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This research study attempts to prove the concept of the applicability of hyperthermia to treating the lysozyme amyloid fibrils (LAF)'s self-assembled fibrillary aggregates by a feedback-modulated temperature controller ranging from 26 °C to 80 °C, and separately, by near-infrared (NIR)
Increased disease resistance through improved general immune capacity would be beneficial for the welfare and productivity of farm animals. Classical swine fever (CSF) is a contagious disease in farm animals. The immunoglobulin G (IgG) blocking percentage of CSF virus (CSFV) in serum is an essential
The article deals with the results of study of 35 patients with Q-fever and 30 donors to determine the content of rosette-forming neutrophils, lysozyme activity of blood and saliva. On the second week of disease it was revealed the activation of compensative immune mechanisms and on third and fourth
Polymorphonuclear cells derived from the peripheral blood of patients with Familial Mediterranean Fever release more lysozyme in response to high temperature (42 degrees, 46 degrees C) than do control cells. No differences between the FMF and control cells were observed in the release of acid
The selective in vitro release of lysozyme from human monocytes and granulocytes was not greatly influenced by temperatures above 37 degrees C and up to 40 degrees C. The release was markedly inhibited by preincubation with phenylbutazone, oxyphenylbutazone, colchicine and vincristine. A
To clarify mechanisms responsible for the self-limiting and nonerosive features of autoinflammatory joint disease in familial Mediterranean fever (FMF), we performed a study on synovial tissue obtained surgically from an acutely inflamed hip joint from a boy feared to have septic arthritis but later
Experimental Rocky Mountain spotted fever was studied in guinea pigs following intraperitoneal inoculation of 10(7) Rickettsia rickettsii. After a 2-day incubation period, animals developed fever, progressive emaciation, and scrotal swelling with necrosis. Vasculitis, with increased small vessel
Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF) is an inherited disease of unknown etiology characterized by recurrent inflammatory episodes. Circulating fibrin was found in patients with FMF in absence of clinical manifestation of thrombosis and was statistically less frequently observed in patients treated
The success of colchicine therapy in the management of familial Mediterranean fever has provided new direction to investigations into the pathogenesis of this disease. Examination of HLA antigen frequencies in 53 patients with familial Mediterranean fever and appropriate controls, as well as various