25 results on '"D J, Bower"'
Search Results
2. Origin and evolution of the deep thermochemical structure beneath Eurasia
- Author
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N. Flament, S. Williams, R. D. Müller, M. Gurnis, and D. J. Bower
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
The Perm anomaly is found in the lower mantle beneath Eurasia, but how this structure formed has remained unclear. Here, the authors show that the anomaly has been mobile since it formed in isolation within a closed subduction network and propose that the anomaly is linked to the Emeishan volcanics.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. When Is the ‘right’ Time to Initiate an Assessment of a Health Technology
- Author
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Lorna McKee, Graham Mowatt, John Cairns, J A Brebner, D J Bower, and Adrian Grant
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Prioritization ,Technology Assessment, Biomedical ,Time Factors ,Emerging technologies ,Computer science ,Health Policy ,Health technology ,United Kingdom ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Categorization ,Humans ,Operations management ,Diffusion of Innovation ,Limited resources - Abstract
There is currently no generally accepted formula for the optimal timing of health technology assessments (HTAs). This paper presents some of the relevant issues and then reviews the existing literature on timing of HTAs. It finds that the literature that specifically addresses these issues is limited. There is a consensus that HTAs should be initiated at an early stage of the development of a new health technology, and repeated during the life cycle of the technology. However, the questions of reliably identifying new technologies at an early stage in their development and of deciding on a detectable critical point for starting evaluation are not resolved. It is proposed that a system of categorization and prioritization of health technologies should be developed to allow decisions to be made as to when a strongly precautionary approach is required and how the limited resources available for HTA could be optimally deployed.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Implementation of videoconferencing to support a managed clinical network in Scotland: lessons learned during the first 18 months
- Author
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G. D. Currie, D. J. Bower, P Campbell, John Norrie, N Reed, N Barry, and Margaret Reid
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Health professionals ,business.industry ,Genital Neoplasms, Female ,Remote Consultation ,Gynaecological oncology ,Managed Care Programs ,Health Informatics ,Primary care ,computer.software_genre ,Medical Oncology ,DICOM ,Computer Communication Networks ,Videoconferencing ,Nursing ,Scotland ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Project management ,Medical diagnosis ,business ,computer ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
Managed clinical networks (MCNs) are usually built on established groups of health professionals from both acute and primary care sectors. We have used videoconferencing to support the gynaecological oncology MCN in the west of Scotland. Videoconferencing was implemented simultaneously at five sites in 2001 and DICOM image-capture software was added in 2003. Videoconferencing and live PC links allowed the multidisciplinary teams to discuss individual cancer diagnoses without the extensive travelling previously required. Our experience of the implementation suggests that local ownership is crucial. In the present project, each of the stakeholders had an important role in the delivery of a successful system. High-quality project management is required during implementation and for some time thereafter to achieve sustainability.
- Published
- 2004
5. Zanamivir in the prevention of influenza among healthy adults
- Author
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D J, Bower and J G, Slawson
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Adult ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,Administration, Inhalation ,Influenza, Human ,Sialic Acids ,Humans ,Zanamivir ,Middle Aged ,Antiviral Agents ,Guanidines ,Aged ,Pyrans ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic - Published
- 2002
6. Using PalmPilots as a teaching tool during a primary care clerkship. Advanced Education Group
- Author
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D J, Bower and C J, Bertling
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Wisconsin ,Microcomputers ,Primary Health Care ,Teaching Materials ,Clinical Clerkship ,Pilot Projects - Published
- 2000
7. Career satisfaction among family-physician-educators
- Author
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L N, Meurer, D J, Bower, V A, Rediske, D E, Simpson, S L, Lawrence, M S, Wolkomir, and A C, Beecher
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Male ,Faculty, Medical ,Time Factors ,Physicians ,Humans ,Female ,Family Practice ,Job Satisfaction ,United States - Published
- 1998
8. US family physicians' experiences with practice guidelines
- Author
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M, Wolff, D J, Bower, A M, Marbella, and J E, Casanova
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Adult ,Information Services ,Male ,Electronic Data Processing ,Insurance, Health ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Medicaid ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Managed Care Programs ,Age Factors ,Physicians, Family ,Private Practice ,Middle Aged ,Medicare ,Asthma ,Medical Records ,United States ,Treatment Outcome ,Hypertension ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Female ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' - Abstract
Practice guidelines were developed to improve medical outcomes and cost-effectiveness. The experiences of family physicians, who may need to use multiple guidelines in their practices, are crucial for effective development and implementation of practice guidelines. We surveyed a national sample of US family physicians about factors that affect their adoption and use of practice guidelines.We mailed a structured survey to a national random sample of 400 family physician members of the American Academy of Family Physicians.The response rate was 51%. Most respondents (69%) reported a positive attitude about practice guidelines, but only 44% reported using any guidelines. More younger physicians thought that guidelines could be useful tools. Most preferred guidelines that could be modified (87%) and that were no longer than two pages. Only 27% of respondents knew where to locate a guideline on a particular topic. Forty-three percent of respondents reported that it would be useful if guidelines were a component of an electronic medical record.If guidelines are to be used by practicing family physicians, a generalist perspective needs to be considered in future guideline development and implementation. Younger physicians had more positive attitudes toward guidelines.
- Published
- 1998
9. The effects of the ALSO course as an educational intervention for residents. Advanced Life Support in Obstetrics
- Author
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D J, Bower, M S, Wolkomir, and D B, Schubot
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Male ,Obstetrics ,Analysis of Variance ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Wisconsin ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Internship and Residency ,Female ,Clinical Competence ,Educational Measurement ,Emergencies ,Family Practice - Abstract
Previous descriptions of the Advanced Life Support in Obstetrics (ALSO) course have indicated increases in physician comfort in managing obstetric emergencies and in their intentions to continue offering maternity care after taking the course. No previous studies have been done about the educational outcomes of the ALSO course on family practice residents. This study compared residents' pre- and post-ALSO course confidence to manage obstetrical emergencies and their intention to provide maternity care when they enter practice.A self-selected group of 55 family practice residents completed questionnaires before and after ALSO training. The questionnaire was designed to measure confidence, using Bandura's model of self efficacy, and future intention, using Ajzen's Theory of Planned Behavior.Residents' confidence in their abilities to manage obstetrical emergencies increased significantly after the ALSO course. Residents' intent to provide maternity care when the residents enter practice did not change.The ALSO course is a valuable teaching intervention that can improve family practice residents' perceived self-confidence in managing obstetric emergencies. The study had sufficient power to detect a moderate effect size of the ALSO course on resident intention to provide maternity care but did not do so.
- Published
- 1997
10. A tale of two polio vaccines: what's best and for whom?
- Author
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J G, Slawson and D J, Bower
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Parents ,Decision Making ,Infant ,Pediatrics ,United States ,Injections ,Poliovirus Vaccine, Inactivated ,Child, Preschool ,Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral ,Humans ,Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S ,Child ,Immunization Schedule ,Societies, Medical ,Poliomyelitis - Published
- 1997
11. When and how to assess fast-changing technologies: a comparative study of medical applications of four generic technologies
- Author
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J A Brebner, D J Bower, John Cairns, Graham Mowatt, Lorna McKee, and Adrian Grant
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Teledermatology ,Telemedicine ,lcsh:Medical technology ,business.industry ,Emerging technologies ,Health Policy ,Opinion leadership ,MEDLINE ,Health technology ,Technology assessment ,lcsh:R855-855.5 ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,restrict ,Medicine ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVES. To try to identify the optimal time at which to start assessing new and fast-evolving health technologies. To provide insight into factors influencing the timing of assessments and the choice of methods for assessing new and fast-changing technologies. HOW THE RESEARCH WAS CONDUCTED. A series of literature reviews were undertaken covering the general principles involved in the timing of health technology assessments (HTAs). Additionally, the reported assessments of laparoscopic cholecystectomy, chorionic villus sampling (CVS), teleradiology, teledermatology, genetic screening for predisposition to breast cancer, and gene therapy for cystic fibrosis were reviewed to try to identify the factors that influenced the timing of these assessments. Key individuals in each field were also interviewed. The selected technologies allowed comparison between those that were new and evolving and those that were relatively well-established. A bibliometric study of publication trends was also undertaken to see whether these trends would suggest points in the development of a technology that could be used as indicators that assessment should be started. RESEARCH FINDINGS. TIMING. The precise point at which assessment should start was not identified but the bibliometric study suggested that extending this approach might give useful results. For all health technologies, more regular reporting of outcomes and side-effects should be encouraged during the period after initial assessment and, where the technology is fast-changing, reassessment should take place from time to time. The precise intervals were not identified and the problem remains of deciding when a technology has changed enough to warrant reassessment. FACTORS INFLUENCING TIMING. Published reports of assessments did not generally specify the reasons for their timing, but a number of factors appear to have influenced the timing of those assessments, directly or indirectly. Product champions and opinion leaders pioneer the introduction of new technologies into clinical practice, and their reports may lead to the rapid diffusion of such technologies before they have been adequately evaluated, as was the case with laparoscopic cholecystectomy; this diffusion may limit the methods of evaluation that can then be used. It is therefore important to assess new health technologies before diffusion takes place. The extent to which regulatory control is imposed on the introduction of new health technologies can also influence the timing of assessments. Such controls might have helped to restrict the diffusion of laparoscopic cholecystectomy, making a large and widely generalisable randomised controlled trial (RCT) feasible. The source and availability of funding for studies may influence the nature and timing of trials. Many telemedicine evaluations were funded by commercial telecommunications organisations and were thus restricted in their timing (and biased towards the technological aspects of the applications) by the availability of funds. Media coverage undoubtedly has an influence although this influence is not always predictable; it may generate 'favourable' publicity about new health technologies, which can lead to immediate demands for the new technique, as was the case with laparosocpic cholecystectomy with its apparent benefits. Thus assessments should be made before media coverage exerts popular pressure on purchasers to adopt the technology and dissuades patients from participating in RCTs (because of fear they may be randomised to the standard treatment as occurred in a US trial of CVS). Innovators should also be cautious in the claims that they make to the media.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. When and how to assess fast-changing technologies: a comparative study of medical applications of four generic technologies
- Author
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G, Mowatt, D J, Bower, J A, Brebner, J A, Cairns, A M, Grant, and L, McKee
- Subjects
Clinical Trials as Topic ,Technology Assessment, Biomedical ,Cystic Fibrosis ,Breast Neoplasms ,Telemedicine ,United Kingdom ,Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic ,Chorionic Villi Sampling ,Pregnancy ,Medical Laboratory Science ,Humans ,Female ,Genetic Testing ,Diffusion of Innovation - Abstract
OBJECTIVES. To try to identify the optimal time at which to start assessing new and fast-evolving health technologies. To provide insight into factors influencing the timing of assessments and the choice of methods for assessing new and fast-changing technologies. HOW THE RESEARCH WAS CONDUCTED. A series of literature reviews were undertaken covering the general principles involved in the timing of health technology assessments (HTAs). Additionally, the reported assessments of laparoscopic cholecystectomy, chorionic villus sampling (CVS), teleradiology, teledermatology, genetic screening for predisposition to breast cancer, and gene therapy for cystic fibrosis were reviewed to try to identify the factors that influenced the timing of these assessments. Key individuals in each field were also interviewed. The selected technologies allowed comparison between those that were new and evolving and those that were relatively well-established. A bibliometric study of publication trends was also undertaken to see whether these trends would suggest points in the development of a technology that could be used as indicators that assessment should be started. RESEARCH FINDINGS. TIMING. The precise point at which assessment should start was not identified but the bibliometric study suggested that extending this approach might give useful results. For all health technologies, more regular reporting of outcomes and side-effects should be encouraged during the period after initial assessment and, where the technology is fast-changing, reassessment should take place from time to time. The precise intervals were not identified and the problem remains of deciding when a technology has changed enough to warrant reassessment. FACTORS INFLUENCING TIMING. Published reports of assessments did not generally specify the reasons for their timing, but a number of factors appear to have influenced the timing of those assessments, directly or indirectly. Product champions and opinion leaders pioneer the introduction of new technologies into clinical practice, and their reports may lead to the rapid diffusion of such technologies before they have been adequately evaluated, as was the case with laparoscopic cholecystectomy; this diffusion may limit the methods of evaluation that can then be used. It is therefore important to assess new health technologies before diffusion takes place. The extent to which regulatory control is imposed on the introduction of new health technologies can also influence the timing of assessments. Such controls might have helped to restrict the diffusion of laparoscopic cholecystectomy, making a large and widely generalisable randomised controlled trial (RCT) feasible. The source and availability of funding for studies may influence the nature and timing of trials. Many telemedicine evaluations were funded by commercial telecommunications organisations and were thus restricted in their timing (and biased towards the technological aspects of the applications) by the availability of funds. Media coverage undoubtedly has an influence although this influence is not always predictable; it may generate 'favourable' publicity about new health technologies, which can lead to immediate demands for the new technique, as was the case with laparosocpic cholecystectomy with its apparent benefits. Thus assessments should be made before media coverage exerts popular pressure on purchasers to adopt the technology and dissuades patients from participating in RCTs (because of fear they may be randomised to the standard treatment as occurred in a US trial of CVS). Innovators should also be cautious in the claims that they make to the media.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
- Published
- 1997
13. A descriptive, cross-sectional study of formal mentoring for faculty
- Author
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J A, Morzinski, S, Diehr, D J, Bower, and D E, Simpson
- Subjects
Interviews as Topic ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Faculty, Medical ,Social Values ,Interprofessional Relations ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Mentors ,Humans ,Physicians, Family ,Organizational Culture - Abstract
Professional academic skills (PAS) encompass the values, collegial relations, and career management skills essential for faculty success. Mentoring has been proposed as a way for junior faculty to acquire these skills. In this paper, we present a summary of literature on formal mentoring and report an evaluation of a formal mentoring program (FMP) on the PAS development of junior family medicine faculty.A descriptive, cross-sectional study was used to examine FMP impact on two groups of junior faculty with 18 months (n = 8) and 6 months (n = 10) of program exposure. We developed a Likert-type questionnaire to assess PAS development and used semistructured interviews to identify unintended outcomes of program participation. A qualitative, template analysis helped surface themes from the descriptive data.The FMP had an overall positive impact on junior faculty PAS development, with greatest improvements in their understanding of academic values. Proteges with longer program experience had greater gains. Unintended benefits included improved preparation to mentor others and increased perceptions of a supportive academic environment.Formal mentoring programs can improve the PAS of junior faculty and positively impact an organizational culture that supports faculty development.
- Published
- 1996
14. When is the right time to initiate an assessment of a health technology?
- Author
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T R Ibbotson, John Cairns, Graham Mowatt, Adrian Grant, D J Bower, J A Brebner, Lorna McKee, and J R Maclean
- Subjects
Nursing ,Environmental health ,Health technology ,Health Informatics ,Business - Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Transient ventilation dynamics following a change in strength of a point source of heat.
- Author
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D. J. BOWER, C. P. CAULFIELD, S. D. FITZGERALD, and A. W. WOODS
- Subjects
AIR conditioning ,DAMPNESS in buildings ,RADIOACTIVE source strength ,VENTILATION - Abstract
We investigate the transient ventilation flow within a confined ventilated space, with high- and low-level openings, when the strength of a low-level point source of heat is changed instantaneously. The steady-flow regime in the space involves a turbulent buoyant plume, which rises from the point source to a well-mixed warm upper layer. The steady-state height of the interface between this layer and the lower layer of exterior fluid is independent of the heat flux, but the upper layer becomes progressively warmer with heat flux. New analogue laboratory experiments of the transient adjustment between steady states identify that if the heat flux is increased, the continuing plume propagates to the top of the room forming a new, warmer layer. This layer gradually deepens, and as the turbulent plume entrains fluid from the original warm layer, the original layer is gradually depleted and disappears, and a new steady state is established. In contrast, if the source buoyancy flux is decreased, the continuing plume is cooler than the original plume, so that on reaching the interface it is of intermediate density between the original warm layer and the external fluid. The plume supplies a new intermediate layer, which gradually deepens with the continuing flow. In turn, the original upper layer becomes depleted, both as a result of being vented through the upper opening of the space, but also due to some penetrative entrainment of this layer by the plume, as the plume overshoots the interface before falling back to supply the new intermediate layer. We develop quantitative models which are in good accord with our experimental data, by combining classical plume theory with models of the penetrative entrainment for the case of a decrease in heating. Typically, we find that the effect of penetrative entrainment on the density of the intruding layer is relatively weak, provided the change in source strength is sufficiently large. However, penetrative entrainment measurably increases the rate at which the depth of the draining layer decreases. We conclude with a discussion of the importance of these results for the control of naturally ventilated spaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Chicken lens δ-crystallin gene expression and methylation in several non-lens tissues
- Author
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David Neil Cooper, L. H. Errington, D. J. Bower, S. Morris, and Ruth M. Clayton
- Subjects
Regulation of gene expression ,Transcription, Genetic ,RNA ,Chick Embryo ,Methylation ,Biology ,Crystallins ,Molecular biology ,eye diseases ,Lens protein ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Crystallin ,Lens, Crystalline ,Gene expression ,DNA methylation ,Genetics ,Animals ,Tissue Distribution ,RNA, Messenger ,sense organs ,Chickens ,Gene - Abstract
RNA sequences coding for the most abundant chicken lens proteins, delta-crystallin, were detected at very low levels in day old post hatch chick lung, heart, kidney and liver, and in 6 day embryo headless bodies. The pattern of cytosine methylation within the CCGG sequences of the delta-crystallin genes was also examined and shown to vary in several non-lens tissues, from several stages of development. Embryonic neural retina, which expresses a higher level of delta-crystallin RNA than the above tissues, is no less methylated in the sites studied than the tissues which have no association with the eye, and is actually more heavily methylated than the kidney. Thus no obvious correlation was found between undermethylation and gene expression.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
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17. Identification and Characterization of a Chick αA2 Crystallin Genomic Clone and Preliminary Identification of a Chick β- Crystallin cDNA Clone
- Author
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Ruth M. Clayton, D. J. Bower, and L. H. Errington
- Subjects
Cdna cloning ,Crystallin ,Complementary DNA ,Total rna ,Genomic clone ,Genomic library ,Biology ,Gene ,Molecular biology - Abstract
We selected 24 clones from a λ charon 4A chicken genomic library (a gift from R.Axel) screened with cDNA made from day old chick lens total RNA. The 15 most strongly hybridizing clones carried δ- crystallin sequences overlapping each other to cover the whole 20kb region of the two tandemly arranged δ-crystallin genes.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
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18. Towards Understanding the Structure of Eukaryotic Chromosomes
- Author
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P. Jeppesen and D. J. Bower
- Subjects
Evolutionary biology ,Eukaryotic chromosome fine structure ,Biology - Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Cytoplasmic RNA sequences complementary to cloned chick delta-crystallin cDNA show size heterogeneity
- Author
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S. Morris, N R Wainwright, D. J. Bower, R.M. Clayton, L. H. Errington, and C. Sime
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Electrophoresis ,Cytoplasm ,Transcription, Genetic ,In situ hybridization ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Nucleic acid thermodynamics ,Transcription (biology) ,Complementary DNA ,Animals ,Cloning, Molecular ,Molecular Biology ,Base Sequence ,RNA ,Nucleic Acid Hybridization ,Nuclease protection assay ,Cell Biology ,DNA ,DNA Restriction Enzymes ,Reverse northern blot ,Molecular biology ,Crystallins ,genomic DNA ,Gene Expression Regulation ,RNA, Ribosomal ,Chickens ,Research Article ,Plasmids - Abstract
Double-stranded complementary DNA (cDNA) sequences were prepared from day-old chick lens total polysomal RNA and inserted into the unique PstI restriction site of the plasmid pBR322. Colonies containing sequences complementary to abundant lens poly(A)-containing RNA sequences were identified by using lens 32P-labelled cDNA. Some of these clones have been characterized as containing delta-crystallin mRNA coding sequences by genomic DNA blot hybridization and RNA blot hybridizations. Hybridization of labelled DNA from such clones to RNA blots detected four size classes of delta-crystallin RNA sequences, although Southern blots indicated that there are probably only two delta-crystallin genes.
- Published
- 1982
20. Homozygous protein C deficiency: early treatment with warfarin
- Author
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K R, Hartman, M, Manco-Johnson, J S, Rawlings, D J, Bower, and R A, Marlar
- Subjects
Protein Deficiency ,Homozygote ,Infant, Newborn ,Humans ,Protein C Deficiency ,Female ,Warfarin ,Protein C - Abstract
We present a case of homozygous protein C deficiency with neonatal purpura fulminans and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC) starting shortly after birth. In addition, the infant had vitreal eye hemorrhages and intraparenchymal brain infarction, apparently as intrauterine events. Within 15 hours of institution of fresh frozen plasma (FFP) infusions the DIC resolved and the progression of purpura fulminans reversed. Warfarin (0.4 mg/kg/day) was started on the fifth day of life, followed by gradual tapering of the FFP infusions. There were no recurrences of purpura, areas of skin necrosis healed without the need for skin grafting, and the areas of brain infarction resolved without apparent sequelae. The eye and brain lesions may be intrauterine events and appear to be a regular feature of this syndrome. Family studies are essential to establish the diagnosis, although there may be no family history of thromboembolic events, as in this case. Homozygous protein C deficiency is a rare disorder, but one in which early recognition and intervention may be lifesaving. Ours is the youngest patient yet reported to be treated with warfarin anticoagulation. We were thus able to avoid the complications of long-term plasma therapy as well as the potential thrombotic complications of central venous catheter placement.
- Published
- 1989
21. Quantitation and Localization of Chick δ-Crystallin Gene Transcription in Developing Non-Lens Tissue
- Author
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Ruth M. Clayton, J-C. Jeanny, D. J. Bower, and L. H. Errington
- Subjects
animal structures ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Chemistry ,Crystallin ,Lens (anatomy) ,embryonic structures ,medicine ,sense organs ,Molecular biology ,Gene ,eye diseases ,Cell biology - Abstract
The main protein of the pre-hatching chick is -crystallin. There are two -crystallin genes, (Bhat and Piatigorsky, 1979) and their sequences are similar enough to cross-hybridise under the most stringent conditions.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The presence of extralenticular crystallins and its relationship with transdifferentiation to lens
- Author
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R M, Clayton, J C, Jeanny, D J, Bower, and L H, Errington
- Subjects
Gene Expression Regulation ,Lens, Crystalline ,Animals ,Nucleic Acid Hybridization ,RNA ,Cell Differentiation ,Chick Embryo ,Biological Evolution ,Crystallins ,Retina - Published
- 1986
23. ChemInform Abstract: (6+3-) CYCLOADDITIONS OF 1,1- AND 1,3-DIPHENYL-2-AZAALLYLLITHIUM TO CYCLOHEPTATRIENE
- Author
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D. J. BOWER and M. E. H. HOWDEN
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Demonstration: High Levels of δ-Crystallin Precursor RNA in Early Development of Chick Lens Cells
- Author
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B. J. Pollock, R. M. Clayton, and D. J. Bower
- Subjects
medicine.anatomical_structure ,Chemistry ,Crystallin ,Lens (anatomy) ,medicine ,RNA ,Molecular biology ,Cell biology - Published
- 1982
- Full Text
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25. The pattern of expression of chick delta-crystallin genes in lens differentiation and in trans-differentiating cultured tissues
- Author
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B. J. Pollock, S. Morris, R.M. Clayton, D. J. Bower, and L. H. Errington
- Subjects
Cytoplasm ,Time Factors ,Cellular differentiation ,Gene Expression ,Chick Embryo ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Lens protein ,Crystallin ,Culture Techniques ,Gene expression ,Lens, Crystalline ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Molecular Biology ,In Situ Hybridization ,Cell Nucleus ,Retina ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,General Neuroscience ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Cell Differentiation ,Molecular biology ,Embryonic stem cell ,Crystallins ,Cell nucleus ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,sense organs ,Research Article - Abstract
During development of the vertebrate lens, the lens epithelium undergoes a final stage of differentiation into lens fibre cells. Lens fibre cells can also be produced by trans-differentiation from certain extralenticular structures, all of which are of different developmental origin from lens, including embryonic neural retina and retinal pigmented epithelium. Delta-crystallin is the major lens protein in the chick and appears first in development; it is the major product in trans-differentiated retina of younger embryos. In both normal differentiation and trans-differentiation an increase of delta-crystallin coding RNA is detectable in the nucleus of cells prior to their terminal differentiation into lens fibres. The increase in transcription of delta-crystallin genes accompanying final differentiation of lens fibres, appears to take place slightly in advance of an increase in the capacity to process and transport this mRNA to the cytoplasm.
- Published
- 1983
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