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Open-ended interviews with 107 patients documented specific patient expectations of radiologic procedures during which there was no direct radiologist-patient interaction. Patient expectations could be classified into those related to the facility and those related to interactions with radiology staff. Among facility-related expectations, waiting time far outweighed all other concerns. Interpersonal skills were the predominant expectation of radiology staff. The role of the radiologist in fulfilling patient expectations was less clear. Only 10% of unprompted patients cited the radiologist as a factor in their expectations. When patients were specifically prompted to discuss the radiologist's role, communication skills, accuracy of interpretation, and interpersonal skills were the predominant concerns.  相似文献   
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Myocardial tagging in polar coordinates with use of striped tags   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Bolster  BD  Jr; McVeigh  ER; Zerhouni  EA 《Radiology》1990,177(3):769-772
Regional deformation abnormalities in the heart wall provide a good indicator of ischemia. Myocardial tagging with magnetic resonance imaging is a new method of assessing heart wall motion during contraction. Current methods of myocardial tagging either do not provide two-dimensional information or lack a coordinate system well adapted to the morphology of the heart. In this article, the authors describe a new tagging method that provides a true polar coordinate system, with both radial and angular dimensions. This is accomplished with use of a section-selective version of spatially modulated magnetization resulting in striped tags (STAGs). These STAG planes are placed in the myocardium in a star pattern so that they intersect on the long axis of the heart and stripes appear through the width of the heart wall. In the short-axis view during contraction, rotation around the long axis yields angular information such as shear and twist, while separation of the stripes within the myocardium permits measurement of radial thickening. Therefore, this method provides a coordinate system for calculating two-dimensional strain that is adapted to the morphology of the left ventricle.  相似文献   
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Ganesan  TS; Min  GL; Goldman  JM; Young  BD 《Blood》1987,70(3):873-876
Four patients with Philadelphia (Ph') positive chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) were studied before, after, and on relapse following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Southern analysis of DNA from cells collected before and at relapse after BMT was performed in order to investigate the origin of the leukemia at relapse. Using minisatellite probes we showed that the relapse occurred in cells of host origin in all four patients and this was confirmed with a Y chromosome specific probe in two male patients who had a female donor. Furthermore, using two probes for the breakpoint cluster region (bcr) on chromosome 22, we showed that leukemic cells at relapse bore identical rearrangements to those in the disease at time of presentation of each patient. We conclude that relapse in all four patients is due to re-emergence of the original leukemic clone.  相似文献   
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Azidothymidine (AZT) and interferon alpha (IFN-alpha) are among the drugs showing strong in vitro activity against the human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1). Each drug, however, has significant toxicity against normal marrow progenitor cells that frequently proves dose-limiting in patients. In this study, AZT and recombinant IFN-alpha 2a (rIFN-alpha 2a) were tested as single agents and in combination against normal myeloid (CFU-GM) and erythroid (BFU- E) colony forming cells in a standard methylcellulose culture assay. The data were analyzed using a quantitative computerized analysis based on the median-effect principle and the isobologram equation as described by Chou and Talalay (Adv Enz Regul 22:27, 1984). The ED90 for BFU-E and CFU-GM inhibition was then compared with previously measured in vivo plasma levels of each drug and the ED90 for the anti-HIV-1 effect in vitro. We demonstrate that (a) the drugs are strongly synergistic in inhibiting marrow progenitor cell growth and that this synergism occurs at drug levels that are within the range of measured plasma levels in phase I clinical trials, (b) BFU-E are more sensitive than CFU-GM to the inhibiting effects of AZT, rIFN-alpha 2a or both drugs in combination, (c) the drug concentrations in combination that synergistically inhibit bone marrow progenitors are much higher than those required to inhibit HIV-1 replication in vitro, and (d) the anti- HIV-1 effect for the combination of AZT and rIFN-alpha 2a was clearly superior to the effect of AZT or rIFN-alpha 2a alone as indicated by the combination index and the dose-reduction index. These data suggest that substantially lower doses of AZT and rIFN-alpha than those currently being tested in clinical trials might not only maintain a strong synergistic anti-HIV-1 effect but might also avoid significant hematologic toxicity.  相似文献   
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cAMP signaling in the brain mediates several higher order neural processes. Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) channels directly bind cAMP through their cytoplasmic cyclic nucleotide binding domain (CNBD), thus playing a unique role in brain function. Neuronal HCN channels are also regulated by tetratricopeptide repeat-containing Rab8b interacting protein (TRIP8b), an auxiliary subunit that antagonizes the effects of cAMP by interacting with the channel CNBD. To unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying the dual regulation of HCN channel activity by cAMP/TRIP8b, we determined the NMR solution structure of the HCN2 channel CNBD in the cAMP-free form and mapped on it the TRIP8b interaction site. We reconstruct here the full conformational changes induced by cAMP binding to the HCN channel CNBD. Our results show that TRIP8b does not compete with cAMP for the same binding region; rather, it exerts its inhibitory action through an allosteric mechanism, preventing the cAMP-induced conformational changes in the HCN channel CNBD.Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN1–4) channels are the molecular determinants of the h-current (Ih), which regulates critical neuronal properties, including membrane resting potential, dendritic excitability, and intrinsic rhythmicity (1). HCN channels are dually regulated by voltage and by binding of cAMP to the cyclic nucleotide binding domain (CNBD), which is found on the cytoplasmic C-terminal tail of the channel. The CNBD exerts a tonic inhibition on the channel pore, with the opening transition of the channel being allosterically coupled to the conformational changes in the CNBD induced by cAMP binding (2). Thus, the closed-to-open transition of the channel is thought to reflect the transition from the cAMP-free conformation to the cAMP-bound conformation of the CNBD, which stabilize, respectively, the closed and open states of the channel (2, 3). The C-linker, an α-helical folded domain that connects the CNBD to the pore region, conveys the regulation of channel gating from the CNBD to the pore (46). As a result of this allosteric mechanism, the binding of cAMP shifts the voltage dependence of the HCN channel opening to more positive potentials and increases maximal Ih at extreme negative voltages, where voltage gating is complete.In addition to cAMP, HCN channels in the brain are regulated by auxiliary proteins, such as TRIP8b, a cytosolic β-subunit of neuronal HCN channels, which inhibits channel activation by antagonizing the effects of cAMP (79). We have previously shown that TRIP8bcore, an 80-aa sequence located in the TRIP8b protein core that directly interacts with the C-linker/CNBD region of HCN channels, is necessary and sufficient to prevent all of the effects of cAMP on the channel (10, 11). TRIP8bcore decreases both the sensitivity of the channel to cAMP [half maximal concentration (k1/2)] and the efficacy of cAMP in inducing channel opening [half activation voltage (V1/2)]; conversely, cAMP binding inhibits these actions of TRIP8b. These mutually antagonistic effects are well described by a cyclic allosteric model in which TRIP8b binding reduces the affinity of the channel for cAMP, with the affinity of the open state for cAMP being reduced to a greater extent than the cAMP affinity of the closed state (11).A second important action of TRIP8b is to reduce maximal current through HCN channels in the absence of cAMP (11). As a consequence, application of cAMP produces a larger increase in maximal Ih in the presence of TRIP8b than in its absence. The observation that TRIP8b exerts opposing influences on the two major actions of cAMP on HCN channel function, namely, reduces the effect of cAMP to shift the voltage dependence of channel gating but enhances the effect of cAMP to increase maximal current, has important implications for the ability of cAMP to modulate neuronal excitability in vivo. Thus, the relative extent by which neuromodulatory transmitters alter maximal Ih or shift the voltage dependence of HCN channel gating can vary widely among distinct classes of neurons (1214). The differential expression of TRIP8b may provide a mechanistic explanation for this finding, because in neurons with high levels of TRIP8b expression, cAMP will exert a larger action to enhance maximal current, and a smaller action to alter the voltage dependence of channel gating, compared with neurons in which TRIP8b expression is low. Such fine-tuning broadens the range of physiological actions that cAMP can exert to modulate neuronal firing.In the present study, we address the structural basis for the mutually antagonistic effects of cAMP and TRIP8b on HCN channel function. Although our previous biochemical and electrophysiological data strongly support the hypothesis that TRIP8b and cAMP binding sites do not overlap, direct structural information on the TRIP8b–CNBD complex is required to validate the allosteric antagonism model of interaction between the two ligands. A plausible hypothesis for the antagonistic effect of TRIP8b and cAMP is that each of the two ligands stabilizes the CNBD in a conformation that decreases the affinity for the other. To test this hypothesis, we first generated the 3D structure of the cAMP-free HCN2 channel CNBD using solution NMR spectroscopy and then characterized its interaction with the TRIP8bcore fragment. By comparing the cAMP-free with the available cAMP-bound HCN2 channel CNBD structure (15, 16), we reconstruct the full conformational changes induced by cAMP binding, revealing critical transitions occurring in the P- and C-helices of the CNBD, and further highlighting the role of the N-terminal helical bundle in transducing the movements of the CNBD to the channel pore. We next identify, through NMR titration, site-directed mutagenesis, and biochemical interaction assays, the binding site of TRIP8bcore on the cAMP-free form of the HCN2 channel CNBD. Our results demonstrate that cAMP and TRIP8b do not directly compete for the same binding region and support a model of mutual allosteric inhibition between cAMP and TRIP8b. Finally, our results clarify the mechanism by which TRIP8b antagonizes the effect of cAMP on channel gating: TRIP8b directly interacts with two mobile elements that drive the ligand-induced conformational changes in the CNBD. TRIP8b binding to the CNBD therefore prevents the cAMP-induced transition and stabilizes the channel in the cAMP-free conformation.  相似文献   
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