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Showing papers by "Raymond R. Townsend published in 1988"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: High-performance anion-exchange (HPAE) chromatography under alkaline conditions (pH congruent to 13) has been found to efficiently separate neutral oligosaccharides (triose to undecaose) according to molecular size, sugar composition, and linkage of monosACcharide units.
Abstract: High-performance anion-exchange (HPAE) chromatography under alkaline conditions (pH congruent to 13) has been found to efficiently separate neutral oligosaccharides (triose to undecaose) according to molecular size, sugar composition, and linkage of monosaccharide units. The method was able to resolve 1----3, 1----4, and 1----6 positional isomers of neutral oligosaccharides, which are defined as having the same number, type, sequence, and anomeric configurations of monosaccharides but differing in the linkage position of a single sugar. From correlating structural features of different oligosaccharides and retention times, we deduced that at least two factors are operative to determine the superior resolution of oligosaccharides by this type of chromatography: (i) the relative acidities of the hydroxyl groups and (ii) the accessibility of oxyanions of the oligosaccharides to the functional groups of the stationary phase. Splitting of peaks attributable to mutarotation was not observed. Reducing oligosaccharides were much more retained than their reduced counterparts. Linkage of Fuc(alpha 1-3) to GlcNAc of oligosaccharides markedly decreased retention times. Positional isomers of two branched monosaccharides, which differed by 1----6 and 1----4 linkages, were widely separated. The separation of 1----3 and 1----4 positional isomers of both tetrasaccharides and glycopeptides containing undecasaccharides demonstrated the significant improvement in resolution of HPAE compared to previous chromatographic methods by either reverse-phase or amine-bonded stationary phases. Picomole quantities of underivatized oligosaccharides have been detected by triple-pulse amperometric detection, which produced similar responses for a wide range of structures. Quantification of two triantennary glycopeptides from bovine fetuin by using either detector response or 1H NMR was comparable. The N-glycanase-catalyzed release of two 1----4 and 1----3 positional isomers of an undecasaccharide from a tryptic glycopeptide of bovine fetuin could be observed and quantified by direct injection of the enzyme mixture into the chromatograph.

195 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In conclusion, short-term combined α and β-adrenergic blockade improves diastolic filling in mild hypertension.
Abstract: We previously used the Doppler transmitral flow velocity ratio A/E (A = late ventricular filling peak velocity; E = early ventricular filling peak velocity) and the age-adjusted ratio A/E/Age to detect left ventricular filling abnormalities in untreated mild hypertension. This study is a double-blind assessment of the effect of combined alpha- and beta-blockade (labetalol) and beta-blockade alone (atenolol) on left ventricular filling in mild hypertension. Twenty-seven patients blindly randomized to labetalol (12 patients) and atenolol (15 patients) treatment completed the echocardiographic and Doppler studies. Clinical and echo-Doppler data obtained at baseline and 6 weeks after initiation of therapy showed no difference between the two groups for age (49 +/- 10 vs 46 +/- 10 years), mean blood pressure (before therapy, 118 +/- 9 vs 117 +/- 8 mm Hg; after therapy, 108 +/- 12 mm Hg), left ventricular dimensions, wall thickness, systolic function, and mean late filling velocity A. There was no significant change in left ventricular mass and mass index with labetalol (left ventricular mass, 211 +/- 36 vs 216 +/- 38; mass index, 110 +/- 17 vs 112 +/- 16) or atenolol (245 +/- 41 vs 271 +/- 65; 120 +/- 18 vs 130 +/- 35). The mean velocity E, A/E, and A/E/Age ratios significantly improved with labetalol (p less than 0.05) but did not change significantly with atenolol. The improvement in A/E and A/E/Age ratios was primarily due to an increase in early filling velocity E.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

9 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: A patient with no family history of renal disease was referred for obstetric sonography because of elevated maternal serum and amniotic fluid alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), and was proved to be carrying a fetus with autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease.

8 citations