Preauricular sinuses are common congenital malformations that usually occur at the anterior margin of the ascending limb of the helix. We present three paediatric patients with postauricular infected cysts and coincidentally discovered auricular pits. Single-stage operations were performed to remove the cysts, pits and involved cartilage. Histopathology revealed a preauricular sinus with inflammation. Although uncommon, a postauricular infected cyst may indicate the presence of a preauricular sinus. Detailed physical examination of preauricular pits should be performed, and the operating microscope may aid during surgery to remove remnants and prevent recurrence. An infected preauricular sinus can be effectively treated with single-stage excision.
We previously reported that intrathecal pro-opiomelanocortin gene electroporation could reduce pain sensitivity induced by chronic constriction injury (CCI) of the sciatic nerve. For optimal use of antinociceptive gene therapy, it might be important to control the expression of the transfected gene extrinsically. For this purpose, a doxycyclinecontrolled transrepressor system composed of two plasmids coding, respectively, for pro-opiomelanocortin gene (pTRE2-POMC) and the silencer (pTel-off) was employed. The regulation of beta-endorphin expression was first assessed in spinal neuronal culture, then we electrotranfected this plasmid into the spinal cord of mononeuropathic rats and evaluated the analgesic potential of this therapy in vivo by thermal and mechanical withdrawal latency. Intraperitoneal injections of various doses of doxycycline were made to elucidate the possible exogenous downregulation of transfected beta-endorphin gene expression in vivo. The levels of beta-endorphin were analyzed by intrathecal microdialysis and radioimmunoassay. Intrathecal pTRE2-POMC/pTel-off electroporation elevated spinal betaendorphin levels, as manifested in a significantly elevated pain threshold for chronic constriction injury limbs. Intraperitoneal doxycycline decreased the antinociceptive effect and spinal beta-endorphin levels in a dose-dependent manner. We concluded that intrathecal pTRE2-POMC/ pTel-off electroporation alleviates CCI-induced limb pain, and can be controlled by intraperitoneal doxycycline administration.
What makes human social learning so powerful? While past accounts have sometimes prioritized finding the single capacity that makes the largest difference, our social learning abilities span a wide spectrum of capacities from the high-fidelity imitation of behaviors to inferring and learning from hidden mental states. Here, we propose that the power of human social learning lies not within a single capacity, but in our ability to flexibly arbitrate between different computations and to integrate their outputs. In particular, learners can directly copy the demonstrator’s actions in the absence of causal insight (policy imitation), infer their instrumental values (value inference), or infer their model of the world and intrinsic rewards (belief inference and reward inference). Each of these strategies trades off the cost of computation against the flexibility and compositionality of its outputs. Crucially, we have the capacity to arbitrate and exchange information between these representational formats. Human social learning, we suggest, is powerful not just because of the way it moves information between minds, but also because of the way it flexibly moves information within them.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the toxicity potential of cyanuric acid (CYA) and a combination of melamine (MEL) and CYA in broilers. A total of 1200 male COBB 500 broilers were randomly allocated into 1 of 10 treatment groups by a 5 × 2 factorial design in a 42-d experiment. The dietary treatments were as follows: T(1) to T(5): basal diets with 0, 10, 20, 33.3, and 50 mg CYA per kg diet; T(6) to T(10): basal diet with CYA regimens similar to T(1) to T(5) but with 100 mg MEL per kg diet. There were 6 replication pens with 20 chicks per pen. No differences were observed in alanine transaminase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) activities. But on d 22, uric acid (UA) and creatinine (Crea) concentrations were significantly greater when birds were fed CYA at 33.3 mg/kg with MEL 100 mg/kg, and Crea concentration was also higher when birds were fed CYA at 50 mg/kg. No crystals were found in kidneys but dilated renal tubules and small blood vessel expansion were found in kidneys of birds fed CYA at 50 mg/kg and CYA at 33.3 mg/kg with MEL 100 mg/kg. The apoptosis rate (AR) of kidneys of all birds fed CYA and MEL contaminated diets were higher than the control group. These results indicated that the dietary addition of CYA and MEL could induce kidney damage, and the effects were harmful when the ratio of CYA/MEL was 1:3.
This study aimed to investigate the effects of single local vibration (LV) with and without blood flow restriction (BFR) on muscle activity and hormonal responses. A total of 12 physically inactive males were exposed to 10 sets of intermittent LV (35-40 Hz) on unilateral mid-quadriceps in the supine lying position and LV + BFR (inflated to 140 mmHg) sessions in a repeated-measures randomized crossover design, with a 1-week interval separating the sessions. The results indicated that the electromyography values from the rectus femoris during LV + BFR were greater than those during LV (p < 0.05). LV + BFR caused a minor increase in the lactate (LA) response (p < 0.05); LV with or without BFR failed to elicit change in growth hormone (GH) and testosterone (T) levels (p > 0.05). Cortisol (C) levels were decreased postexercise in both the sessions (p < 0.05). In conclusion, BFR elicited higher increase in muscle activity and metabolic response, but it did not induce hormonal responses. The exposure of LV and LV + BFR may only have a relief effect as detected by the reduction in C levels, probably because the LV did not elicit sufficient stimulus to the muscles.
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