The VAWCM method provided a high fascial closure rate after long-term treatment of OA. Technique-related complications were few. No patient was left with a large planned ventral hernia.
SummaryThe Norway spruce (Picea abies) gene DAL2 shows distinct structural similarities to angiosperm MADS-box genes which act in the control of the development of the sexual organs of the flower. Transcription of DAL2 is restricted to the reproductive organs, the unisexual cones, of Norway spruce. In this paper we show that DAL2 in the compound female cone is exclusively expressed in the developing ovule-bearing organ, the ovuliferous scale. When expressed constitutively in transgenic Arabidopsis the gene causes developmental alterations very similar to those observed in plants ectopically expressing the Arabidopsis gene AGAMOUS and the closely related Brassica napus gene BAG1. These alterations include homeotic transformations of floral organs. On the basis of these data and analysis of the phylogeny of the plant MADSbox gene family, we propose that DAL2 acts to control reproductive organ development in spruce. We also propose that DAL2 shares a common origin with AGAMOUS and related genes from other angiosperms, in an ancestral MADS-box gene that was active in the control of ontogeny of ovule-bearing organs in the unknown last common ancestor of conifers and angiosperms.
Small-volume HSD resuscitation is much more effective than ISD resuscitation. Variables that were improved include cardiac output, portal blood flow, and intestinal mucosal blood flow in ET shock, all of which improve survival. Such beneficial effects of HSD on splanchnic perfusion may be of value in treating critically ill septic patients in the intensive care unit.
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