Very Clear (very + clear)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Three-dimensional reconstruction of the mucosa from sequential sections of biopsy specimens of patients with ulcerative colitis: Relationship between crypt structure and vascular architecture

DIGESTIVE ENDOSCOPY, Issue 2 2004
Hiroo Furukawa
Background:, In a previous paper, the stereographic reconstruction of the crypt structure of ulcerative colitis using the RATOCK System was described. The relationship between the blood vessels and the crypt structure is the focus of the current paper, using two kinds of tissue staining color in which the color differs. Stereographic images make the relationship between the crypt structure and blood vessel distribution understandable at a glance. Methods:, The methods used here are identical to those described in a previous paper. In the present paper, five cases of ulcerative colitis (UC) are examined. Biopsy specimens were obtained from the diseased, normal, and transitional zones (the area between the normal and diseased zones) from each patient. Three-dimensional reconstruction was created using TRI for Windows (RATOC System Tokyo, Japan) software. In the present paper, two kinds of dyeing method between H&E and monoclonal antibody staining of the tissue was used. It was proven that the distribution of gland and blood vessel is very clear in the 3-D reconstruction shown. Results:, (i) The blood vessels in the normal zones run parallel to the crypt in a regular manner and are almost identical to one another in diameter. (ii) In the transitional and diseased zones, the blood vessels show no clear direction and produce many branches without any apparent order. The blood vessels are, moreover, irregular in diameter. (iii) In short, clear parallelism is lost in both the transitional and diseased zones. Conclusion:, Stereographic reconstruction of endoscopically obtained biopsy specimens of UC-affected tissues makes it possible to understand at a glance the distribution of blood vessels and their relationship to crypts. The relationship of these was clarified by the combined use of two kinds of dyeing method with three-dimensional reconstruction. [source]


HRTEM Study of Precipitates in Mg-Zn-Y Alloys as Cast and after Extrusion,

ADVANCED ENGINEERING MATERIALS, Issue 7 2005
J. Rao
Three kinds of precipitates were newly found, which are Mg3Zn3Y2, MgZn and MgZn2, in Mg-Zn-Y alloys both as-cast and after extrusion due to the composition concentration of Zn and Y on nanometer scale. This figure shows the high-resolution TEM image of MgZn precipitate in Mg substrate with the crystallographic parameters labeled in details. The boundary between MgZn precipitate and Mg substrate is very clear, no second phases were observed. [source]


Trends in the southern oscillation phenomenon and Australian rainfall and changes in their relationship

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, Issue 3 2004
Ramasamy Suppiah
Abstract An attempt has been made to investigate decadal-scale trends in Australian rainfall and in the southern oscillation index (SOI) and their influence on the relationship between them. Monthly rainfall data from high-quality stations in Australia (from 1900 to 1995), India, Sri Lanka and Tahiti are used. The relationship between the SOI and Australian rainfall is positive, but shows decadal-scale variations during the past century. Although there were extended and severe El Niño events in the early 1990s and in 1997, Australia did not experience the expected severe rainfall deficiencies characteristic of previous events. However, severe drought conditions over eastern Australia were associated with a moderate El Niño event during 2002,03. Long-term fluctuations of March,May (MAM) rainfall show high-frequency variations, but trends during June,August (JJA), September,November (SON) and December,February (DJF) show low-frequency or decadal-scale variations. Trends and multi-decadal fluctuations in all-Australian spring (SON) and summer (DJF) rainfall are strongly dominated by rainfall trend fluctuations in northern and eastern Australia. Austral summer rainfall shows an increasing trend during the 1980s and 1990s, particularly in Queensland and New South Wales, despite the occurrence of extended and severe El Niños. However, some parts of New South Wales and Queensland experienced severe rainfall deficiencies during 2002,03 in conjunction with an El Niño event. The relationship between the SOI and rainfall on the interannual time scale is strong when the SOI and rainfall follow the same direction, but it is weak when they follow opposite directions on a decadal-time scale. The poor correlation during the 1920s and 1930s was due to a slightly increasing trend in the SOI and a stronger decreasing trend in rainfall. A weakening in the relationship between the SOI and rainfall in recent years, after the mid-1970s, is due to a small increase in rainfall in the 1980s and 1990s and a strong decrease in the SOI. Rainfall trends were enhanced (stronger decreases or increases) when the influence of the SOI (or El Niño-southern oscillation (ENSO)) was removed. Enhanced increases and decreases are particularly strong during SON and DJF, when the ENSO phenomenon is at the mature stage and also the influence on Australian rainfall is strong. The increasing trend in rainfall during the 1980s and 1990s in some parts of eastern Australia and the decreasing trend in the SOI result in more rainfall for a given SOI compared with the same SOI during the previous period, i.e. before the mid-1970s. A similar analysis was carried out for two periods, before and after 1972, for Tahiti, India and Sri Lanka. The upward or downward shift in regression lines is very clear during the season, that shows a strong relationship between rainfall and the SOI. Moreover, strengthening or weakening of the relationship between rainfall and the SOI is largely dependent on their multi-decadal variations and trends during the past century. Increases in rainfall during the 1980s and the 1990s and decreases in the SOI have weakened their relationship, both in Australia and India. Such a relationship gives more rainfall for a given SOI after 1973. The pattern was reversed for Sri Lanka, where rainfall during the second intermonsoon season has decreased. Analyses of trends in temperature at Darwin and Tahiti and of rainfall over Australia, India, Tahiti and Sri Lanka suggest a regional-scale change in climate, whereas the SOI reflects a change in the large-scale circulation pattern over the Indo-Pacific region after the mid-1970s. Copyright © 2004 Royal Meteorological Society [source]


Molecular mechanism of preconditioning

IUBMB LIFE, Issue 4 2008
Manika Das
Abstract During the last 20 years, since the appearance of the first publication on ischemic preconditioning (PC), our knowledge of this phenomenon has increased exponentially. PC is defined as an increased tolerance to ischemia and reperfusion induced by previous sublethal period ischemia. This is the most powerful mechanism known to date for limiting the infract size. This adaptation occurs in a biphasic pattern (i) early preconditioning (lasts for 2,3 h) and (ii) late preconditioning (starting at 24 h lasting until 72,96 h after initial ischemia). Early preconditioning is more potent than delayed preconditioning in reducing infract size. Late preconditioning attenuates myocardial stunning and requires genomic activation with de novo protein synthesis. Early preconditioning depends on adenosine, opioids and to a lesser degree, on bradykinin and prostaglandins, released during ischemia. These molecules activate G-protein-coupled receptor, initiate activation of KATP channel and generate oxygen-free radicals, and stimulate a series of protein kinases, which include protein kinase C, tyrosine kinase, and members of MAP kinase family. Late preconditioning is triggered by a similar sequence of events, but in addition essentially depends on newly synthesized proteins, which comprise iNOS, COX-2, manganese superoxide dismutase, and possibly heat shock proteins. The final mechanism of PC is still not very clear. The present review focuses on the possible role signaling molecules that regulate cardiomyocyte life and death during ischemia and reperfusion. © 2008 IUBMB IUBMB Life, 60(4): 199,203, 2008 [source]


Immunohistochemical analysis of thyroid-specific transcription factors in thyroid tumors

PATHOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, Issue 5 2006
Ping Zhang
Thyroid transcription factor 1 (TTF1), thyroid transcription factor 2 (TTF2) and paired box gene 8 (Pax8) are demonstrated to play a crucial role for the differentiation and organogenesis of thyroid follicular cells. Their roles in thyroid carcinogenesis are not very clear. Because dedifferentiation is a common process in thyroid carcinogenesis, thyroid-specific transcription factors seem also to be involving in thyroid carcinogenesis. The purpose of the present paper was to investigate their expression in a broad spectrum of follicular cell tumors in different degrees of differentiation, from well-differentiated benign follicular adenoma to anaplastic carcinoma. Medullary (C cell) carcinoma was also included in the investigation. Results of immunohistochemical staining showed that nuclear localization of these transcription factors was gradually decreased corresponding to the progressive dedifferentiation of thyroid tumors. Also, abnormal cytoplasmic accumulation of TTF2 and Pax8 was detected in many tumors samples, which may indicate a subtle regulation mechanism on the function of these transcription factors. In conclusion, abnormal expression of TTF1, TTF2 and Pax8 was closely related to thyroid tumorigenesis. [source]


Interior Monologue: Reflections on a Journey into Guyana's Heartland

ANTHROPOLOGY & HUMANISM, Issue 1 2010
Angela Barry
SUMMARY In 2002, a group made up mainly of American academics embarked on an excursion to the interior of Guyana. It was soon very clear that there would be a shift in accepted assumptions about the relationship between the developed and the developing world. But it was only when the group left the city behind and entered the rain forest itself that the travelers understood the true power of the experience, the encounter with the majestic landscape and the indigenous peoples who had lived in harmony with it for millennia; and, in the silence of the forest, the encounter with the self. [source]


Clinical study on the correlation between metabolic syndrome and colorectal carcinoma

ANZ JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Issue 5 2010
Zhanlong Shen
Abstract Background:, Although metabolic syndrome (MS) has received a lot of attention in recent years, the correlation between MS and colorectal carcinoma is still not very clear. This study aims at exploring the relationship between MS and colorectal carcinoma. Methods:, Data was collected from 507 cases of colorectal carcinoma and 507 cases of healthy patients between January 2002 and March 2007 to establish the database. The patients with colorectal cancer were divided into two groups based on the presence of MS. Multivariate analysis of these data for the overall survival and recurrence was performed with the Cox proportional hazard model. Variables examined by multivariate analysis were sex , age, location, histotype, differentiation, tumour, node, metastasis (TNM) stage, the number of lymph nodes detected, etc. Results:, The existence of MS in the colorectal carcinoma group was clearly more than that in the control group. The existence of two to four types of abnormal metabolic diseases was significantly more in the colorectal cancer group than in the control group. MS is one of the important elements that can independently influence the survival (odds ratio (OR) = 1.501, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.057,2.131) and have the highest risk with worse survival compared with other parameters. Conclusion:, There is a close relationship between MS and colorectal carcinoma, and MS is a significantly independent element that influences the survival of the colorectal carcinoma. Decreasing the incidence of MS maybe play a role in improving therapeutic efficacy and prognosis of the cancer. [source]


Infrastructure policy in Asian developing countries

ASIAN-PACIFIC ECONOMIC LITERATURE, Issue 1 2010
Peter McCawley
The urgent need for very large increases in investment in infrastructure in most developing countries in Asia is very clear. This paper surveys the challenges facing policymakers in the region. Nearly all of the main concerns for policymakers in Asia in addressing the global infrastructure imbalance are on the supply side. In particular, there are seven related supply-side issues that are of high priority for policymakers: selection and preparation of appropriate projects, finance, pricing, access, governance and management, policy and regulatory policies, and climate change. Governments and utilities need to improve their policies and performance to build confidence among stakeholders. Access to infrastructure services needs to be improved so that consumers will support realistic pricing policies, and investors will be encouraged to provide finance for infrastructure sectors. [source]