14 research outputs found
Asphyxial death related to sublingual hematoma after root canal intervention in a hemophilic patient - case report and literature review
The Association of Telangiectasias with Other Peripheral Vascular Lesions of Systemic Sclerosis
Carmen Bobeica,1,* Elena Niculet,2,3,* Carmina Liana Musat,2,* Lina Iancu,4 Mihaela Craescu,2,3 Andreea Mioara Luca,5 Bogdan Ioan Stefanescu,6 Emma Gheorghe,7 Mihaela Debita,8 Claudiu-Ionut Vasile,8 Gabriela Balan,8– 10 Camelia Busila,8 Alin Laurentiu Tatu3,8,11 1Medical Department, Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy, “Dunărea de Jos” University, Galați, 800008, Romania; 2Department of Morphological and Functional Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy, “Dunărea de Jos” University, Galați, 800008, Romania; 3Multidisciplinary Integrated Center of Dermatological Interface Research MIC-DIR (Centrul Integrat Multidisciplinar de Cercetare de Interfata Dermatologica - CIM-CID), “Dunărea de Jos” University, Galați, Romania; 4Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy, “Dunărea de Jos” University, Galați, 800008, Romania; 5Department of Plastic Surgery, “Sf. Ioan” Clinical Emergency Hospital for Children, Galați, 800487, Romania; 6Clinical Surgical Department, Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy, “Dunărea de Jos” University, Galați, Romania; 7Department No. 1 (Preclinical), Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy, “Ovidius” University, Constanța, 900527, Romania; 8Clinical Medical Department, Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy, “Dunărea de Jos” University, Galați, 800008, Romania; 9Department of Gastroenterology, “Sf. Apostol Andrei” County Emergency Clinical Hospital, Galaţi, 800578, Romania; 10Research Center in the Field of Medical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, “Dunărea de Jos” University, Galaţi, 800008, Romania; 11Dermatology Department, “Sf. Cuvioasa Parascheva” Clinical Hospital of Infectious Diseases, Galați, 800179, Romania*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Elena Niculet; Carmina Liana Musat, Department of Morphological and Functional Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy, “Dunărea de Jos” University of Galați, 35 Alexandru Ioan Cuza Street, Galați, 800216, Romania, Tel +40741398895 ; +40723338438, Email [email protected]; [email protected]: Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a relatively rare collagenosis manifested as microvasculopathy, excessive cutaneous and visceral fibrosis in a background of autoimmune alteration. Autoimmune vasculopathy in SSc occurs early and begins with endothelial cell activation followed by blood vessel intimal proliferation in a context of defective angiogenesis. The alteration of peripheral micro and macrocirculation in SSc is evident through vascular lesions, such as Raynaud’s phenomenon, telangiectasias, acrocyanosis, digital ulcers, gangrene, peripheral pulse deficiency. Our paper details the results of the study on the association between telangiectasias and other types of immune-mediated peripheral vascular lesions that can be identified in SSc. The presence of these peripheral vascular lesions can provide information about the magnitude of the peripheral vasculopathy.Patients and Methods: A total of 37 patients diagnosed with SSc, recruited from a university clinic in Bucharest between February 2019 and March 2020, were enrolled in an observational study. We evaluated the presence of telangiectasias, as a stigma of autoimmune microvasculopathy, and their association with other immune-mediated peripheral vascular lesions that may be present in SSc.Results: The presence of telangiectasias was identified in the absence, but especially in the presence of acrocyanosis and digital ulcerations, and patients with peripheral pulse deficiency almost always had telangiectasias. Less than a quarter of the patients with digital ulcers progressed unfavorably to gangrene, and only one required amputation, telangiectasias being present not only in the patient with amputation but in all patients with gangrene.Conclusion: We appreciate that telangiectasias may be the clinical expression of peripheral vasculopathy characteristic of SSc, they can often be present in association with other peripheral vascular lesions and may represent a valuable indicator for the gangrene risk of digital ulcerations in SSc.Keywords: systemic sclerosis, vascular lesions, phenomenon Raynaud’s, telangiectasias, acrocianosis, digital ulcer
Novel Culturing Techniques Select for Heterotrophs and Hydrocarbon Degraders in a Subantarctic Soil
The soil substrate membrane system (SSMS) is a novel micro-culturing technique targeted at terrestrial soil systems. We applied the SSMS to pristine and diesel fuel spiked polar soils, along with traditional solid media culturing and culture independent 454 tag pyrosequencing to elucidate the effects of diesel fuel on the soil community. The SSMS enriched for up to 76% of the total soil diversity within high diesel fuel concentration soils, in contrast to only 26% of the total diversity for the control soils. The majority of organisms originally recovered with the SSMS were lost in the transfer to solid media, with all 300 isolates belonging to Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, Actinobacteria or Bacteroidetes, the four phyla most frequently associated with soil culturing efforts. The soils spiked with high diesel fuel concentrations exhibited reduced species richness, diversity and a selection towards heterotrophs and hydrocarbon degraders in comparison to the control soils. Based on these observations and the unusually high level of overlap in microbial taxa observed between methods, we suggest the SSMS holds potential to exploit hydrocarbon degraders and other targets within simplified bacterial systems, yet is inadequate for soil ecology and ecotoxicology studies where identifying rare oligotrophic species is paramount
Bidirectional C and N transfer and a potential role for sulfur in an epiphytic diazotrophic mutualism
Single-cell measurement of ammonium and bicarbonate uptake within a photosymbiotic bioeroding sponge
Benthic Deep-Sea Life Associated with Asphaltic Hydrocarbon Emissions in the Southern Gulf of Mexico
Crenothrix are major methane consumers in stratified lakes
Methane-oxidizing bacteria represent a major biological sink for methane and are thus Earth's natural protection against this potent greenhouse gas. Here we show that in two stratified freshwater lakes a substantial part of upward-diffusing methane was oxidized by filamentous gamma-proteobacteria related to Crenothrix polyspora. These filamentous bacteria have been known as contaminants of drinking water supplies since 1870, but their role in the environmental methane removal has remained unclear. While oxidizing methane, these organisms were assigned an 'unusual' methane monooxygenase (MMO), which was only distantly related to 'classical' MMO of gamma-proteobacterial methanotrophs. We now correct this assignment and show that Crenothrix encode a typical gammaproteobacterial PmoA. Stable isotope labeling in combination swith single-cell imaging mass spectrometry revealed methane-dependent growth of the lacustrine Crenothrix with oxygen as well as under oxygen-deficient conditions. Crenothrix genomes encoded pathways for the respiration of oxygen as well as for the reduction of nitrate to N2O. The observed abundance and planktonic growth of Crenothrix suggest that these methanotrophs can act as a relevant biological sink for methane in stratified lakes and should be considered in the context of environmental removal of methane
