The odds ratio of infection was 0.85 with antibiotic use but one was contained within the confidence interval suggesting no significant difference in infection rate when antibiotics were used.
Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) is increasingly incorporated into routine body magnetic resonance imaging protocols. DWI can assist with lesion detection and even in characterization. Quantitative DWI has exhibited promise in the discrimination between benign and malignant pathology, in the evaluation of the biologic aggressiveness, and in the assessment of the response to treatment. Unfortunately, inconsistencies in DWI acquisition parameters and analysis have hampered widespread clinical utilization. Focusing primarily on liver applications, this article will review the basic principles of quantitative DWI. In addition to standard mono-exponential fitting, the authors will discuss intravoxel incoherent motion and diffusion kurtosis imaging that involve more sophisticated approaches to diffusion quantification.
The increasing demand for adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors, a result from the surging interest for their potential to cure human genetic diseases by gene transfer, tumbled on low-performing production systems. Innovative improvements to increase both yield and quality of the vector produced have become a priority undertaking in the field. In a previous study, we showed that adding a specific concentration of sodium chloride (NaCl) to the production medium resulted in a dramatic increase of AAV vector particle and infectious titers when using the herpes simplex virus (HSV) production system, both in adherent or suspension platforms. In this work, we studied additional salts and their impact on AAV vector production. We found that potassium chloride (KCl), or a combination of KCl and NaCl, resulted in the highest increase in AAV vector production. We determined that the salt-mediated effect was the most impactful when the salt was present between 8 and approximately 16 h post-infection, with the highest rate increase occurring within the first 24 h of the production cycle. We showed that the AAV vector yield increase did not result from an increase in cell growth, size, or viability. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the impact on AAV vector production was specifically mediated by NaCl and KCl independently of their impact on the osmolality of the production media. Our findings convincingly showed that NaCl and KCl were uniquely efficacious to promote up to a 10-fold increase in the production of highly infectious AAV vectors when produced in the presence of HSV. We think that this study will provide unique and important new insights in AAV biology toward the establishment of more successful production protocols.
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