C-reactive protein (CRP) has been shown to be a useful and sensitive indicator of pyogenic infections in many clinical situations, including acute pneumonia and infective pulmonary exacerbations in cystic fibrosis patients. Exacerbations of COPD are often, but not always, associated with demonstrable infection. The value of CRP measurement in this situation has not been assessed. We have evaluated CRP measurement in 50 patients [age 71 +/- 8 (SD) years] who were admitted to hospital with clinical evidence of exacerbation [PaO2 = 7.3 +/- 1.3 (SD) kPa, baseline FEV1 = 0.8 +/- 0.4 (SD) l]. These patients all had serial measurement of CRP [polarizing immunofluorescence (Abbot, TDx)], peripheral white cell count (WCC), body temperature, peak expiratory flow rate, Karnofsky performance status and chest X-ray, in addition to serial sputum bacteriological analysis carried out in a specialized laboratory. CRP was elevated (> 10 mg l-1) in all patients (n = 29) with proven infection [103 +/- 98 (SD) mg l-1]. Levels were markedly elevated in patients infected with Streptococcus pneumoniae (mean 156 mg l-1); there was also a rapid fall in the CRP with therapy. WCC fell with therapy, giving a correlation with CRP level (r = 0.44, P < 0.01). Since CRP elevation was observed in patients having exacerbation with proven infections and also in those where infection was not proven, it is possible that, while it is a marker for COPD exacerbation, it is not necessarily a marker of bacterial infection per se. However, it is evident from our study that it is of value in the assessment of exacerbations of COPD, where routine bacterial culture of sputum is often unreliable, and thus the measurement of serum CRP may provide an additional objective indicator of infection.
The keratinous capsules surrounding rat sperm mitochondria were isolated 24 days after intratesticular injections of [75Se] selenite or [35S] cysteine. Dodecyl sulfate‐polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of purified, doubly labeled mitochondrial capsules revealed only a single 75Se‐labeled component, whose molecular weight was 17,000, in agreement with previously reported observations obtained with cruder sperm fractions. Most of the 35S label and the major zone of stained protein on the gels coincided with the position of 75Se, suggesting that selenium is associated with a cysteine‐rich structural protein. The level of selenium in rat sperm, 195 ± 3.2 ng/108 sperm (approximately 30 ppm), determined by hydride generation and atomic absorption spectrophotometry, is consistent with a structural function for this trace element in the sperm.
Three successive generations of mice were fed a Torula yeast based Se‐deficient diet with or without 0.1 ppm Se in the drinking water. The Se‐deficient mice, in the course of three generations, showed a decrease in body weight, testis weight, epididymal weight, and sperm production. The percentage of morphologically abnormal sperm increased in successive generations. The majority of sperm defects were found in the midpiece region of the tail. Many of these aberrant sperm were motile. A progressive decrease in fertility was noted during the first two generations of Se deficiency. This system confirms the essential role of Se in spermatogenesis and provides a model for the evaluation of the primary effect of Se deprivation on the structural development of sperm.
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