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The present study was carried out to investigatethe possibility that lipopolysaccharide deprived fromHelicobacter pylori may alter gastric motility. Toaddress the question, we examined the effect of H. pylori lipopolysaccharide on gastricemptying in conscious rats. Gastric emptying wasevaluated by the phenol red method. Time-course anddose-related effects of intraperitoneal administrationof H. pylori lipopolysaccharide were investigated.Intraperitoneal injection of H. pylorilipopolysaccharide significantly suppressed gastricemptying of a liquid meal in a dose-dependent manner.The inhibitory action of H. pylori lipopolysaccharide wasobserved 2, 4, 8, or 12 hr after the injection. Theseresults suggest for the first time that H. pylorilipopolysaccharide may suppress gastric emptying in along-lasting fashion. It is also suggested that H. pylorimay influence gastric function through its cell wallstructure named lipopolysaccharide.  相似文献   
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Trends in Asthma Mortality in Japan   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Asthma mortality has been increasing in many developed countries in recent years, so we have described the epidemiological features of asthma in Japan. Data on all certified asthma deaths from 1950 to 1997 were obtained from The National Vital Statistics, published annually by the Ministry of Health and Welfare. Trends in crude and age-adjusted asthma mortality rates, as well as age-specific mortality rates, were analyzed. Age and birth cohort effects on mortality rates were also examined using multiplicative models. Between 1950 and 1980, crude asthma mortality rates steadily decreased in both sexes and began to level off thereafter. Age-adjusted mortality rates have also decreased since 1950, and showed a persistent downward trend in both sexes even in recent years. Asthma mortality rates were higher in males than in females during the entire study period. When analysis was restricted to those aged 5 to 34 years, an upward trend since 1980 was observed. The multiplicative model showed a rapidly decreasing cohort effect on mortality among those born after 1860. However, the slope increased in the cohorts born after 1950 in both sexes. The age effect increased linearly with advancing age after 50 years in both sexes. Overall asthma mortality rates have been decreasing during the past five decades in Japan, but the mortality rate has increased among the 5-34-year-old age group since 1980. The high fatality rate stemming from the overuse of beta 2-agonists may account for the mortality increase.  相似文献   
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Archaeologists argue that the replacement of Neanderthals by modern humans was driven by interspecific competition due to a difference in culture level. To assess the cogency of this argument, we construct and analyze an interspecific cultural competition model based on the Lotka−Volterra model, which is widely used in ecology, but which incorporates the culture level of a species as a variable interacting with population size. We investigate the conditions under which a difference in culture level between cognitively equivalent species, or alternatively a difference in underlying learning ability, may produce competitive exclusion of a comparatively (although not absolutely) large local Neanderthal population by an initially smaller modern human population. We find, in particular, that this competitive exclusion is more likely to occur when population growth occurs on a shorter timescale than cultural change, or when the competition coefficients of the Lotka−Volterra model depend on the difference in the culture levels of the interacting species.Neanderthals are a human species (or subspecies) that went extinct, after making a small contribution to the modern human genome (1, 2). Hypotheses for the Neanderthal extinction and their replacement by modern humans, in particular as recorded in Europe, can be classified into those emphasizing competition with modern humans and those arguing that interspecific competition was of minor relevance. Among the latter are the climate change (3) and epidemic/endemic (4) hypotheses. However, an ecocultural niche modeling study has shown that Neanderthals and modern humans exploited similar niches in Europe (5), which, together with a recent reassessment of European Paleolithic chronology showing significant spatiotemporal overlap of the two species (6), suggests a major role for interspecific competition in the demise of the Neanderthals.Replacement of one species (or population) by another is ultimately a matter of numbers. One competing species survives while the other is reduced to, or approaches, zero in size. In the classical Lotka−Volterra model of interspecific competition, this process is called competitive exclusion (7). If Neanderthals were indeed outcompeted by modern humans, the question arises: Wherein lay the advantage to the latter species? Many suggestions have been made, including better tools (8), better clothing (9, 10), and better economic organization (11). These hypotheses share the premise that modern humans were culturally more advanced than the coeval Neanderthals.The purpose of our paper is threefold. First, we extend the Lotka−Volterra-type model of interspecific competition by incorporating the “culture level” of a species as a variable that interacts with population size (12, 13). Here, culture level may be interpreted as the number of cultural traits, toolkit size, toolkit sophistication, etc. Although, as noted above, many anthropological and archaeological discussions invoke interspecific cultural competition, there is, to the best of our knowledge, no mathematical theory of this ecocultural process. A mechanistic resource competition model is difficult to justify at present, because there is a limited understanding of “what the species are competing for… [or] how they compete” (14). Second, we use our interspecific cultural competition model to explore, analytically and numerically, the possibility that a difference in culture level, or in underlying learning ability, may produce competitive exclusion of a comparatively (although not absolutely) large regional (Neanderthal) population by an initially smaller (modern human) one. Third, we assume the competition coefficients of the Lotka−Volterra model to depend explicitly on the difference in the culture levels of the interacting species (rather than to be constants) and ask how this modification affects the invasion and subsequent dynamics.Dependence of the culture/technology level of a human population on its size has been the focus of many theoretical (1521) as well as psychological (2224), archaeological (25, 26), and ethnological (2730) studies. However, the coupled dynamics of population size and culture level, where both quantities are treated as variables, has received less theoretical attention (12, 13, 31, 32).Taking refs. 12 and 13 as the point of departure, we extend previous treatments by introducing two such populations in direct competition with each other in the Lotka−Volterra framework. The two populations are described in terms of their size, Ni (≥0), their culture level zi (≥0), i (=1, 2), and parameters to be defined below. We ask whether a population can be replaced by an initially smaller one, which has an advantage in culture level or in learning ability. This ecological perspective on the competition between “size−culture profiles” may inform ongoing debate on the replacement of Neanderthals by modern humans.  相似文献   
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Journal of Gastroenterology - In clinical practice, rectal cancer (RC) is classified according to tumor location. However, RC’s genetic characteristics according to tumor location remain...  相似文献   
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