to practice laparoscopic skills.


Subject(s)
Anatomy/education , Education, Medical/methods , Laparoscopes , Abdomen/anatomy & histology , Abdomen/surgery , Cadaver , Clinical Competence , Feasibility Studies , Humans , Students, Medical
3.
Psychooncology ; 8(5): 429-38, 1999.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10559802

ABSTRACT

This study examined the relationships among spiritual well-being, quality of life, and psychological adjustment in 142 women diagnosed with breast cancer who were participating in a larger study designed to compare the efficacy of two psychosocial support programs. Participants were given a set of questionnaires that measured spiritual well-being, quality of life, and adjustment to cancer. Results revealed a positive correlation between spiritual well-being and quality of life, as well as significant correlations between spiritual well-being and specific adjustment styles (e.g. fighting spirit). There was also a negative correlation between quality of life and use of a helpless/hopeless adjustment style, and a positive correlation between quality of life and fatalism. In regression analyses, after controlling for demographic variables and adjustment styles, spiritual well-being contributed very little additional variance in quality of life. These findings suggest that while spiritual well-being is correlated with both quality of life and psychological adjustment, the relationships among these variables are more complex and perhaps indirect than previously considered.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , Breast Neoplasms/psychology , Mental Health , Quality of Life/psychology , Religion and Medicine , Adult , Emotions , Female , Humans , Middle Aged
4.
J Vasc Surg ; 29(5): 807-12; discussion 812-3, 1999 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10231631

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of gender on the immediate and long-term postoperative morbidity, mortality, and patency rates for infrainguinal autogenous vein bypass grafts. METHODS: Data were abstracted for consecutive patients who were followed in a prospective surveillance protocol after undergoing infrainguinal autogenous vein bypass grafting during the years 1988 to 1994. There were 165 grafts constructed in 148 patients (101 in 87 men, and 64 in 61 women). Gender differences were analyzed with Student t test or chi2 test for risk factors, indications for reconstruction, and complications. The patency rates and the long-term survival rates were compared by means of life-table analysis. Eagle criteria and long-term survival rates were compared with multivariate analysis. RESULTS: The mean follow-up period was 36 months (39 months for men, and 32 months for women), with a range of 6 to 123 months for the total follow-up period. The two groups did not differ in age at the time of operation (66.6 +/- 1.2 years for men, and 66.7 +/- 1.5 years for women) or in history of diabetes (48% for men, and 56% for women). The risks were similar for hypertension (48% for men vs 45% women), preoperative myocardial infarction (23% for men vs 26% for women), and previous coronary artery bypass grafting (9% for men vs 8% for women). The thallium stress scintigraphy results showed a diagnosis of proportionately more preoperative defects in men (reversible, 34% vs 18%, P <.05; overall, 75% vs 43%, P <.05). The 30-day limb loss rates (0.9% for men, and 0% for women) and mortality rates (2.2% for men, and 5% for women) were similar. Women had statistically more perioperative myocardial infarctions than did men (6 of 61, 9.8% vs 2 of 101, 2%; P <.05), as was documented with electrocardiography and cardiac isoenzymes. Two of these women died within a 30-day postoperative period. The 3-year primary patency rate was 85% for the men and 88% for the women, and the primary assisted patency rate was 97% for the men and 97% for the women. The secondary patency rate was 98% for the men and 97% for the women. The limb salvage rate was slightly higher for the men than for the women (93% vs 87%), although this was not statistically significant. The 5-year survival rate for women was statistically less than for men, with life-table analysis (58% for men vs 42% for women; P <.05). CONCLUSION: After distal bypass grafting, men and women have similar rates of patency and limb salvage, but women have a higher incidence rate of perioperative myocardial infarction and a decreased 5-year survival rate. These data suggest that women have unrecognized cardiac disease that affects them adversely in the perioperative period and the long term when compared with men who undergo the same operation.


Subject(s)
Blood Vessels/transplantation , Myocardial Infarction/epidemiology , Postoperative Complications/epidemiology , Vascular Diseases/surgery , Aged , Female , Groin , Humans , Life Tables , Male , Middle Aged , Myocardial Infarction/mortality , Risk , Sex Factors , Survival Analysis , Vascular Patency
5.
J Pers Soc Psychol ; 68(1): 151-8, 1995 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7861311

ABSTRACT

The present study examined antisocial dispositions in 487 university students. Primary and secondary psychopathy scales were developed to assess a protopsychopathic interpersonal philosophy. An antisocial action scale also was developed for purposes of validation. The primary, secondary, and antisocial action scales were correlated with each other and with boredom susceptibility and disinhibition but not with experience seeking and thrill and adventure seeking. Secondary psychopathy was associated with trait anxiety. Multiple regression analysis revealed that the strongest predictors of antisocial action were disinhibition, primary psychopathy, secondary psychopathy, and sex, whereas thrill and adventure seeking was a negative predictor. This argues against a singular behavioral inhibition system mediating both antisocial and risk-taking behavior. These findings are also consistent with the view that psychopathy is a continuous dimension.


Subject(s)
Antisocial Personality Disorder/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Sex Factors
6.
J Pharm Pharmacol ; 37(5): 329-35, 1985 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2862241

ABSTRACT

(E)-2-(3,4-dimethoxyphenyl)-3-fluoroallylamine (MDL 72145) was found to be an extremely potent inhibitor of the semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) in rat aorta homogenates. Considerable inhibition, which was not reversed by dialysis, could be produced under appropriate in-vitro conditions at drug concentrations around 10 nM. The pseudo first order kinetics for time-dependent inhibition by MDL 72145 (10-100 nM) were found to be consistent with a bimolecular reaction between enzyme and inhibitor with a rate constant for this step of 2 X 10(6) min-1 M-1. A similar rate of inhibition under an oxygen atmosphere to that obtained under nitrogen was produced upon incubation of enzyme with inhibitor, suggesting that oxidation of the inhibitor to an active metabolite was not required for its activity. Incubation of homogenates for very short periods (1 min) with inhibitor (0.05-0.5 microM) and benzylamine (1-10 microM) as substrate indicated non-competitive kinetics for the early interaction of enzyme with the drug. Benzylamine (50 microM), but not pyridoxal phosphate (100 microM), was able to protect SSAO from inhibition by 10 nM MDL 72145. However, pyridoxal phosphate alone appeared to produce some irreversible inhibition of the enzyme. Dialysis against buffer containing 50 microM or 1 mM benzylamine was unable to reactivate SSAO inhibited by 10 nM MDL 72145. It is concluded that MDL 72145 irreversibly inhibits SSAO by acting at, or near, the substrate binding site, but the exact nature of the complex formed remains to be identified.


Subject(s)
Allylamine/pharmacology , Amines/pharmacology , Aorta/enzymology , Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Allylamine/analogs & derivatives , Animals , Dialysis , Female , In Vitro Techniques , Kinetics , Male , Muscle Proteins/metabolism , Muscle, Smooth, Vascular/enzymology , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Semicarbazides/pharmacology , Time Factors
7.
Biochem Pharmacol ; 33(16): 2569-74, 1984 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6466372

ABSTRACT

Cell fractions enriched in cardiac muscle cells (myocytes), on the one hand, and in non-myocytes, on the other, were prepared by dissociation of rat ventricular tissue with collagenase. Amine oxidase activities in homogenates of these cell fractions and also in homogenates of the corresponding undissociated ventricular tissue were compared. In addition, the activity of alkaline phosphatase (AP), an enzyme found predominantly associated in the heart with non-myocytes, particularly capillary endothelial cells, was also measured. No significant difference in the activity of MAO-A (assayed with 1 mM 5-hydroxytryptamine) was found between myocyte and non-myocyte fractions. In contrast, the activities of alkaline phosphatase (AP) and also the semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO), assayed with 1 microM benzylamine (BZ), were both significantly higher in non-myocytes, by several-fold, than in myocyte fractions. Studies of the inhibition by clorgyline of 1 mM BZ metabolism confirmed that both MAO-A and MAO-B can also contribute to BZ oxidation in the rat heart. These experiments indicated different ratios of MAO-A: MAO-B in the various cell fractions. The ratios of the percentage contributions of MAO-A and MAO-B, respectively, to the total metabolism of 1 mM BZ were 78:20 (myocytes), 43:52 (non-myocytes) and 57:32 (undissociated tissue). These results suggest that MAO-B, in addition to AP and SSAO, may be associated preferentially with non-myocyte constituents of the rat heart. Although cardiac myocytes appear to contain predominantly MAO-A, this enzyme form is also localized, with high activity, to the non-myocyte fraction. However, since the non-myocyte fraction is heterogeneous in its cell content, containing vascular components of the coronary microcirculation, as well as other cells of connective tissue origin, the exact cellular localization of the enzyme activities within this fraction has not yet been defined.


Subject(s)
Amine Oxidase (Copper-Containing) , Monoamine Oxidase/analysis , Myocardium/enzymology , Alkaline Phosphatase/analysis , Animals , Benzylamines/metabolism , Clorgyline/pharmacology , Male , Oxidoreductases Acting on CH-NH Group Donors/analysis , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Semicarbazides/pharmacology , Serotonin/metabolism
8.
J Ir Med Assoc ; 65(2): 42-3, 1972 Jan 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-5058790
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...