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  • Antarctic alga  (1)
  • Fecal incontinence  (1)
  • Key words: Pudendal nerve—Pudendal canal syndrome—Computed tomographic guidance.  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Diseases of the colon & rectum 43 (2000), S. 813-820 
    ISSN: 1530-0358
    Keywords: Fecal incontinence ; Sphincteroplasty ; Sphincter defect
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract PURPOSE: This study was designed to analyze critically the short-term and long-term outcome of sphincteroplasty and to identify high-risk factors. METHODS: Eighty-six patients with fecal incontinence associated with an ultrasound defect of the external anal sphincter were treated by anal sphincteroplasty. Clinical and physiologic assessment was made before surgery, and clinical evaluation was made three months and an average of 40 months after surgery. RESULTS: The evaluation of 86 patients three months after surgery showed that 42 patients were totally continent (49 percent), 28 were incontinent for gas (33 percent), and 16 still had fecal incontinence (19 percent). Seventy-four patients (86 percent) were contacted 40 months after surgery. Twenty-one patients (28 percent) were totally continent, 17 were incontinent to gas (23 percent), and 36 were incontinent to feces (49 percent). Forty-six percent of patients felt they were clearly improved after surgery. Poor results were associated with an internal anal sphincter defect. CONCLUSIONS: Our study suggests that in the long term, one-third of patients are totally continent after sphincteroplasty. One-half of patients are satisfied, but only if their incontinence to feces has totally disappeared. Results of sphincteroplasty deteriorate with time. One factor in poor prognosis is the presence of an associated defect of the internal anal sphincter.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0509
    Keywords: Key words: Pudendal nerve—Pudendal canal syndrome—Computed tomographic guidance.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Chronic anoperineal pain without any apparent etiology may be caused by compression of the pudendal nerve. This presentation illustrates the course of the pudendal nerve and the technique of computed tomography-guided infiltration of the nerve.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: Antarctic alga ; Chlamydomonas ; 77 K fluorescence ; light harvesting ; Photosystem I ; psychrophile
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The green alga, Chlamydomonas subcaudata, collected from a perennially ice-covered Antarctic lake, was able to grow at temperatures of 16°C or lower, but not at temperatures of 20°C or higher, which confirmed its psychrophilic nature. Low temperature (77 K) Chl a fluorescence emission spectra of whole cells of the mesophile, C. reinhardtii, indicated the presence of major emission bands at 681 and 709 nm associated with PS II and PS I, respectively. In contrast, emission spectra of whole cells of C. subcaudata exhibited major emission bands at 681 and 692 nm associated with PS II, but the absence of a major PS I emission band at 709 nm. These results for C. subcaudata were consistent with: (1) low ratio of Chl a/b (1.80); (2) low levels of PsaA/PsaB heterodimer as well as specific Lhca polypeptides as determined by immunoblotting, (3) decreased levels of the Chl-protein complexes CP1 and LHC I associated with PS I; and (4) an increased stability of the oligomeric form of LHC II as assessed by non-denaturing gel electrophoresis in the psychrophile compared to the mesophile. Furthermore, immunoblotting indicated that the stoichiometry of PS II:PS I:CF1 is significantly altered in C. subcaudata compared to the mesophile. Even though the psychrophile is adapted to growth at low irradiance, it retained the capacity to adjust the total xanthophyll cycle pool size as well as the epoxidation state of the xanthophyll cycle. Despite these differences, the psychrophile and mesophile exhibited comparable photosynthetic efficiency for O2 evolution regardless of growth conditions. Pmax for both Chlamydomonas species was similar only when grown under identical conditions. We suggest that these photosynthetic characteristics of the Antarctic psychrophile reflect the unusual light and low temperature regime to which it is adapted.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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