Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (SEM)
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The purpose of the present investigation was to assess the effects of periodontal surgery and 4 systemically administered agents, Augmentin, tetracycline, ibuprofen or a placebo on clinical and microbiological parameters of periodontal disease. 98 subjects were monitored at 2-month intervals at 6 sites per tooth for clinical parameters. Subgingival plaque samples were taken from the mesial surface of each tooth at each visit and evaluated for their content of 14 subgingival species using DNA probes and a colony lift method. 40 subjects who exhibited loss of attachment > 2.5 mm at 1 or more sites during longitudinal monitoring were treated using modified Widman flap surgery at sites with probing pocket depth > 4 mm, subgingival scaling at all other sites and were randomly assigned 1 of the 4 agents. Treatment was completed within 30 days during which time the subject took the assigned agent. Overall, subjects exhibited a mean attachment level "gain" of 0.34 +/- 0.10 mm (SEM) and a mean pocket depth reduction of 0.62 +/- 0.09 mm 10 +/- 4 months post-therapy. However, certain subjects in each treatment group showed a poor response. Subjects receiving antibiotics exhibited significantly more attachment level "gain" (0.57 +/- 0.15 mm, SEM) than subjects receiving either ibuprofen or a placebo (0.02 +/- 0.10). The differences between Augmentin and tetracycline groups were not significant, nor were the differences between ibuprofen and placebo. 10 months post-therapy, there was a reduction in the number of sites colonized in any subject group by detectable levels (10(3)) of P. gingivalis. Species showing similar reductions were B. forsythus, P. intermedia and P. micros. Subjects receiving systemically administered antibiotics had a significant increase in the proportion of sites colonized by C. ochracea coupled with a greater decrease in the number of sites colonized by P. gingivalis, B. forsythus, P. intermedia and P. micros post-therapy than subjects not receiving antibiotics. The results of this investigation indicate that adjunctive systemic antibiotics increase periodontal attachment "gain" and decrease the levels of some suspected periodontal pathogens in subjects with evidence of current disease progression.
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PMID:Clinical and microbiological changes associated with the use of 4 adjunctive systemically administered agents in the treatment of periodontal infections. 858 19

Neutral endopeptidase (EC 3.4.24.11; NEP), originally isolated from renal tubular brush border, is a cell surface peptidase identical to the CD10 antigen (or CALLA; common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen) in lymphoid cells. We studied the serum NEP levels daily after transplantation (Tx) in 19 renal allograft recipients. The NEP activity was determined with a two-step enzymatic assay utilizing a fluorogenic substrate (Suc-Ala-Ala-Phe-AMC; see text) and related to clinical signs of graft rejection, to signs of immunoactivation in transplant fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) specimens, to renal function, and to serum levels of C-reactive protein. The serum NEP levels remained normal (peak level 10.3 +/- 1.8 micrograms/l on days 6-9 after Tx, initial level after Tx 7.3 +/- 1.4 micrograms/1 on day 2; mean values +/- SEM) in patients who neither showed clinical signs of rejection nor had findings of immunoactivation in FNAB samples. On the contrary, the serum NEP levels rose clearly in patients developing acute rejection verified clinically and in FNAB samples (peak value 90.4 +/- 18.7 micrograms/l on days 6-9 post-Tx; p < 0.001 compared with patients without sings of immunoactivation) and even in patients having immunoactivation in FNAB without clinical evidence of rejection (108.2 +/- 22.4 micrograms/l, p < 0.001). Serum NEP peak appeared 2-3 days before clinical diagnosis of rejection and a positive findings in FNAB samples. Serum NEP increments did not correlate with changes in serum creatinine, delayed onset of renal excretory function, blood leukocyte count, C-reactive protein level, or infections. Thus, the serum NEP activity was shown to increase after renal allotransplantation associated with early phases of immunoactivation and development of acute graft rejection. Because of the limited number of patients studied, the clinical implications of these preliminary observations for kidney transplant monitoring clearly need confirmation in larger studies.
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PMID:Increased serum neutral endopeptidase activity in acute renal allograft rejection. 873 78

The objective of this study was to evaluate the relationship between the presence of bacteria on the tooth-facing surface of ePTFE barriers and the clinical outcome of membrane supported reconstructive periodontal surgery. 20 systemically healthy subjects affected by chronic periodontitis were enrolled. One tooth site per patient, associated with an angular bony defect and a probing attachment loss of > 4 mm, was selected to be treated by means of a guided tissue regeneration procedure using an ePTFE barrier membrane. Antibiotics (Augmentin 1 g/day) for 2 weeks were prescribed. In addition to the use of chlorhexidine for post-surgical plaque control, all patients were recalled once a week for professional tooth cleaning. The barrier material was harvested for SEM analysis after 4-6 weeks. Professional tooth cleaning and reinforcement of sel-performed oral hygiene measures were given at 1 mouth intervals after membrane removal. For each treated site, the difference in probing attachment loss between baseline examination and a follow-up examination after 6 months of healing was calculated. The results of the SEM-analysis revealed that bacterial colonization was evident in the collar area of all the retrieved membranes. In the mid part of the membranes 30 out of 60 microscopic fields (50%) demonstrated microbial colonization, and in the most apical part 9 out of 60 fields (15%). Regression analysis indicated that gain in probing attachment level was positively correlated to initial attachement loss and negatively correlated to microbial colonization of the mid part of the membranes. It was concluded that bacterial colonization in the mid part of the ePTFE membrane reduced the potential gain in probing attachment following GTR-therapy with almost 50%.
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PMID:Bacterial colonization of barrier material and periodontal regeneration. 895 34

The Hawaiian Drosophilidae possess spectacular diversity in male foreleg modifications, many of which are unknown in other Diptera. The greatest diversity in foreleg morphology is in the antopocerus, modified tarsus, and ciliated tarsus clade (AMC Clade), a group of 95 species. The modified tarsus flies are divided into the bristle, ciliated, split, and spoon tarsus subgroups. The bristle tarsus species feature one or two rows of thickened setae on the basitarsus. The split tarsus species are characterized by only having four tarsal segments, in contrast to five tarsomeres in the remainder of Diptera. Based on comparisons of the apparent ground state of ventral setal rows across the Hawaiian Drosophila, we suggest that it is the second tarsal segment which has been lost. The spoon tarsus species are characterized by having the second tarsomere modified into a setae-filled, concave-shaped spoon. The ciliated tarsus species, all of which possess one or more elongate setae on the tarsus of males, are probably not monophyletic with respect to the bristle tarsus subgroup. The antopocerus flies are characterized by a long basitarsus, with extensive setation on the tibia and basitarsus of some species. The use of these foreleg modifications in courtship behavior has been previously described and it is suggested that they represent the results of sexual selection. The current work expands on previous morphological analyses, presenting a level of detail not previously possible without SEM images. The new characters revealed will figure prominently in future cladistic studies.
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PMID:Morphological variation in the forelegs of the Hawaiian Drosophilidae. I. The AMC clade. 1972 70