Term
What did Emil du Bois-Reymond do? |
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Definition
Discovered the action potential. |
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Term
What are the three phases for Na+ channel gating? |
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Definition
Resting state, activation phase and inactivation phase. |
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Term
What is the basic structure of the voltage-gated sodium channel? |
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Definition
Four six-transmembrane spanning units that fold up into a pore making up the α-subunit, with an associated β-subunit. |
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Term
What is the role of patch clamping? |
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Definition
Allows us to see individual ion channels opening and closing. |
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Term
What do voltage-sensitive dyes allow us to do, electrophysiologically? |
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Definition
To see action-potentials. |
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Term
What does multiphoton fluroscence microscopy allow us to do? |
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Definition
To image entire fields of living tissue neuronal fields. |
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Term
What is the main role for an ecological study? |
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Definition
To generate a hypothesis. |
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Term
What is the data type of an ecological study? |
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Definition
Population/groups - not of individuals. |
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Term
What are the main points of a cross-sectional study? |
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Definition
Sample of a population is collected at a single point in time. |
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Term
What is the main output for a cross-sectional study? |
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Definition
Descriptive outputs, especially prevalence. |
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Term
What are the pros and cons of cross-sectional studies? |
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Definition
Cheap and easy, though there is no explicit data on temporal relationships, and it's also weak evidence for causality. |
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Term
What are the main points of a case control study? |
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Definition
Compares previous exposure of cases and controls, matched to each other n:1 (usually 1:1). |
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Term
What are the benefits of using a case control study? |
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Definition
Provides explicit knowledge about the temporal relationship between exposure and outcome, and also good for studying rare outcomes. |
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Term
What is the key output for a case control study? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
An approximate risk of outcome conferred by exposure. |
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Term
What are the main points of a cohort study? |
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Definition
Longitudinal, so that subjects are followed up. |
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Term
What is the main output for a cohort study? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the pros and cons of a cohort study? |
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Definition
Provides explicit knowledge about the temporal relationship between exposure and outcome, however, they aren't cheap or easy, and it's difficult to study rare outcomes. |
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Term
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Definition
Quantification of whole tissue homogeneates. |
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Term
What is the downside of soup assays? |
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Definition
Assumes all tissues are homogeneous, and that pathophysiological changes are diffuse. |
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Term
What is an in situ assay? |
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Definition
A tissue is an assay based on a tissue section. |
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Term
What makes a good probe for hybridisation histochemistry? |
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Definition
Uniqueness of complementary coding sequences (specificity) and incorporation of multiple labels (sensitivity). |
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Term
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Definition
Detects DNA fragmentation, hence apoptosis. |
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Term
What are the problems with in situ morphometry? |
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Definition
Information is lost when going from 3D to 2D, systematic errors (shrinkage, compression, section thickness, etc) and statistical errors. |
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Term
What is histology and immunohistochemistry mainly used for? |
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Definition
Tells you where proteins accumulate. |
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Term
What is in situ hybridisation and intracellular labelling mainly used for? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the main aims for fetal welfare assessment? |
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Definition
Reduce perinatal mortality, prevent neurodevelopmental delay and evaluate whether or not the individual fetus is able to tolerate the environment. |
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Term
What are some forms of fetal welfare assessment? |
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Definition
Movement charts, ultrasound, doppler waveform studies, amniocentesis, fetal blood sampling, intermittent auscultation of the fetal heart, CTG, fetal pulse oxymetry, ECG, etc. |
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Term
What is CTG and what is it used for? |
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Definition
Cardiotocography, used to listen to and record the fetal heart and the abdominal muscle changes (+ contractions of the uterus). |
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Term
What is a normal fetal baseline heart rate? |
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Definition
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Term
Are early fetal decelerations normal? |
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Definition
Usually not a cause for concern. |
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Term
Are late fetal decelerations normal? |
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Definition
Serious, relates to how well the placenta is providing needs to the fetus. |
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Term
Are variable fetal decelerations normal? |
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Definition
Can be normal or serious (eg., umbilical cord contraction). |
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Term
Are prolonged fetal decelerations normal? |
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Definition
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Term
What is a 1st trimester ultrasound used for? |
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Definition
Dates the baby, viability and nuchal translucency (screens for Down's syndrome). |
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Term
What is a 2nd trimester ultrasound used for? |
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Definition
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Term
What is a 3rd trimester ultrasound used for? |
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Definition
Growth and placental location. |
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Term
How are pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics different? |
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Definition
Pharmacogenetics is the study of how genetic differences contribute to the individual drug reponses, whereas pharmacogenomics is the correlation of variations of specific genes with individual drug responses. |
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Term
What is the goal of pharmacogenomics? |
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Definition
Safer and more effective drug therapy. |
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Term
In the Wistar rats in Strasbourge, how many of them had spontaneous absence-like seizures? |
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Definition
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Term
How were the GAERS rats made? |
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Definition
Selective breeding from Wistar rats. |
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Term
How is stargazin implicated in epilepsy? |
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Definition
Increased mRNA in the Stargazer mouse postictally; alters AMPA receptor protein expression (hyperexcitability?). |
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Term
What is roughly the structure of TrK? |
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Definition
Extracellular domain (contains ligand-binding domain), intracellular domain (contains ATP binding site, tyrosine residues are phosphorylated here) and a transmembrane domain. |
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Term
What are the results of enhanced EGFR signalling? |
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Definition
Proliferation (↑ in proteins that promote cell cycle progression and ↓ proteins that are cell cycle checkpoint proteins), survival/resistance (↑ in anti-apoptotic proteins), angiogenesis (↑ pro-angiogenic proteins) and invasion/metastasis (↑ in extracellular matrix degredation and survival proteins). |
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Term
What are the mechanisms used by cancer to enhance EGFR signalling? |
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Definition
Overexpression of EGFR, EGFR mutation (always active), autocrine signalling (secrete own ligands), enhanced downstream signalling (no receptor needed to activate), loss of phosphotase expression (disinhibits downsteam signals). |
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Term
What is a knock-in mouse? |
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Definition
A mouse with a gene that assumes a different function. |
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Term
How do you create a classical transgenic mouse? |
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Definition
Design the construct then inject it into the nucleus of embryos. |
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Term
What are the pros and cons for classical transgenic mice? |
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Definition
Quick and easy, though random DNA integration. |
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Term
Why are mice used in brain research? |
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Definition
As they have a six-layered neocortex, short breeding and lifespans, and are inbred/genetically identical. |
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Term
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Definition
Are the symptoms the same as the human symptoms? |
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Term
What is construct validity? |
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Definition
Is the biological dysfunction share the same cause as in humans? |
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Term
What is predictive validity? |
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Definition
Are the response to treatments the same as for humans? |
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Term
What is the drawback for the phenotype-first approach? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the drawbacks for in vitro models? |
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Definition
Has to be proven in vivo. |
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Term
What are the drawbacks to pharmacological induction of phenotypes? |
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Definition
Non-specific (side-effects), not a natural presentation. |
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Term
What is the drawback to a lesion model? |
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Definition
Creates more health problems than needed. |
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Term
What are the fast and slow rats? |
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Definition
Fast (seizure-prone) and slow (seizure-resistant). |
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Term
Why do we use molecular approaches? |
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Definition
Because it proves causation. |
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Term
What does a Kozak site do? |
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Definition
Promotes expression via translation. |
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Term
How can one get vectors into a plasmid? |
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Definition
DNA-calcium phosphate precipitates, liposomes, electroporation and viral vectors. |
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Term
How can you purify cells that express your vector? |
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Definition
Drugs or FACS-based cell sorting. |
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Term
What can siRNA-mediated gene silencing do? |
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Definition
Can decrease or increase protein (loss-of-function or gain-of-function phenotypes). |
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Term
What are the cons for using mouse models in biological psychiatry? |
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Definition
Broad spectrum of symptoms and complex higher order processes. |
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Term
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Definition
Where data is fit into categories (eg. hair colour). |
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Term
What is an ordinal scale? |
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Definition
Order in categories, but the differences aren't consisent (eg. cancer grade I to V). |
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Term
What is a numerical scale? |
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Definition
Quantitative observations - either continuous or discrete. |
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Term
Who are the principal victims for P. falciparum? |
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Definition
Young children and pregnant women. |
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Term
Who is most likely to get cerebral malaria, and why? |
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Definition
Children around 3-4 years old, due to infected erythrocytes clogging brain vasculature and inflammation. |
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|
Term
How does respiratory distress occur in malaria? |
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Definition
Acidosis due to inadequate oxygen of poorly perfused tissues. |
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Term
What are the main problems for malaria in pregnancy? |
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Definition
Anemia and low birth weight (predisposes to high infant mortality). |
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Term
What is bad about the naturally acquired immunity for malaria? |
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Definition
Takes several years to develop, is short-lived and can still have parasitaemia. |
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Term
What are the three immunological strategies for enhancing phagocytosis? |
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Definition
Neutralisation, opsonisation and complement activation. |
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Term
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Definition
Single nucleotide polymorphism, a single nucleotide is replaced with another. |
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Term
What is an insertion/deletion polymorphism? |
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Definition
Where a nucleotide base is inserted/deleted. |
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Term
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Definition
A unique variation of a gene. |
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Term
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Definition
A collection of genotypes from the same chromosome. |
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Term
How do infected erythrocytes bind to the SCT on the placenta? |
|
Definition
Express VAR2CSA which mediates binding to CSA. |
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|
Term
Which cytokines recruit macrophages in placental malaria? |
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Definition
MCP-1, MIP-1α, MIP-1β, IP-10 and IL-8. |
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Term
What are the two TH-cell roles in normal pregnancy and malaria? |
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Definition
TH2 occur during normal pregnancy, but in malaria it is mainly TH1 which causes the anemia, premature delivery and spontaenous abortion (but help clear infected erythrocytes). |
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Term
What does IFNγ do in placental malaria? |
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Definition
Secreted by TH1 cells, they enhance the phagocytic activity of macrophages. |
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|
Term
What does TNF-α do in placental malaria? |
|
Definition
Secreted by TH1 cells, they enhance phagocytic activity of macrophages and generate NO. |
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Term
How does HIV affect placental malaria? |
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Definition
Inhibits phagocytosis by decreasing the amount of mRNA and cytokine secretion, though cell viability isn't altered. |
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|
Term
Is NF-κB activated in response to opsonised and unopsonised infected erythrocytes? |
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Definition
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|
Term
What are the most common reported symptoms of womens ageing? |
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Definition
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|
Term
What were the possible confounding factors attributable to menopausal transition? |
|
Definition
Ageing, personal atecedents, previous surgery and country specificity. |
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|
Term
What happens to mood swings as one gets older? |
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Definition
Decreases, influenced by mental and physical morbidity and country. |
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Term
What happens to sweating, backache, lack of energy, weight gain and aching in muscles as we age? |
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Definition
Nothing - age independent. |
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Term
What symptoms are properly associated with menopause? |
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Definition
Trouble sleeping, night sweats, dry vagina and hot flushes. |
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Term
What are the criteria for biomarkers? |
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Definition
Accurate, data not being already available through clinical assessment and the informatin needs to aid in clinical decision making. |
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|
Term
When do endocrine biomarkers work best? |
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Definition
When incorporating multiple biomarkers. |
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Term
What are the two factors associated with Alzheimer's? |
|
Definition
Aβ amyloid plaque and neurofibrillary tangles. |
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|
Term
What are the two pathways from APP? |
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Definition
Non-amyloidogenic pathway uses α-secretase, amyloidogenic pathway uses β and γ-secretase. |
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|
Term
What is the correlation with PiB retention and hippocampal volume? |
|
Definition
Negative - no correlation in any other groups. |
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|
Term
Which malaria is associated with severe disease? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Which malaria causes the most deaths? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Why isn't chemoprophylaxis administered for everyone in malarial regions? |
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Definition
Interferes with immunity, costly. |
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Term
What is an 'intention to treat' analysis? |
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Definition
Offer the entire group an intervention, and they can accept/reject, yet you still use the rejections in the analysis. |
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Term
Why would people reject a free screening? |
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Definition
Have bad health already, usually end up worse. |
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Term
What did screening do for colorectal cancer? |
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Definition
Lowered the mortality by 16-20% for the entire group; up to 33% who actually accepted the screening. |
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Term
How can incidence affect mortality? |
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Definition
More screening = removing polyps/adenomas = less turn to cancer = less incidence = less mortality. |
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|
Term
What happens in the Navβ1 mutation in epilepsy? |
|
Definition
Ig-like loop is disrupted, less voltage-gated sodium channels in the AIS (due to the β-subunit), so that it quietens down the acceleration, changing its kinnetics. |
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Term
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Definition
A characteristic that is objectively measured and evaluated as an indicator of normal biological processes, pathogenic processes, or pharmacologic responses to a therapeutic intervention. |
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Term
Why are imaging biomarkers needed? |
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Definition
Non-invasive, visualiasation/quantification of molecular/cellular phenomena in vivo, and can accelerate and reduce the cost of drug discovery/trials. |
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|
Term
What are the modalities for imaging biomarkers? |
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Definition
X-Ray, CT, MRI, ultrasound, PET, SPECT, OCT/infrared. |
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|
Term
What are the classes for imaging biomarkers? |
|
Definition
Diagnostic/prognostic, predictive, response and monitoring. |
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|
Term
How is APC involved with tumourigenesis? |
|
Definition
Activates the Wnt pathway. |
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Term
|
Definition
When it isn't activated, the entire degredation complex is bound so β-catenin can't activate genes. When activated, β-catenin breaks off and activates genes. |
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|
Term
Why does deleting the Apc gene result in tumourigenesis? |
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Definition
Since it leaves β-catenin activating, always promoting gene transcription. |
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|
Term
What does monocyte recruitment in malaria indicate? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is the main fetal glucose transporter? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
How is GLUT-1 implicated in malaria? |
|
Definition
On the microvillous membrane with malaria (no inflammation) = higher, with malaria (and inflammation) = same as controls. On the basal membrane, normal for malaria and no inflammation but decreased with inflammation. |
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|
Term
What are the main amino acid transporters in the placenta? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
How are the SNAT transporters implicated in malaria? |
|
Definition
Decreases (even more with inflammation). |
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|
Term
What is responsible for antigenic variation in malaria? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What enzyme transcribes the var genes in malaria? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What is a negative regulator of var, and where does it bind? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What does a Sir2 knockout result in? |
|
Definition
Transcription of multiple var genes. |
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|
Term
How can you mark silent/active var genes? |
|
Definition
Silent ones with HP1, active ones with H2A.Z. |
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