V1

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of V1

  • area v1
  • lead v1


  • Selected Abstracts


    Influence of neurohumoral blockade on heart rate and blood pressure responses to haemorrhage in isoflurane anaesthetized rats

    ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA, Issue 3 2000
    UllmanArticle first published online: 24 DEC 200
    Four groups of Sprague,Dawley rats were anaesthetized with isoflurane (ISO) (1.7% end-tidal concentration) in 40% oxygen, and mechanically ventilated. The animals were bled 15 mL kg,1 b.w. from the femoral vein over 10 min, followed by an observation period of 30 min. Ten minutes before haemorrhage each group of animals was pre-treated with intravenous injection/infusion of either: isotonic saline (Group B; CON; n=7), vasopressin V1 -receptor antagonist [d(CH2)5Tyr(Me)AVP; 10 ,g kg,1] (Group C; AVP-a; n=7), the non-selective angiotensin II receptor antagonist saralasin (10 ,g kg,1 min,1) (Group D; SAR; n=7) or hexamethonium (10 mg kg,1) (Group E; HEX; n=7). A separate group of conscious animals were pre-treated with isotonic NaCl and subjected to the same haemorrhage protocol (Group A; AW; n=7). Mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR) and blood gases were observed during the experiments. Only pre-treatment with SAR and HEX reduced MAP significantly. The pre-haemorrhage HR was only affected by HEX, which caused a reduction by 17%. The HR was significantly lower at the end of haemorrhage compared with pre-haemorrhage levels in all groups except that group treated with HEX. In that group the HR changed in the opposite direction. The ability to maintain MAP during haemorrhage, and the post-haemorrhage period, was significantly impaired in the groups treated with AVP-a, SAR or HEX compared with the group receiving NaCl. It is concluded that autonomic nervous activity is of major importance for the maintenance of MAP during isoflurane anaesthesia, whereas circulating angiotensin II and vasopressin levels contribute to a much smaller degree in this regard. General anaesthesia in combination with different degrees of neurohumoral blockade impairs the haemodynamic responses to blood loss, seen in conscious individuals. The impairment involves both the early and late phases during haemorrhage, as well as the post-bleeding recovery period. All three neurohumoral systems (autonomic nervous activity, angiotensin II and vasopressin) are of importance for regulating MAP during and after haemorrhage, although the autonomic nervous outflow appears to contribute to a larger extent. [source]


    Color responses of the human lateral geniculate nucleus: selective amplification of S-cone signals between the lateral geniculate nucleno and primary visual cortex measured with high-field fMRI

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 9 2008
    Kathy T. Mullen
    Abstract The lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) is the primary thalamic nucleus that relays visual information from the retina to the primary visual cortex (V1) and has been extensively studied in non-human primates. A key feature of the LGN is the segregation of retinal inputs into different cellular layers characterized by their differential responses to red-green (RG) color (L/M opponent), blue-yellow (BY) color (S-cone opponent) and achromatic (Ach) contrast. In this study we use high-field functional magnetic resonance imaging (4 tesla, 3.6 × 3.6 × 3 mm3) to record simultaneously the responses of the human LGN and V1 to chromatic and Ach contrast to investigate the LGN responses to color, and how these are modified as information transfers between LGN and cortex. We find that the LGN has a robust response to RG color contrast, equal to or greater than the Ach response, but a significantly poorer sensitivity to BY contrast. In V1 at low temporal rates (2 Hz), however, the sensitivity of the BY color pathway is selectively enhanced, rising in relation to the RG and Ach responses. We find that this effect generalizes across different stimulus contrasts and spatial stimuli (1-d and 2-d patterns), but is selective for temporal frequency, as it is not found for stimuli at 8 Hz. While the mechanism of this cortical enhancement of BY color vision and its dynamic component is unknown, its role may be to compensate for a weak BY signal originating from the sparse distribution of neurons in the retina and LGN. [source]


    Comparison of spatial integration and surround suppression characteristics in spiking activity and the local field potential in macaque V1

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 3 2008
    M. A. Gieselmann
    Abstract Neurons in primary visual cortex exhibit well documented centre,surround receptive field organization, whereby the centre is dominated by excitatory influences and the surround is generally dominated by inhibitory influences. These effects have largely been established by measuring the output of neurons, i.e. their spiking activity. How excitation and inhibition are reflected in the local field potential (LFP) is little understood. As this can bear on the interpretation of human fMRI BOLD data and on our understanding of the mechanisms of local field potential oscillations, we measured spatial integration and centre,surround properties in single- and multiunit recordings of V1 in the awake fixating macaque monkey, and compared these to spectral power in different frequency bands of simultaneously recorded LFPs. We quantified centre,surround organization by determining the size of the summation and suppression area in spiking activity as well as in different frequency bands of the LFP, with the main focus on the gamma band. Gratings extending beyond the summation area usually inhibited spiking activity while the LFP gamma-band activity increased monotonically for all grating sizes. This increase was maximal for stimuli infringing upon the near classical receptive field surround, where suppression started to dominate spiking activity. Thus, suppressive influences in primary cortex can be inferred from spiking activity, but they also seem to affect specific features of gamma-band LFP activity. [source]


    Effects of attention and arousal on early responses in striate cortex

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 1 2005
    Vahe Poghosyan
    Abstract Humans employ attention to facilitate perception of relevant stimuli. Visual attention can bias the selection of a location in the visual field, a whole visual object or any visual feature of an object. Attention draws on both current behavioral goals and/or the saliency of physical attributes of a stimulus, and it influences activity of different brain regions at different latencies. Attentional effect in the striate and extrastriate cortices has been the subject of intense research interest in many recent studies. The consensus emerging from them places the first attentional effects in extrastriate areas, which in turn modulate activity of V1 at later latencies. In this view attention influences activity in striate cortex some 150 ms after stimulus onset. Here we use magnetoencephalography to compare brain responses to foveally presented identical stimuli under the conditions of passive viewing, when the stimuli are irrelevant to the subject and under an active GO/NOGO task, when the stimuli are cues instructing the subject to make or inhibit movement of his/her left or right index finger. The earliest striate activity was identified 40,45 ms after stimulus onset, and it was identical in passive and active conditions. Later striate response starting at about 70 ms and reaching a peak at about 100 ms showed a strong attentional modulation. Even before the striate cortex, activity of the right inferior parietal lobule was modulated by attention, suggesting this region as a candidate for mediating attentional signals to the striate cortex. [source]


    Centre-surround interactions in response to natural scene stimulation in the primary visual cortex

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 2 2005
    Kun Guo
    Abstract Centre,surround interaction in the primary visual cortex (area V1) has been studied extensively using artificial, abstract stimulus patterns, such as bars, gratings and simple texture patterns. In this experiment, we extend the study of centre,surround interaction by using natural scene images. We systematically varied the contrast of natural image surrounds presented outside the classical receptive field (CRF), and recorded neuronal response to a natural image patch presented within the CRF in area V1 of awake, fixating macaques. For the majority of neurons (67 out of 111), the natural image surrounds profoundly modulated, mainly by suppressing, neuronal responses to CRF images. These modulatory effects started at the earliest stage of neuronal responses, and often depended on the contrast and higher-order structures of the surrounds. For 47 out of 67 neurons, randomising the phases of the Fourier spectrum of the natural image surround diminished the centre,surround interaction. Our results suggest that the centre,surround interaction in area V1 can be extended to natural vision, and is sensitive to the higher-order structures of natural scene images, such as image contours. [source]


    Cortical inhibitory circuits in eye-movement generation

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 11 2003
    Peter H. Schiller
    Abstract The role inhibitory circuits play in target selection with saccadic eye movements was examined in area V1, the frontal eye fields (FEF) and the lateral intraparietal sulcus (LIP) of the Rhesus Macaque monkey by making local infusions of the GABA agonist muscimol and antagonist bicuculline. In V1, both agents greatly interfered with target selection and visual discrimination of stimuli placed into the receptive field of the affected neurons. In the FEF, bicuculline facilitated target selection without affecting visual discrimination and generated many spontaneous saccades. Muscimol in the FEF interfered with saccadic eye-movement generation. In the LIP, bicuculline was ineffective and muscimol had only a small effect. These findings suggest that in the FEF GABAergic inhibitory circuits play a central role in eye-movement generation whereas in V1 these circuits are essential for visual analysis. Inhibitory circuits in the LIP do not appear to play a central role in target selection and in visual discrimination. [source]


    Saccadic eye movements evoked by microstimulation of striate cortex

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 4 2003
    Edward J. Tehovnik
    Abstract Experiments were performed to assess the excitability of neural elements activated while inducing saccadic eye movements electrically from different cortical layers of striate cortex (area V1) in rhesus monkeys. Excitability was assessed by measuring current thresholds, saccadic latencies, chronaxies, and the effectiveness of anode-first vs. cathode-first pulses. Minimum current thresholds for the evocation of saccades (i.e. less than 5 µA) were observed when the deepest layers of V1 were stimulated. The shortest saccadic latencies were also observed at these depths. The shortest latency at 10 times the threshold current was 49 ms on average. The chronaxies of the elements mediating saccades were less in deep V1 (i.e. 0.17 ms) than in superficial V1 (i.e. 0.23 ms). Anode-first pulses were more effective at evoking saccades from superficial V1, whereas cathode-first pulses were more effective at evoking saccades from deep V1. These results indicate that the excitability properties of superficial and deep V1 are distinct for the generation of saccades. Moreover, the excitability of elements mediating saccades in V1 of monkeys is comparable to that of elements mediating phosphenes in human V1. [source]


    Neural selectivity for hue and saturation of colour in the primary visual cortex of the monkey

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 5 2000
    Akitoshi Hanazawa
    Abstract In the inferior temporal (IT) cortex of monkeys, which has been shown to play a critical role in colour discrimination, there are neurons sensitive to a narrow range of hues and saturation. By contrast, neurons in the retina and the parvocellular layer of the lateral geniculate nucleus (pLGN) encode colours in a way that does not provide explicit representation of hue or saturation, and the process by which hue- and saturation-selectivity is elaborated remains unknown. We therefore tested the colour-selectivity of neurons in the primary visual cortex (V1) and compared it with those of pLGN and IT neurons. Quantitative analysis was performed using a standard set of colours, systematically distributed within the CIE (Commission Internationale de l'Eclairage)-xy chromaticity diagram. Selectivity for hue and saturation was characterized by analysing response contours reflecting the overall distribution of responses across the chromaticity diagram. We found that the response contours of almost all pLGN neurons were linear and broadly tuned for hue. Many V1 neurons behaved similarly; nonetheless, a considerable number of V1 neurons had clearly curved response contours and were selective for a narrow range of hues or saturation. The relative frequencies of neurons exhibiting various selectivities for hue and saturation were remarkably similar in the V1 and IT cortex, but were clearly different in the pLGN. Thus, V1 apparently plays a very important role in the conversion of colour signals necessary for generating the elaborate colour selectivity observed in the IT cortex. [source]


    Population pharmacokinetics of ketanserin in pre-eclamptic patients and its association with antihypertensive response

    FUNDAMENTAL & CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, Issue 5 2005
    Lidwien M. Hanff
    Abstract Ketanserin is an antihypertensive drug that is increasingly being used parenterally in the treatment of pre-eclampsia. Because of lack of efficacy in a substantial part of our pre-eclamptic patients, we determined the plasma concentrations of ketanserin in 51 pre-eclamptic patients. Population pharmacokinetic parameters were assessed using the iterative two-stage Bayesian population procedure. The influence of individual pharmacokinetic parameters on antihypertensive response, expressed as the attainment of a diastolic blood pressure ,90 mmHg using ketanserin treatment, was analysed. Almost all plasma concentrations of ketanserin were in or above the therapeutic range. The individual pharmacokinetics of ketanserin in pre-eclamptic patients showed an accurate fit using a three-compartment model. The pharmacokinetic parameters in our pre-eclamptic population were a metabolic clearance (Clm) of 37.9 ± 10.86 L/h and volume of distribution (V1) of 0.544 ± 0.188 L/kg, which is comparable with data from healthy volunteers. Despite a considerable inter-individual variation, no correlation was found between differences in pharmacokinetic parameters and antihypertensive response. We conclude that therapeutic plasma levels can be obtained in pre-eclamptic patients with a fixed dosage schedule of ketanserin and differences in antihypertensive responses within a pre-eclamptic population cannot be attributed to pharmacokinetic differences. [source]


    Different roles of proteolipids and 70-kDa subunits of V-ATPase in growth and death of cultured human cells

    GENES TO CELLS, Issue 6 2003
    Hong Zhan
    Background: The vacuolar-type proton-translocating adenosine triphosphatase (V-ATPase) plays important roles in cell growth and tumour progression. V-ATPase is composed of two distinct structures, a hydrophilic catalytic cytosolic sector (V1) and a hydrophobic transmembrane sector (V0). The V1 sector is composed of 5,8 different subunits with the structure A3B3C1D1E1F1G1H1. The V0 sector is composed of 5 different subunits with the structure 1161381191166. The over-expression of 16-kDa proteolipid subunit of V-ATPase in the perinuclear region of the human adventitial fibroblasts promotes phenotypic modulation that contributes to neointimal formation and medial thickening. A relationship between oncogenicity and the expression of the 16-kDa proteolipid has also been suggested in human pancreatic carcinoma tissue. Results: We found that the mRNA levels of the 16-kDa proteolipid but not of the 70-kDa subunit of V-ATPase in human myofibroblasts were more abundant in serum-containing medium (MF(+) cells) than serum-free medium (MF(,) cells). In HeLa cells, the levels of mRNA and protein of the 16-kDa, 21-kDa or 70-kDa were clearly suppressed when the corresponding anti-sense oligonucleotides were administered to the culture medium. The growth rate and viability (mostly due to necrosis) of HeLa cells were reduced markedly by the 16-kDa and 21-kDa anti-sense, but little by the 70-kDa anti-sense, and not at all by any sense oligonucleotides. The localization of 16-kDa/21-kDa proteolipid subunits was different from that of the 70-kDa subunit in HeLa cells. Conclusion: These results suggest that the 16-kDa and 21-kDa proteolipid subunits of the V0 sector play crucial roles in growth and death of cultured human cells. Our results may provide new insights into the mechanism and therapeutic implications for vessel wall hyperplasia and tumorigenesis. [source]


    Developmental and activity-dependent genomic occupancy profiles of CREB in monkey area V1

    GENES, BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR, Issue 2 2009
    J. Lalonde
    The mammalian neocortex displays significant plastic rearrangement in response to altered sensory input, especially during early postnatal development. It is believed that cyclic AMP-response element-binding (CREB) plays an important role in orchestrating the molecular events that guide neuroplastic change, although the details of its genomic targets during normal postnatal development or in response to sensory deprivation remain unknown. Here, we performed CREB chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) from monkey area V1 tissue and hybridized enriched DNA fragments to promoter microarrays (ChIP chip analysis). Our goal was to determine and categorize the CREB regulon in monkey area V1 at two distinct developmental stages (peak of critical period vs. adulthood) and after 5 days of monocular enucleation (ME) at both ages. Classification of enriched candidates showed that the majority of isolated promoter loci (n = 795) were common to all four conditions. A particularly interesting group of candidates (n = 192) was specific to samples derived from enucleated infant area V1. Gene ontology analysis of CREB targets during early postnatal development showed a subgroup of genes implicated in cytoskeleton-based structural modification. Analysis of messenger RNA expression (quantitative real-time,polymerase chain reaction) of candidate genes showed striking differences in expression profiles between infant and adult area V1 after ME. Our study represents the first extensive genomic analysis of CREB DNA occupancy in monkey neocortex and provides new insight into the multifaceted transcriptional role of CREB in guiding neuroplastic change. [source]


    A double dissociation between striate and extrastriate visual cortex for pattern motion perception revealed using rTMS

    HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, Issue 10 2009
    Benjamin Thompson
    Abstract The neural mechanisms underlying the integration and segregation of motion signals are often studied using plaid stimuli. These stimuli consist of two spatially coincident dynamic gratings of differing orientations, which are either perceived to move in two unique directions or are integrated by the visual system to elicit the percept of a checkerboard moving in a single direction. Computations pertaining to the motion of the individual component gratings are thought to take place in striate cortex (V1) whereas motion integration is thought to involve neurons in dorsal stream extrastriate visual areas, particularly V5/MT. By combining a psychophysical task that employed plaid stimuli with 1 Hz offline repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), we demonstrated a double dissociation between striate and extrastriate visual cortex in terms of their contributions to motion integration. rTMS over striate cortex increased coherent motion percepts whereas rTMS over extrastriate cortex had the opposite effect. These effects were robust directly after the stimulation administration and gradually returned to baseline within 15 minutes. This double dissociation is consistent with previous patient data and the recent hypothesis that both coherent and transparent motion percepts are supported by the visual system simultaneously and compete for perceptual dominance. Hum Brain Mapp 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Attentional load modifies early activity in human primary visual cortex

    HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, Issue 5 2009
    Karsten S. Rauss
    Abstract Recent theories of selective attention assume that the more attention is required by a task, the earlier are irrelevant stimuli filtered during perceptual processing. Previous functional MRI studies have demonstrated that primary visual cortex (V1) activation by peripheral distractors is reduced by higher task difficulty at fixation, but it remains unknown whether such changes affect initial processing in V1 or subsequent feedback. Here we manipulated attentional load at fixation while recording peripheral visual responses with high-density EEG in 28 healthy volunteers, which allowed us to track the exact time course of attention-related effects on V1. Our results show a modulation of the earliest component of the visual evoked potential (C1) as a function of attentional load. Additional topographic and source localization analyses corroborated this finding, with significant load-related differences observed throughout the first 100 ms post-stimulus. However, this effect was observed only when stimuli were presented in the upper visual field (VF), but not for symmetrical positions in the lower VF. Our findings demonstrate early filtering of irrelevant information under increased attentional demands, thus supporting models that assume a flexible mechanism of attentional selection, but reveal important functional asymmetries across the VF. Hum Brain Mapp 2009. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Electrophysiologic and electrocardiographic characteristics of focal atrial tachycardia arising from superior tricuspid annulus

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PRACTICE, Issue 7 2008
    J. X. Yin
    Summary Objectives:, This study describes the electrophysiologic and electrocardiographic characteristics of focal atrial tachycardia (AT) arising from superior tricuspid annulus in six (1.9%) patients of a consecutive series of 320 patients. Methods:, Six patients (mean age 42 ± 22 years) with a mean cycle length of 326 ms of a consecutive series of 320 patients undergoing radiofrequency ablation for focal AT were mapped. Results:, During electrophysiologic study, tachycardia could be induced in five patients with programmed atrial extrastimuli while a spontaneous onset and offset with ,warm-up and cool-down' phenomenon was seen in the other patient. During tachycardia, P-wave morphology in Lead I, II, III and aVF was upright in all the six patients. The precordial leads were dominantly negative or isoelectric in V1,V2 and positive in V5,V6 with a transition at V3 or V4. Moreover, the tachycardia was sensitive to intravenous administration of adenosine triphosphate in five of six patients. Conclusions:, Radiofrequency ablation was performed successfully in all patients (mean 4.5 ± 1.2 applications). No recurrence of AT was observed after a mean follow-up of 8 ± 6 months. Thus, AT arising from superior tricuspid annulus is rare. Radiofrequency ablation of this kind of AT is safe and effective. [source]


    Electrophysiologic characteristics and radiofrequency ablation of focal atrial tachycardia arising from para-Hisian region

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PRACTICE, Issue 3 2007
    Y. Zhou
    Summary This study describes the electrophysiologic characteristics and radiofrequency ablation of focal atrial tachycardia (AT) arising from para-Hisian region in 14 (6.0%) patients of a consecutive series of 224 patients patients. Inverted or biphasic P wave in V1 and uncharacteristic P wave in inferior leads were observed during tachycardia, suggesting that there isn't a characteristic P-wave morphology for para-Hisian AT. During electrophysiological study, tachycardia could be induced with programmed atrial extrastimuli in 11 patients while a spontaneous onset and offset with ,warm-up and cool-down' phenomenon were seen in other three patients. Moreover, the tachycardias were sensitive to intravenous administration of adenosine triphosphate in all patients. On the basis of these findings, the mechanism is suggestive of triggered activity or micro-reentry, but automaticity cannot be conclusively excluded. Radiofrequency energy was delivered to the earliest site of atrial activation during AT. Ablating energy was carefully titrated, starting at 5 W and increasing gradually upto a maximum of 40 W, to achieve the ceasing of tachycardia. The long-term outcome was a 100% success rate in these 14 patients and there were no irreversible complications associated with ablation. Thus, the mapping and ablation of focal AT arising from para-Hisian region is safe and effective, delivery of radiofrequency energy in a titrated manner and continuous monitoring of atrioventricular (AV) conduction advocated to minimise the risk of damage to the anterograde AV conduction. [source]


    Kinetics and mechanism of esterification of epoxy resin with methacrylic acid in the presence of tertiary amines

    ADVANCES IN POLYMER TECHNOLOGY, Issue 1 2005
    Akanksha Srivastava
    Abstract The synthesis of vinyl ester resins V1, V2, and V3 was carried out using bisphenol-A based epoxy resin and methacrylic acid in the presence of triethyl-, tripropyl-, and tributyl-amines, respectively. The reaction follows first-order kinetics. The interaction between acid and amine was investigated by IR spectroscopy which shows absorptions corresponding to the formation of activated acid,catalyst complex. The specific rate constants, calculated by regression analysis, were found to obey an Arrhenius expression. The kinetic and thermodynamic parameters: activation energy, frequency factor, entropy, enthalpy, and free energy revealed that the reaction was spontaneous and irreversible with a highly ordered activated complex. The activation energy of the esterification of epoxy resin in the presence of tertiary amines increases in order V1 < V2 < V3. The experimental results were explained by proposing a reaction mechanism and deriving the rate equation. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Adv Polym Techn 24:1,13, 2005; Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002/adv.20026 [source]


    The Surface Electrocardiogram Predicts Risk of Heart Block During Right Heart Catheterization in Patients With Preexisting Left Bundle Branch Block: Implications for the Definition of Complete Left Bundle Branch Block

    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 7 2010
    BENZY J. PADANILAM M.D.
    LBBB and Heart Block.,Background: Patients with left bundle branch block (LBBB) undergoing right heart catheterization can develop complete heart block (CHB) or right bundle branch block (RBBB) in response to right bundle branch (RBB) trauma. We hypothesized that LBBB patients with an initial r wave (,1 mm) in lead V1 have intact left to right ventricular septal (VS) activation suggesting persistent conduction over the left bundle branch. Trauma to the RBB should result in RBBB pattern rather than CHB in such patients. Methods: Between January 2002 and February 2007, we prospectively evaluated 27 consecutive patients with LBBB developing either CHB or RBBB during right heart catheterization. The prevalence of an r wave ,1 mm in lead V1 was determined using 118 serial LBBB electrocardiographs (ECGs) from our hospital database. Results: Catheter trauma to the RBB resulted in CHB in 18 patients and RBBB in 9 patients. All 6 patients with ,1 mm r wave in V1 developed RBBB. Among these 6 patients q wave in lead I, V5, or V6 were present in 3. Four patients (3 in CHB group and 1 in RBBB group) developed spontaneous CHB during a median follow-up of 61 months. V1 q wave ,1 mm was present in 28% of hospitalized complete LBBB patients. Conclusions: An initial r wave of ,1 mm in lead V1 suggests intact left to right VS activation and identifies LBBB patients at low risk of CHB during right heart catheterization. These preliminary findings indicate that an initial r wave of ,1 mm in lead V1, present in approximately 28% of ECGs with classically defined LBBB, may constitute a new exclusion criterion when defining complete LBBB. (J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol, Vol. pp. 781-785, July 2010) [source]


    Activation Delay and VT Parameters in Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia/Cardiomyopathy: Toward Improvement of Diagnostic ECG Criteria

    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 8 2008
    MONIEK G.P.J. COX M.D.
    Introduction: Desmosomal changes, electrical uncoupling, and surviving myocardial bundles embedded in fibrofatty tissue are hallmarks of activation delay in arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C). Currently, generally accepted task force criteria (TFC) are used for clinical diagnosis. We propose additional criteria based on activation delay and ventricular tachycardia (VT) to improve identification of affected individuals. Methods and Results: Activation delay and VT-related 12-lead electrocardiographic (ECG) criteria were studied, while off drugs, in 42 patients with proven ARVD/C according to TFC, and 27 controls with idiopathic VT from the RV outflow tract. Two of three measured TFC could only be identified in a small minority of ARVD/C patients. Additional ECG criteria proposed in this study included (a) prolonged terminal activation duration, an indicator of activation delay; (b) VT with LBBB morphology and superior axis; and (c) multiple different VT morphologies. These criteria were met in 30 (71%), 28 (67%), and 37 (88%) ARVD/C patients, respectively, and in one control patient (P < 0.001). Electrophysiologic studies contributed importantly to yield different VT morphologies. Pathogenic plakophilin-2 mutations were identified in 25 (60%) of ARVD/C patients and in none of the controls. In ARVD/C patients, parameters measured were not significantly different between mutation carriers and noncarriers, except for negative T waves in V1,3, occurring more frequently in patients with mutation. Conclusions: The proposed additional criteria are specific for ARVD/C and more sensitive than the current TFC. Therefore, adding the newly proposed criteria to current TFC could improve ARVD/C diagnosis, independent of DNA analysis. [source]


    Focal Atrial Tachycardia Originating from the Left Atrial Appendage: Electrocardiographic and Electrophysiologic Characterization and Long-Term Outcomes of Radiofrequency Ablation

    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 5 2007
    WANG YUN-LONG M.D.
    Introduction: This study sought to investigate electrophysiologic characteristics and radiofrequency ablation (RFA) in patients with focal atrial tachycardia (AT) arising from the left atrial appendage (LAA). Methods: This study included seven patients undergoing RFA with focal AT. Activation mapping was performed during tachycardia to identify an earlier activation in the left atria and the LAA. The atrial appendage angiography was performed to identify the origin in the LAA before and after RFA. Results: AT occurred spontaneously or was induced by isoproterenol infusion rather than programmed extrastimulation and burst atrial pacing in any patient. The tachycardia demonstrated a characteristic P-wave morphology and endocardial activation pattern. The P wave was highly positive in inferior leads in all patients. Lead V1 showed upright or biphasic (±) component in all patients. Lead V2,V6 showed an isoelectric component in five patients or an upright component with low amplitude (<0.1 mV) in two patients. Earliest endocardial activity occurred at the distal coronary sinus (CS) ahead of P wave in all seven patients. Mean tachycardia cycle length was 381 ± 34 msec and the earliest endocardial activation at the successful RFA site occurred 42.3 ± 9.6 msec before the onset of P wave. RFA was acutely successful in all seven patients. Long-term success was achieved in seven of the seven over a mean follow-up of 24 ± 5 months. Conclusions: The LAA is an uncommon site of origin for focal AT (3%). There were consistent P-wave morphology and endocardial activation associated with this type of AT. The LAA focal ablation is safe and effective. Long-term success was achieved with focal ablation in all patients. [source]


    Electrocardiographic and Electrophysiologic Characteristics of Midseptal Accessory Pathways

    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 3 2005
    SHIH-LING CHANG M.D.
    Background: The purpose of the present study was to investigate the electrocardiographic and electrophysiologic characteristics of right midseptal (RMS) and left midseptal (LMS) accessory pathways (APs), and to develop a stepwise algorithm to differentiate RMS from LMS APs. Methods and Results: From May 1989 to February 2004, 1591 patients with AP-mediated tachyarrhythmia underwent RF catheter ablation in this institution, and 38 (2.4%) patients had MS APs. The delta wave and precordial QRS transition during sinus rhythm, retrograde P wave during orthodromic tachycardia, and electrophysiologic characteristic and catheter ablation in 30 patients with RMS APs and 8 patients with LMS APs were analyzed. There was no significant difference in electrophysiologic characteristics and catheter ablation between RMS and LMS APs. The polarity of retrograde P wave during orthodromic tachycardia also showed no statistical difference between patients with RMS and LMS APs. The delta wave polarity was positive in leads I, aVL, and V3 to V6 in patients with RMS and LMS APs. Patients with LMS APs had a higher incidence of biphasic delta wave in lead V1 than patients with RMS APs (80% vs. 15%, P = 0.012). The distributions of precordial QRS transition were different between RMS APs (leads V2; n = 10, V3; n = 7 and V4; n = 3) and LMS APs (leads V1; n = 1 and V2; n = 4) (P = 0.03). The combination of a delta negative wave in lead V1 or precordial QRS transition in lead V3 or V4 had a sensitivity of 90%, specificity of 80%, positive predictive value of 95%, and negative predictive value of 66% in predicting an RMS AP. Conclusions: Delta wave polarity in lead V1 and precordial QRS transition may differentiate RMS and LMS APs. [source]


    Relatively Benign Clinical Course in Asymptomatic Patients with Brugada-Type Electrocardiogram Without Family History of Sudden Death

    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 1 2001
    SHIHO TAKENAKA M.D.
    Asymptomatic Brugada-Type ECG.Introduction: The incidence of sudden death or ventricular fibrillation (VF) in asymptomatic Brugada syndrome patients with a family history of sudden death is reported to be very high. However, there are few reports on the prognosis of asymptomatic Brugada syndrome patients without a family history of sudden death. Methods and Results: Eleven patients (all male; mean age 40.5 ± 9.6 years, range 26 to 56) with asymptomatic Brugada-type ECG who had no family history of sudden death were evaluated. The degrees of ST segment elevation and conduction delay on signal-averaged ECG (SAECG) before and after pilsicainide were evaluated in all 11 patients. VF inducibility by ventricular electrical stimulation also was evaluated in 8 of 11 patients. Patients were followed for a period of 9 to 84 months (mean 42.5 ± 21.6). The J point level was increased (V1 :0.19 ± 0.09 mV to 0.36 ± 0.23 mV; V2: 0.31 ± 0.12 mV to 0.67 ± 0.35 mV) by pilsicainide. Conduction delay was increased (total QRS: 112.2 ± 6.3 msec to 131 7 ± 6.3 msec; under 40 , V: 42.0 ± 8.5 msec to 52.7 ± 12.7 msec; last 40 msec: 17.4 ± 5.9 , V to 10.4 ± 6.1 , V) on SAECG by pilsicainide. VF was induced in only 1 of 8 patients. None of the patients had syncope or sudden death during a mean follow-up of 42.5 ± 21.6 months. Conclusion: This study suggests that asymptomatic patients with Brugada-type ECG who have no family history of sudden death have a relatively benign clinical course. [source]


    Balanced judicious bipartitions of graphs

    JOURNAL OF GRAPH THEORY, Issue 3 2010
    Baogang Xu
    Abstract A bipartition of the vertex set of a graph is called balanced if the sizes of the sets in the bipartition differ by at most one. B. Bollobás and A. D. Scott, Random Struct Alg 21 (2002), 414,430 conjectured that if G is a graph with minimum degree of at least 2 then V(G) admits a balanced bipartition V1, V2 such that for each i, G has at most |E(G)|/3 edges with both ends in Vi. The minimum degree condition is necessary, and a result of B. Bollobás and A. D. Scott, J. Graph Theory 46 (2004), 131,143 shows that this conjecture holds for regular graphs G(i.e., when ,(G)=,(G)). We prove this conjecture for graphs G with ; hence, it holds for graphs ]ensuremathG with . © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Graph Theory 63: 210,225, 2010 [source]


    Improved bounds for the chromatic number of a graph

    JOURNAL OF GRAPH THEORY, Issue 3 2004
    S. Louis Hakimi
    Abstract After giving a new proof of a well-known theorem of Dirac on critical graphs, we discuss the elegant upper bounds of Matula and Szekeres-Wilf which follow from it. In order to improve these bounds, we consider the following fundamental coloring problem: given an edge-cut (V1, V2) in a graph G, together with colorings of ,V1, and ,V2,, what is the least number of colors in a coloring of G which "respects" the colorings of ,V1, and ,V2, ? We give a constructive optimal solution of this problem, and use it to derive a new upper bound for the chromatic number of a graph. As easy corollaries, we obtain several interesting bounds which also appear to be new, as well as classical bounds of Dirac and Ore, and the above mentioned bounds of Matula and Szekeres-Wilf. We conclude by considering two algorithms suggested by our results. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Graph Theory 47: 217,225, 2004 [source]


    Ageing and the Diurnal Expression of the mRNAs for Vasopressin and for the V1a and V1b Vasopressin Receptors in the Suprachiasmatic Nucleus of Male Rats

    JOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 6 2004
    T. Kalamatianos
    Abstract Changes in the function of neuropeptide synthesizing cells within the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), the site of the predominant circadian pacemaker, may underlie the disturbance of rhythms observed during ageing. Arginine vasopressin (AVP) is synthesized by nearly one-third of SCN neurones in the rat. This peptide has predominantly excitatory actions within the SCN mediated by V1 -type receptors; the extent to which the V1a and/or V1b receptor subtypes are involved in SCN functions remains to be determined. The present study used isotopic in situ hybridization histochemistry to examine the effects of ageing on expression of mRNAs for AVP and V1a in the SCN and for V1b in the SCN and supraoptic nucleus (SON) of male rats kept under a 12 : 12 h light/dark cycle. Analysis of film autoradiographs from young adult (2,3-month-old; n = 40) or aged (19,20-month-old; n = 40) animals, at eight time points across the light/dark cycle, revealed an equivalent pattern and amplitude for the diurnal rhythm of AVP mRNA in the SCN of the young adult and aged groups. Both groups also displayed a significant diurnal rhythm in the expression of V1a receptor mRNA; however, the amplitude of this rhythm was reduced in the aged group, due to increased levels during the light phase and early part of night. Although the expression of V1b mRNA did not display a significant diurnal rhythm within the SCN or SON, persistently elevated levels for V1b mRNA were observed in the aged group at both sites. [source]


    The characterization of versican and its message in human articular cartilage and intervertebral disc

    JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, Issue 2 2002
    Robert Sztrolovics
    Splicing variation of the versican message and size heterogeneity of the versican core protein were analyzed in human articular cartilage and intervertebral disc. Splicing variation of the message was studied by PCR analysis to detect the presence or absence of exons 7 and 8, which encode large chondroitin sulfate attachment regions. At all ages in normal cartilage from the third trimester fetus to the mature adult, the presence of the versican isoform possessing exon 8 but not exon 7 (V1) could be readily detected. The message isoforms possessing neither exon 7 nor 8 (V3) or both exons 7 and 8 (V0) were only detectable in the fetus, and the isoform possessing only exon 7 (V2) was never detected. In osteoarthritic cartilage and in adult intervertebral disc the versican message pattern was the same as that observed in the normal adult with only the isoform possessing exon 8 being detected. Core protein heterogeneity was studied by immunoblotting following enzymic removal of the glycosaminoglycan chains from the proteoglycan, using an antibody recognizing the globular G1 region of versican. All articular cartilage extracts from the fetus to the mature adult contained multiple core protein sizes of greater than 200 kDa. The adult cartilage extracts tended to have an increased proportion of the smaller sized core proteins and osteoarthritic cartilage possessed similar core protein sizes to the normal adult. In contrast, intervertebral disc at all post-natal ages showed a greater range of size heterogeneity with a prominent component of about 50 kDa. The abundance of this component increased if the samples were treated with keratanase prior to analysis, suggesting that the G1 region of versican in disc can be substituted with keratan sulfate. The increased presence of versican in the disc relative to articular cartilage may suggest a more pronounced functional role for this proteoglycan, particularly in the nucleus pulposus. © 2002 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. [source]


    AL-3138 Antagonizes FP Prostanoid Receptor-mediated Inositol Phosphates Generation: Comparison with Some Purported FP Antagonists

    JOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACOLOGY: AN INTERNATI ONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCE, Issue 12 2000
    N. A. SHARIF
    The aim of this study was to pharmacologically characterize the antagonist properties of a novel prostaglandin F2, (PGF2,) analogue (11-deoxy-16-fluoro PGF2,; AL-3138) using a variety of second-messenger assays of prostaglandin receptor subtypes. A detailed comparison was made between AL-3138 and some purported FP receptor antagonists such as PGF2, dimethylamine, PGF2, dimethylamide, glibenclamide and phloretin using the FP receptor-mediated phosphoinositide turnover assay in A7r5 rat thoracic aorta smooth muscle cells and mouse Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts. The potency and efficacy of AL-3138 as an FP receptor agonist were: EC50 = 72.2 ± 17.9 nM (Emax = 37%) (n = 3) in A7r5 cells and EC50 = 20.5 ± 2.8 nM (Emax = 33%) (n = 5) in 3T3 cells. Being a partial agonist, the antagonist potency of AL-3138 against fluprostenol in A7r5 cells was determined to be: Ki = 296 ± 17 nM (n = 3) and Kb = 182 ± 44nM (n = 5) (-log Kb = 6.79 ± 0.1). AL-3138 exhibited very minimal or no antagonistic effects at EP2, EP4, DP and TP prostaglandin receptors. Both PGF2, dimethylamide and PGF2, dimethylamine were inactive as FP receptor antagonists, whereas phloretin and glibenclamide were very weak and had -log Kb values of 5.28 ± 0.09 (n = 3) and 3.58 ± 0.32 (n = 3), respectively. However, phloretin antagonized functional responses of EP2 and DP prostanoid receptors, and also the V1 , vasopressin receptor. AL-3138 competed for [3H]PGF2, binding to FP receptors with a relatively high affinity (IC50high = 312 ± 95nM) matching its functional antagonist potency. In conclusion, AL-3138 is a more potent and selective FP receptor antagonist than glibenclamide, phloretin, PGF2, dimethylamide and PGF2, dimethylamine and is therefore a unique and novel pharmacological tool to help characterize FP receptor-mediated functions. [source]


    Simplified standardized technique for living donor liver transplantation using left liver graft plus caudate lobe

    LIVER TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 11 2004
    Shin Hwang
    Concomitant resection of the caudate lobe (CL) would increase the liver mass in the left liver graft. We tried to define a simplified standardized technique for adult living donor liver transplantation using the extended left lobe (ELL) plus CL (ELLC) through a prospective study of 27 consecutive ELLC graft cases in 2003. Donor CL was dissected toward the 10 o'clock direction and transected at the midpoint between the trunks of the right hepatic vein (RHV) and the middle hepatic vein (MHV). This orthodox transection was performed in 18 cases, but the transection plane was moved left in 9 cases. Compared with conventional left liver implantation, there was no additional reconstruction except for single revascularization of the largest short hepatic vein of the CL (V1) in 21 cases. On 1-week computed tomography (CT) images, the perfusion states of the CL portion were good in 15 cases, fair in 7 cases, and poor in 5 cases. Regeneration of the CL portion during the 1st week was +43%, +18%, and ,10% in the good, fair, and poor perfusion groups, respectively. There were positive correlations among the perfusion state of the CL, the location of the CL transection plane, and the width of the CL portion that was attached to the left liver graft. CL implantation resulted in a mean gain of graft mass by 5.9% in the left liver at the time of operation and by 3.9% after 1 week. There were no donor complications, and 25 recipients (93%) survive to date. In conclusion, this simplified standardized technique was feasible for most of the living donor livers and required only 1 additional reconstruction of the V1. (Liver Transpl 2004;10:1398,1405.) [source]


    Remodeling of extracellular matrix at ovulation of the bovine ovarian follicle

    MOLECULAR REPRODUCTION & DEVELOPMENT, Issue 10 2006
    H.F. Irving-Rodgers
    Abstract Using immunohistochemistry and RNA analyses we examined the fate of components of a newly identified matrix that develops between granulosa cells (focimatrix, abbreviated from focal intraepithelial matrix) and of the follicular basal lamina in ovulating bovine ovarian follicles. Pre- and postovulatory follicles were generated by treatment with estradiol (Day 1), progesterone (Days 1,10), and prostaglandin analogue (Day 9) with either no further treatment (Group 1, n,=,6) and or with 25 mg porcine LH (Day 11, Group 2, n,=,8 or Day 10, Group 3, n,=,8) and ovariectomy on Day 12 (12,14 hr post LH in Group 2, 38,40.5 hr in Group 3). In the time frame examined no loss of follicular basal lamina laminin chains ,2 and ,1 or nidogen 1 was observed. In the follicular basal lamina collagen type IV ,1 and perlecan were present prior to ovulation; after ovulation collagen type IV ,1 was discontinuously distributed and perlecan was absent. Versican in the theca interna adjacent to the follicular basal lamina in preovulatory follicles was not observed post ovulation, however, the granulosa cells then showed strong cytoplasmic staining for versican. Expression of versican isoforms V0, V1, and V3 was detected at all stages. Focimatrix was observed in preovulatory follicles. It contained collagen type IV ,1, laminins ,2 and ,1, nidogen 1 and perlecan and underwent changes in composition similar to that of the follicular basal lamina. In conclusion focimatrix and the follicular basal lamina are degraded at ovulation. Individual components are lost at different times. Mol. Reprod. Dev. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Connectedness of digraphs and graphs under constraints on the conditional diameter

    NETWORKS: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 2 2005
    X. Marcote
    Abstract Given a digraph G with minimum degree , and an integer 0, , , ,, consider every pair of vertex subsets V1 and V2 such that both the minimum out-degree of the induced subdigraph G[V1] and the minimum in-degree of G[V2] are at least ,. The conditional diameter D, of G is defined as the maximum of the distances d(V1, V2) between any two such vertex subsets. Clearly, D0 is the standard diameter and D0 , D1 , ··· , D, holds. In this article, we guarantee appropriate lower bounds for the connectivities and superconnectivities of a digraph G when D, , h(,,), h(,,) being a function of the parameter ,,,which is related to the shortest paths in G. As a corollary of these results, we give some constraints of the kind D, , h(,,), which assure that the digraph is maximally connected, maximally edge-connected, superconnected, or edge-superconnected, extending other previous results of the same kind. Similar statements can be obtained for a graph as a direct consequence of those for its associated symmetric digraph. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. NETWORKS, Vol. 45(2), 80,87 2005 [source]


    Superconnected digraphs and graphs with small conditional diameters

    NETWORKS: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 3 2002
    C. Balbuena
    Abstract The conditional diameter D, of a digraph G measures how far apart a pair of vertex sets V1 and V2 can be in such a way that the minimum out-degree and the minimum in-degree of the subdigraphs induced by V1 and V2, respectively, are at least ,. Thus, D0 is the standard diameter and D0 , D1 , ··· , D,, where , is the minimum degree. We prove that if D, , 2l , 3, where l is a parameter related to the shortest paths, then G is maximally connected, is superconnected, or has a good superconnectivity, depending only on whether , is equal to ,,/2,, ,(, , 1)/2,, or ,(, , 1)/3,, respectively. In the edge case, it is enough that D, , 2l , 2. The results for graphs are obtained as a corollary of those for digraphs, because, in the undirected case, l = ,(g , 1)/2,, g being the girth. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]