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Welcome to Ant LarvaScientists announce major progress towards historic Census of Marine Life in 2010
Scientists announce major progress towards historic Census of Marine Life in 2010
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| • | Prostate cancer and weight |
| Excerpts from the Globe's blog on the Boston-area medical community. | |
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| • | Tranexamic Acid and Aprotinin in Primary Cardiac Operations: An Analysis of 220 Cardiac Surgical Patients Treated with Tranexamic Acid or Aprotinin |
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BACKGROUND: Antifibrinolytics are widely used in cardiac surgery to reduce bleeding. Allogeneic blood transfusion, even in primary cardiac operations with low blood loss, is still high. In the present study we evaluated the impact of tranexamic acid compared to aprotinin on the transfusion incidence in cardiac surgical patients with low risk of bleeding. METHODS: This prospective, randomized, double-blind study included 220 patients undergoing primary coronary artery revascularization (coronary artery bypass grafting [CABG]) or aortic valve replacement (AVR). Randomized in blocks of 20, patients received either tranexamic acid (approximately 6 g) or full-dose aprotinin (approximately 5–6 x 106 Kallikrein Inhibiting Units). Transfusion was guided by a strict transfusion algorithm. Molecular markers of hemostasis were determined to assess differences in the mode of action of the two drugs. Primary end-points were the incidence of allogeneic red cell transfusion and 24-h postoperative blood loss. Data were analyzed according to the intention-to-treat principle and compared using the 2 and Mann-Whitney U-test. RESULTS: Two-hundred-twenty patients were enrolled (CABG: 134, AVR: 86). In the aprotinin Group 47% of patients received allogeneic blood during the hospital stay as compared to 61% in the tranexamic acid group (P = 0.036). Aprotinin conferred a 23% reduction in allogeneic transfusion risk (RR 0.77, 95% CI 0.53–0.88). Overall, no significant difference in postoperative bleeding was observed, although 24-h blood loss was reduced in aprotinin-treated CABG patients (500, 350–750 mL vs 650, 475–875 mL (median, 25th–75th percentile); P = 0.039). Despite the lower transfusion rate, the hemoglobin concentration on the first postoperative day was higher in the aprotinin group (11.3, 9.9–12.1 vs 10.6, 9.9–11.6 mg/dL; P = 0.023). The fibrinolytic activity at the end of operation determined by D-Dimer was comparable in both groups. (0.15, 0.11–0.17 mg/L [aprotinin] versus 0.18, 0.12–0.24 mg/L [tranexamic acid]). The activated partial thromboplastin time was prolonged up to 4 h postoperatively in the aprotinin group, while the heparin requirement was reduced: 19% of the patients in the aprotinin group and 45% in the tranexamic acid group received at least one additional bolus heparin during cardiopulmonary bypass (P < 0.001). Troponin T levels postoperatively and on postoperative day 1 were significantly higher in the tranexamic acid group (P = 0.017). No differences in renal, cardiac, or mortality outcomes were observed. CONCLUSION: Considering the rate of transfusion of red blood cells, tranexamic acid was slightly inferior in patients undergoing CABG, but there was no difference in patients receiving AVR. Tranexamic acid seems to be less effective in operations with increased bleeding such as CABG. Clinical benefit depends on specific patient and institution characteristics ( |
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| • | Comparative Structural Study of Leaf Spot Disease of Safflower and Sugar Beet by Cercospora beticola |
| Sugar beet and safflower are sometimes rotated or grown side by side in the Sidney, MT region of the Lower Yellowstone River Basin (LYRB). Cercospora beticola and C. carthami infect sugar beet (Beta vulgaris) and safflower (Carthamus tinctorius) respectively. C. beticola is ubiquitous in sugar beet, but C. carthami has not been reported in LYRB. Observations of unusual leaf spots on safflower in Sidney led to investigation and subsequent identification of safflower as a host of C. beticola. We describe a comparative structural study of progression of C. beticola infection and disease development in both sugar beet and safflower. The two crops were manually infected with two isolates of C. beticola (C2 and Sid1). Gradual development of the pathogen on the leaf surface and disease symptoms were investigated with scanning electron microscope operated at a variable pressure mode. Some specimens were sputter coated with gold to obtain higher resolution images. Lesions in sugar beet and safflower showed a substantial amount of hyphal mass. A number of stomatal apertures in lesion areas of both host plants and in splits in sugar beet lesions clearly showed protruding hyphae, indicating presence of internalized hyphae after establishment of infection. Substantial hyphal mass developed eventually and covered the lesions of both host plants. Assay of the symptoms by PCR provided evidence for C. beticola in the lesions, thus confirming it as the causal agent of the leaf spot of both sugar beet and safflower. | |
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| • | iphone games |
| Apple Iphone Games and Technical specifications, mobile phone, music phone, telephone, mobile systems,voip phone. | |
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| • | digitalfotoclub.com - Compare digital cameras at Digital Foto Club - Home and portable electronics, appliances, housewares and more |
| accessory starter kits, air conditioners, barbecue grill, barbeque grills, big screen tv, birding binoculars, camcorder battery, camera battery, camera lens, canon camera, canon powershot, digital camcorders, digital cameras, digital photo display, electric razors, electric shavers, espresso machines, espresso makers, fuji finepix, fujifilm finepix, gas grill, gps receivers, gps units, home theater, hunting optics, kitchen appliances, lcd tv, nikon cameras, nikon coolpix, olympus stylus, pentax cameras, portable air conditioner, stereo equipment, video battery | |
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| • | The Age of Entanglement by Louisa Gilder |
The Age of Entanglement eBook, 352 pages | Knopf | Science - Quantum Theory | $27.50 | November 11, 2008 | 978-0-307-27036-8 (0-307-27036-X) |
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