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Showing papers by "University of Kansas published in 1996"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The modified hydroxyproline assay presented in this communication will be useful for routine measurement of collagen content in extracts of various tissue specimens and can be used for batch processing of column fractions to monitor the collagen concentrations during purification.

1,196 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Joseph L. Blackshear1, Vickie S. Baker1, F. Rubino1, Robert E. Safford1  +152 moreInstitutions (21)
TL;DR: Low-intensity, fixed-dose warfarin plus aspirin in this regimen is insufficient for stroke prevention in patients with non-valvular AF at high-risk for thromboembolism; adjusted-doseWarfarin (target INR 2.0-3.0) importantly reduces stroke for high- risk patients.

1,028 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article reviews some current thinking and research about using a strengths orientation and assesses conceptual endorsements and criticisms of the strengths perspective.
Abstract: The strengths perspective in social work practice continues to develop conceptually. The strengths-based approach to case management with people with severe mental illness is well established. More recently, there have been developments in strengths-based practice with other client groups and the emergence of strengths orientations in work with communities. To augment these developments, converging lines of thinking, research, and practice in areas such as developmental resilience, healing and wellness, and constructionist narrative and story have provided interesting supports and challenges to the strengths perspective. This article reviews some current thinking and research about using a strengths orientation and assesses conceptual endorsements and criticisms of the strengths perspective.

907 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A set of morphemes that mark Tense, which includes -s third person singular, -ed regular past, BE, and DO, is evaluated, showing that children in an EOI stage who are likely to mark T tense optionally at the same time know a great deal about the grammatical properties of finiteness and agreement in the adult grammar.
Abstract: A critical clinical issue is the identification of a clinical marker, a linguistic form or principle that can be shown to be characteristic of children with Specific Language Impairment (SLI). In t...

874 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This Review primarily focuses on newer findings concerning cyclodextrin derivatives which are likely to receive regulatory acceptance due to improved aqueous solubility and safety profiles as compared to the unmodified cyclodexypropyl-beta-cyclodextrins.

849 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) declined over time, a substantial level of symptomatology was observed up to 10 months after the disease and all 5 factors in the conceptual model were predictive of children's PTSD symptoms 7 and 10 months postdisaster.
Abstract: The authors examined symptoms of posttraumatic stress in 3rd-5th grade children during the school year after Hurricane Andrew. From a conceptual model of the effects of traumatic events, 442 children were evaluated 3, 7, and 10 months postdisaster with respect to (a) their exposure to traumatic events during and after the disaster, (b) their preexisting demographic characteristics, (c) the occurrence of major life stressors, (d) the availability of social support, and (e) the type of coping strategies used to cope with disaster-related distress. Although symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) declined over time, a substantial level of symptomatology was observed up to 10 months after the disease. All 5 factors in the conceptual model were predictive of children's PTSD symptoms 7 and 10 months postdisaster. Findings are discussed in terms of the potential utility of the model for organizing thinking about factors that predict the emergence and persistence of PTSD symptoms in children.

689 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A circulating factor found in some patients with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis is associated with recurrent disease after renal transplantation and may be responsible for initiating the renal injury.
Abstract: Background Heavy proteinuria and progressive renal injury recur after transplantation in up to 40 percent of patients with renal failure caused by idiopathic focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. A circulating factor may be responsible for this recurrence. Methods To determine whether patients with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis have a circulating factor capable of causing glomerular injury, we tested serum samples from 100 patients with the disorder in an in vitro assay of glomerular permeability to albumin. Of the 56 patients who had undergone renal transplantation, 33 had recurrences. Sixty-four patients, many of whom had undergone transplantation, were being treated with dialysis. Thirty-one patients with other renal diseases and nine normal subjects were also studied. Results The 33 patients with recurrent focal segmental glomerulosclerosis after transplantation had a higher mean (±SE) value for permeability to albumin (0.47±0.06) than the normal subjects (0.06±0.07) or the patients who did not hav...

668 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This is the first randomized study to prove the value of surgical treatment for clinically occult regional metastases for intermediate-thickness melanomas, especially with nonulcerative melanoma and those with tumors 1 to 2 mm thick, may benefit.
Abstract: Objective A prospective multi-institutional randomized surgical trial involving 740 stage I and II melanoma patients was conducted by the Intergroup Melanoma Surgical Program to determine whether elective (immediate) lymph node dissection (ELND) for intermediate-thickness melanoma (1-4 mm) improves survival rates compared with clinical observation of the lymph nodes. A second objective was to define subgroups of melanoma patients who would have a higher survival with ELND. Methods The eligible patients were stratified according to tumor thickness, anatomic site, and ulceration, and then were prerandomized to either ELND or nodal observation. Femoral, axillary, or modified neck dissections were performed using standardized surgical guidelines. Results The median follow-up was 7.4 years. A multifactorial (Cox regression) analysis showed that the following factors independently influenced survival : tumor ulceration, trunk site, tumor thickness, and patient age. Surgical treatment results were first compared based on randomized intent. Overall 5.year survival was not significantly different for patients who received ELND or nodal observation. However, the 552 patients 60 years of age or younger (75% of total group) with ELND had a significantly better 5-year survival. Among these patients, 5-year survival was better with ELND versus nodal observation for the 335 patients with tumors 1 to 2 mm thick, the 403 patients without tumor ulceration, and the 284 patients with tumors 1 to 2 mm thick and no ulceration. In contrast, patients older than 60 years of age who had ELND actually had a lower survival trend than those who had nodal observation. When survival rates were compared based on treatment actually received (i.e., including crossover patients), the patients with significantly improved 5-year survival rates after ELND included those with tumors 1 to 2 mm thick, those without tumor ulceration, and those 60 years of age or younger with tumors 1 to 2 mm thick or without ulceration. Conclusion This is the first randomized study to prove the value of surgical treatment for clinically occult regional metastases. Patients 60 years of age or younger with intermediate-thickness melanomas, especially those with nonulcerative melanoma and those with tumors 1 to 2 mm thick, may benefit from ELND. However, because some patients still are developing distant disease, these results should be considered an interim analysis.

596 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
14 Jun 1996-Science
TL;DR: Analyses of fossil mammal faunas from 2945 localities in the United States demonstrate that the geographic ranges of individual species shifted at different times, in different directions, and at different rates in response to late Quaternary environmental fluctuations.
Abstract: Analyses of fossil mammal faunas from 2945 localities in the United States demonstrate that the geographic ranges of individual species shifted at different times, in different directions, and at different rates in response to late Quaternary environmental fluctuations. The geographic pattern of faunal provinces was similar for the late Pleistocene and late Holocene, but differing environmental gradients resulted in dissimilar species composition for these biogeographic regions. Modern community patterns emerged only in the last few thousand years, and many late Pleistocene communities do not have modern analogs. Faunal heterogeneity was greater in the late Pleistocene.

585 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the challenges faced by charities in soliciting adequate resources to carry out their mission, as well as the challenges they face in finding adequate resources for their work.
Abstract: Charitable organizations play a vital role in our society, as is evidenced by their enormous economic and social impact. Yet, for many of them, soliciting adequate resources to carry out their mand...

477 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A large family of diverse item response theory models are now available to apply to an assortment of measurement tasks as mentioned in this paper, such as rating scales, partial credit scoring, and rating scales.
Abstract: In an ever-changing world, psychological testing remains the flagship of applied psychology. Although both the context of application and the legal guidelines for using tests have changed, psychological tests themselves have been relatively stable. Many historically valued tests, in somewhat revised forms, remain in active current use. Further, although several new tests have developed in response to contemporary needs in applied psychology, the principles underlying test development have remained constant. Or have they? Classical test theory has served test development well over several decades. Guiliksen's (1950) classic book, reprinted even in the 1990s, is often cited as the defining volume. However, classical test theory is much older. Many procedures were pioneered by Spearman ( 1907, 1913 ). Most psychologists should, and in fact do, know its principles. In some graduate programs, classical test theory is presented in a separate course that is required for applied psychologists and elective for other areas. In other graduate programs, classical test theory is part of the basic curriculum in testing methods for courses for clinical, counseling, industrial-organizational, and school psychologists. However, since Lord and Novick's (1968) classic book introduced model-based measurement, a quiet revolution has occurred in test theory. Model-based measurement, known as item response theory (IRT) or latent trait theory, has rapidly become mainstream as a theoretical basis for psychological measurement. Increasingly, tests are developed from modelbased measurement not only because the theory is more plausible but also because the potential to solve practical testing problems is greater. A large family of diverse IRT models are now available to apply to an assortment of measurement tasks. IRT applications to available tests will be increasing. Although the early IRT models emphasized dichotomous item formats (e.g., the Rasch model), extensions to other item formats, such as rating scales (Andrich, 1982) and partial credit scoring (Masters, 1982 ) are

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that IL-1β stimulates connective tissue cells to produce MMPs, but activated M MPs in turn negatively regulate the activity of IL-2β, which is implicated in inflammation and tissue destruction.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This book, written by two major figures in adaptive control, provides a wealth of material for researchers, practitioners, and students that can be used by designers of control systems to enhance their work through the information on many new theoretical developments.
Abstract: This book, written by two major figures in adaptive control, provides a wealth of material for researchers, practitioners, and students. While some researchers in adaptive control may note the absence of a particular topic, the book‘s scope represents a high-gain instrument. It can be used by designers of control systems to enhance their work through the information on many new theoretical developments, and can be used by mathematical control theory specialists to adapt their research to practical needs. The book is strongly recommended to anyone interested in adaptive control.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A method of transforming any local discretization method into a global one, based on cluster analysis, is presented and compared experimentally with three known local methods, transformed into global.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that the uterineCOX-1 gene is influenced by ovarian steroids, while the COX-2 gene is regulated by the implanting blastocyst during early pregnancy.
Abstract: Cyclo-oxygenase (COX) is a rate-limiting enzyme that converts arachidonic acid to prostaglandins (PGs) and exists in two isoforms, COX-1 and COX-2. In the rodent, increased uterine vascular permeability at sites of blastocyst apposition is one of the earliest prerequisite events in the implantation process. This event is preceded by generalized uterine edema and luminal closure, and coincides with the initial attachment reaction between the trophectoderm and luminal epithelium. Vasoactive PGs are implicated in these processes. Here we demonstrate that COX genes are differentially regulated in the peri-implantation mouse uterus. During the preimplantation period (days 1-4), the COX-1 gene was expressed in the uterine epithelium mainly on day 4 until the initiation of attachment reaction in the evening after which the expression was downregulated. This COX-1 expression coincides with the generalized uterine edema required for luminal closure. In contrast, the COX-2 gene was expressed in the luminal epithelium and subepithelial stromal cells at the anti-mesometrial pole exclusively surrounding the blastocyst at the time of attachment reaction on day 4 and persisted through the morning of day 5. This uterine gene was not expressed at the sites of blastocyst apposition during progesterone (P(4))-treated delayed implantation, but was readily induced in the uterus surrounding the activated blastocysts after termination of the delay by estradiol-17beta (E(2)). The results suggest that PG synthesis catalyzed by COX-2 is important for localized increased uterine vascular permeability and attachment reaction. The COX-1 gene that was downregulated from the time of attachment reaction on day 4 was again expressed in the mesometrial and anti-mesometrial secondary decidual beds on days 7 and 8. These results suggest that PGs generated by COX-1 are involved in decidualization and/or continued localized endometrial vascular permeability observed during this period. In contrast, the COX-2 gene, expressed at the anti-mesometrial pole on days 4 and 5, switched its expression to the mesometrial pole from day 6 onward. These results suggest that PGs produced at this site by COX-2 are involved in angiogenesis for the establishment of placenta. In the ovariectomized mice, the COX-1 gene was induced in the epithelium by a combined treatment with P(4) and E(2). However, P(4) and/or E(2) treatments failed to influence the uterine COX-2 gene. Overall, the results suggest that the uterine COX-1 gene is influenced by ovarian steroids, while the COX-2 gene is regulated by the implanting blastocyst during early pregnancy.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A conditional step-wise logistic regression analysis revealed the factors of knee recurvatum, an excessive navicular drop, and excessive subtalar joint pronation to be significant discriminators between the ACL-injured and noninjured groups.
Abstract: Female participation in athletics has increased dramatically over the last decade. Accompanying the increase in participation in sports is the increase incidence of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury. The purpose of this study was to examine the correlation between static postural faults in female athletes and the prevalence of noncontact ACL injury. Twenty ACL-injured females and 20 age-matched controls were evaluated. Seven variables were measured: standing pelvic position, hip position, standing sagittal knee position, standing frontal knee position, hamstring length, prone subtalar joint position, and navicular drop test. A conditional step-wise logistic regression analysis revealed the factors of knee recurvatum, an excessive navicular drop, and excessive subtalar joint pronation to be significant discriminators between the ACL-injured and noninjured groups. These findings may have implications regarding rehabilitation techniques in physical therapy.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A variety of sequence specificity studies have been performed using collagen sequence-based peptides and MMP family members, demonstrating that these peptides may not be very good models of native MMP substrates, and that the additivity principle is not always applicable for designing synthetic M MP substrates.
Abstract: The matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)/matrixin family has been implicated in both normal tissue remodeling and a variety of diseases associated with abnormal turnover of extracellular matrix components. To better understand MMP behaviors and to aid in the design of MMP inhibitors, a variety of sequence specificity studies have been performed using collagen sequence-based peptides and MMP family members. Results of these studies have been valuable for defining the differences in MMPs and for creating fluorogenic substrates that can continuously monitor MMP activity. However, these studies have also demonstrated that these peptides may not be very good models of native MMP substrates, and that the additivity principle is not always applicable for designing synthetic MMP substrates.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that surfactants, which are commonly added to pharmaceutical formulations, may enhance the intestinal absorption of some drugs by inhibiting this apically polarized efflux system.
Abstract: Purpose It has recently been reported that the permeability of peptides across Caco-2 cells, an in vitro model of the intestinal mucosa, was limited by an apically polarized efflux mechanism Since surfactants (eg Cremophor EL, Polysorbate 80) have been reported to inhibit similar efflux systems in tumor cells, we determined whether they could enhance the permeability of peptides across monolayers of Caco-2 cells

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 1996-Lipids
TL;DR: Whereas n-3 FA have only a minor impact on lipoprotein C levels in humans, they often markedly lower both total C and HDL-C levels in animals, especially monkeys.
Abstract: The impact of n-3 fatty acids (FA) on blood lipoprotein levels has been examined in many studies over the last 15 yr in both animals and humans. Studies in humans first demonstrated the potent triglyceride-lowering effect of n-3 FA, and these were followed up with animal studies to unravel the mechanism of action. This paper reviews the reported effects of n-3 FA on blood lipoproteins in 72 placebo-controlled human trials, at least 2 wk in length and providing 7 or less g of n-3 FA/day. Trials in normolipidemic subjects (triglycerides <2.0 mM; 177 mg/dL) were compared to those in hypertriglyceridemic patients (triglycerides ≥2.0 mM). In the healthy subjects, mean triglyceride levels decreased by 25% (P<0.0001), and total cholesterol (C) levels increased by 2% (P<0.009) due to the combined increases in low density lipoprotein (LDL)-C (4%,P<0.02) and high density lipoprotein (HDL)-C (3%,P<0.008). In the patients, triglyceride levels decreased by 28% (P<0.0001), LDL-C rose by 7% (P<0.0001), but neither total C nor HDL-C changed significantly. Although the effect on triglyceride levels is also observed in rats and swine, it is rarely seen in mice, rabbits, monkeys, dogs, and hamsters. Whereas n-3 FA have only a minor impact on lipoprotein C levels in humans, they often markedly lower both total C and HDL-C levels in animals, especially monkeys. These differences are not widely appreciated and must be taken into account when studying the effects of n-3 FA on lipoprotein metabolism.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A transport model is proposed in which maternal IgG binds FcRn at low pH in endosomes within the syncytiotrophoblast, and this corresponds with the pH dependence of IgG binding to F cRn and is consistent with the presence of Fc Rn in syncyTiotrophicoblast.
Abstract: During normal human pregnancy, maternal IgG crosses the placenta and provides passive immunity for the fetus. In so doing, IgG passes through two cellular barriers: the syncytiotrophoblast and the fetal capillary endothelium. The Fc region of IgG is required for its transport across the placenta, but the Fc receptors responsible have not been identified definitively. We recently reported the isolation from a placental cDNA library of clones encoding the alpha chain of a human homologue of the major histocompatibility complex class I-related Fc receptor, the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn). In mice, FcRn is essential for the transport of maternal IgG to the fetus and the neonate. We report here the localization of human FcRn mRNA within the placenta by in situ hybridization, and of human FcRn protein by immunohistochemistry. Both methods show that human FcRn is expressed in syncytiotrophoblast, and is, thus, appropriately located to transport maternal IgG across the first barrier. We confirm previous findings that specific binding of IgG to placental membranes is greater at pH 6.0 than pH 7.5. This corresponds with the pH dependence of IgG binding to FcRn and is consistent with the presence of FcRn in syncytiotrophoblast. We propose a transport model in which maternal IgG binds FcRn at low pH in endosomes within the syncytiotrophoblast. FcRn is not expressed in fetal capillary endothelia, and the mechanism of IgG transport across the second barrier remains unknown.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a nonconventional gas distribution design was developed to improve the mass-transport rates of the reactants from the flow channels to the inner catalyst layers of the porous electrodes and to reduce the electrode water flooding problem in the cathode of proton-exchange-membrane fuel cells.
Abstract: A nonconventional gas distribution design has been developed to improve the mass-transport rates of the reactants from the flow channels to the inner catalyst layers of the porous electrodes and to reduce the electrode water flooding problem in the cathode of proton-exchange-membrane fuel cells. Preliminary results validate the effectiveness of the design in achieving the above goals.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A variety of anesthetic techniques and drugs are available to control the hemodynamic response to laryngoscopy and intubation and these medications and techniques are reviewed to guide the clinician in choosing the best methods.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data suggest that women are innately more susceptible to AD than men, the lifetime risk among relatives does not support a simple autosomal dominant inheritance pattern of disease, and AD may not be an inevitable concomitant of the aging process, a conclusion that has profound implications for basic and applied AD research.
Abstract: Despite recent advances in the molecular genetics of Alzheimer's disease (AD), several fundamental questions concerning risk of illness are unresolved, namely, if Mendelian factors account for the incidence of the disease, and if AD is an inevitable consequence of the aging process This study was designed to address these issues and other aspects of familial aggregation of the disorder A consecutive sample of 1,694 patients who met criteria for a diagnosis of probable or definite AD were ascertained in 13 centers participating in the Multi-Institutional Research in Alzheimer Genetic Epidemiology (MIRAGE) project Lifetime risk and age at onset of AD among various strata of 12,971 first-degree relatives was estimated using survival analysis procedures The lifetime risk of AD in first-degree relatives was 390% +/- 21% by age 96 years Age-specific risk of AD declined after age 90 and the data set included 61 apparently unaffected persons who survived to age 96 without becoming demented Female relatives had a higher risk of AD than male relatives at all ages By age 80, children of conjugal AD couples had a cumulative risk of 54%, 15 times greater than the sum of the risks to children having affected mothers or fathers, and nearly 5 times greater than the risk to children having normal parents Children of affected fathers had a cumulative risk that was 14 times the corresponding risk to children of affected mothers Risk assessment in early-onset and late-onset families, using various strategies for determining the age cut-off, yielded contradictory results These data suggest the following: (1) the lifetime risk among relatives does not support a simple autosomal dominant inheritance pattern of disease; (2) women are innately more susceptible to AD than men; (3) the proportion of hereditary cases may be higher in men than women; (4) distinction between early- onset and late-onset forms of AD has little meaning in the absence of a biological marker; (5) the risk of AD decreases after age 90; and (6) AD therefore may not be an inevitable concomitant of the aging process, a conclusion that has profound implications for basic and applied AD research The age- and sex-specific lifetime risks derived from this study are sufficiently robust to be a reliable source of information for counseling relatives of AD patients

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that the current methods for storing and processing human liver are well suited to preserving microsomal P450 enzyme activity, and that long-term storage of human liver microsomes at -80 degrees C is well suited.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The virulent cell-free SHIV can now be used to screen the efficacy of vaccines directed against the envelope of HIV-1 by animal-to-animal passage of simian/human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) in pig-tailed macaques.
Abstract: By animal-to-animal passage of simian/human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) in pig-tailed macaques, we have developed a macaque model of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) disease in humans. Passaging was begun with a chimeric virus containing the env gene of HIV-1 HXBc2 and the gag and pol genes of simian immunodeficiency virus SIVmac239. SHIV was passaged serially in cohorts of two macaques each, using bone marrow-to-bone marrow transfers at 5, 5, and 16 weeks for passages 2, 3, and 4, respectively. The fifth passage was done by using cell-free virus isolated from cerebrospinal fluid of a passage 4 macaque. The virus became more virulent with each passage. Virus replication was restricted in all three animals in passages 1 and 2 but not in five of the six animals in passages 3, 4, and 5. In these animals, intense virus replication in the lymphoid tissues resulted in almost total elimination of CD4+ T cells within weeks of inoculation, and three of these animals developed AIDS in less than 1 year. The more uniform virus-host interaction initiated by the cell-free virus in the passage 5 animals contrasted with a more variable pattern of disease initiated by infectious bone marrow cells during earlier passages. The virulent cell-free SHIV can now be used to screen the efficacy of vaccines directed against the envelope of HIV-1.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The combined use of these two measurements allows accurate definition of the entire range of body iron status, valid even in situations where assessment of iron status has been notoriously problematic, including periods of rapid growth, in pregnancy, in conditions associated with inflammation, and in trained athletes.

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, the HLA-G protein was identified in the macrophage-like stromal cells by immunohistochemistry using the anti-HLA-G mAb, 87G.
Abstract: In situ hybridization studies have shown that at early but not late stages of gestation, human placental stromal cells, many of which are macrophages (Hofbauer cells), contain HLA-G message. In this study, the HLA-G protein was identified in the macrophage-like stromal cells by immunohistochemistry using the anti-HLA-G mAb, 87G. Expression of the HLA-G gene was then analyzed in macrophage cell lines (U937, HL-60, THP-1) and blood monocytes. HLA-G mRNA identified by using reverse transcriptase PCR was consistent with production of a transcript containing intron 4, which codes for a soluble form of HLA-G. Low levels of HLA-G mRNA were identified in mononuclear phagocytes by Northern blot hybridization, and little if any HLA-G Ag was detectable. By contrast, essentially all of the cells displayed high levels of HLA-B/C H chains detected by the mAb, 4E, and B2m. Treatment of macrophage cell lines and monocytes with IFN-gamma increased steady-state levels of HLA-G mRNA, stimulated higher levels of cell surface and intracellular HLA-G Ag in a dose-dependent manner, and increased the proportions of HLA-G relative to HLA-B/C. INF-alpha and IFN-beta enhanced steady-state levels of HLA-G mRNA and in some lines modestly increased the numbers of weakly positive cells but were poor inducers of cell-surface and intracellular HLA-G and did not increase HLA-G relative to HLA-B/C. Thus, mononuclear phagocytes express low levels of HLA-G mRNA and protein, and IFN-gamma selectively enhances expression of this HLA class Ib gene relative to HLA class Ia, which could influence the repertoire of peptides presented during embryogenesis as well as during inflammatory situations in adults. Soluble HLA-G might influence both fetal and maternal immune responses.

Journal ArticleDOI
Tim Dalton1, Qingwen Li1, Doug Bittel1, Luchuan Liang1, Glen K. Andrews1 
TL;DR: In vivo genomic footprinting of the mouse metallothionein-I promoter after treatment of Hepa cells with hydrogen peroxide, tert-butylhydroquinone, or zinc suggested a rapid increase in occupancy of the metal response elements.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper examined the relationship between a comprehensive set of industry conditions and CEO characteristics utilizing data from a broad range of U.S. manufacturing industries and found that industry conditions played a limited role in explaining variations in CEO firm tenure, educational level, functional background, and functional heterogeneity.
Abstract: This study examined the relationships between a comprehensive set of industry conditions and CEO characteristics utilizing data from a broad range of U.S. manufacturing industries. Pooled cross-sectional time series analyses indicated that industry conditions played a limited role in explaining variations in CEO firm tenure, educational level, functional background, and functional heterogeneity. Results of subgroup regression analyses indicated that although high performers appeared to align the studied CEO characteristics more closely to industry conditions than low performers, differences between the industry coefficients in the two groups are generally small.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The changes in grip strength observed with variations in forearm position further support the necessity of a standard position for testing grip strength.
Abstract: Objective Several studies have indicated that changing body positions results in altered grip strengths. Although one might expect that grip strength would be influenced by the position of the forearm during gripping due to the biomechanical properties of the forearm and hand muscles, no investigations of this variable have been undertaken. Method This study examined the effect on grip strength of moving the forearm among supinated, neutral, and pronated positions while maintaining the standard position recommended by the American Society of Hand Therapists. The mean of three grip trials in each position was recorded for each of 106 subjects. Results Grips in forearm supination were the strongest, followed by grips in the neutral position. Grips in pronation were the weakest. Conclusions The changes in grip strength observed with variations in forearm position further support the necessity of a standard position for testing grip strength. The knowledge of how changes in body position affect the strength of the grip can be used to design environments and tools to maximize biomechanical abilities.