{"id":88,"date":"2023-01-18T10:21:07","date_gmt":"2023-01-18T09:21:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/?page_id=88"},"modified":"2023-01-18T10:21:07","modified_gmt":"2023-01-18T09:21:07","slug":"reference-21-30","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/?page_id=88","title":{"rendered":"Reference 21-30"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><strong>Prof. Sven Kurbel MD, PhD \u2013 personal web pages<\/strong><br>Dept. of Physiology, Osijek Medical Faculty<br>J. Huttlera 4, 31000 Osijek, Croatia<br>e-mail: sven@jware.hr<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>21. Duplex sonography of arteriovenous fistula in chronic hemodialysis patients.<br>Misevi\u0107 T, Brkljaci\u0107 B, Zibar L, Jaki\u0107 M, Kurbel S, Radi\u0107 R, Misevi\u0107 S.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Coll Antropol. 2006 Sep;30(3):535-41.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Department of Radiology, University Hospital Osijek, Osijek, Croatia.<br>misevic.tonci@kbo.hr<br><br>Duplex sonography was used to assess functional features of arteriovenous fistula<br>(AVF) for hemodialysis (HD). Internal diameter (ID), resistance index (RI) and<br>blood flow (BF) velocity in feeding artery and in vein ofAVF, and venous BF<br>volume were analyzed with purpose to determine the normal values. Presumed normal<br>BF velocities are those of clinically well functioning shunts, allowing BF<br>through HD lines of minimally 250 ml\/min. Study included 66 nondiabetic<br>HDpatients (30 women, 36 men), mean age 52-13 years, treated by HD for median 61<br>(4-252) months. Measurements in 47patients with clinically well functioning AVF<br>were as followed: mean arterial ID 5.2 +\/- 1.4 mm, median arterial RI 0.3<br>(0.3-0.9), median arterial BF velocity 1.5 (0.6-3.6) m\/s, mean venous ID 7.6 +\/-<br>2.2 mm, median venous RI 0.3 (0.3-0.9), mean venous BF velocity 1.6 +\/- 0.7 m\/s,<br>and median venous BF volume 530 (120-1890) ml\/min. Patients with poor functioning<br>AVF had significantly less arterial ID, higher arterial RI, less venous ID, less<br>venous BF velocity and volume. Duplex sonography findings obtained for clinically<br>estimated well functioning shunt should be considered as normal Doppler values.<br>Blood vessels\u2019 morphologic features depend upon age, and older patients have more<br>pronounced changes.<br><br>PMID: 17058520&nbsp; [PubMed \u2013 indexed for MEDLINE]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>22. Resorption of gas trapped in body cavities: comparison of alveolar and pleural<br>space with inner ear and paranasal sinuses.<br>Ivezi\u0107 Z, Kurbel S, Skrinjari\u0107-Cincar S, Radi\u0107 R.<\/strong><br><strong>Adv Physiol Educ. 2006 Mar;30(1):30-2.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Osijek Medical Faculty, University of Osijek, Osijek, Croatia.<br><br>This paper describes our attempt to devise a short text aimed at improving<br>students\u2019 understanding of gas resorption in body cavities. Students are expected<br>to understand the mechanisms behind paranasal sinusitis, otitis media, closed<br>pneumothorax, and atelectasis of collapsed lung tissue, all used as examples. On<br>the basis of the interpretation that during pneumothorax resorption, gas diffuses<br>down pressure gradients into the blood, students are encouraged to calculate<br>tables of pressure gradients for the above-mentioned pathological conditions.<br>After answering a few questions, students need to analyze and eventually accept<br>the following conclusion: in cases of air trapping in collapsible body cavities,<br>all gases will be fully reabsorbed without pain. Air trapping in bone cavities<br>leads only to partial reabsorption of gases and results in subatmospheric<br>intracavity pressure. Partial vacuum causes painful mucosal edema and free fluid<br>secretion.<br><br>PMID: 16481606&nbsp; [PubMed \u2013 indexed for MEDLINE]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>23. Are HER1\/EGFR interactions with ligand free HER2 related to the effects of<br>HER1-targeted drugs?<br>Kurbel S.<br>Med Hypotheses. 2006;67(6):1355-7. Epub 2006 Aug 4.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Osijek Clinical Hospital, Department of Oncology, J Huttlera 4, 31000 Osijek,<br>Croatia. sven@jware.hr<br><br>This paper is aimed to describe consequences of possible dimerization modes<br>between ligand binding HER1 and ligand free HER2 receptors on cellular membrane.<br>Cells without HER2\/neu need high exposure to HER1 ligands for growth stimulation<br>since formation of HER1-ligand:HER1-ligand homodimers depends on the number of<br>both HER1 and ligand molecules and an \u201call or none\u201d threshold under which cell<br>growth is not stimulated can be expected. Cells with HER2\/neu molecules on their<br>surface can react to moderate or even low HER1 ligand exposure through formation<br>of HER2:HER1-ligand dimers, making them more sensitive to growth stimulation by<br>EGF or other ligands without the \u201call or none\u201d threshold in cell growth<br>stimulation. Formation of some HER2:HER2 homodimers can provide the basal cell<br>growth stimulation despite available ligands to HER1. In tumors, high expression<br>of HER2 can lead to many HER2:HER2 homodimers and increased cell growth that<br>contributes to a poor prognosis. Here presented concept is that some 75 millions<br>of years ago, introduction of HER2\/neu with increased sensitivity to low EGFR<br>ligand exposure, might be the cause of increased variability of HER1 expression<br>on normal cells and of the basal EGF secretion from the uninjured tissue.<br>Spontaneous formation of HER2:HER2 homodimers in cells with HER2\/neu expression<br>might have substituted the low ligand exposure from uninjured tissue and thus<br>slowly reduce importance of basal secretions of EGFR ligands. Reported<br>variability in HER1 tumor expression and response to HER1-targeted agents, a wide<br>range of EGF concentration in healthy women breasts fluid and the skin rash\/tumor<br>response relation to HER1-targeted drugs are discussed as possible examples of<br>individual differences in tissue dependency on HER1 interactions with ligands in<br>normal and cancer tissue.<br><br>PMID: 16890381&nbsp; [PubMed \u2013 indexed for MEDLINE]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>24. Intestinal gases and flatulence: possible causes of occurrence.<br>Kurbel S, Kurbel B, Vcev A.<br>Med Hypotheses. 2006;67(2):235-9. Epub 2006 Mar 29.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Department of Physiology, Osijek Medical Faculty, J. Huttlera 4, 31000 Osijek,<br>Croatia. sven@jware.hr<br><br>All gases entrapped in closed body cavities are destined to be partially or<br>completely absorbed. Intestinal gases often accumulate and cause flatulence. This<br>paper proposes a simple concept of intestinal gas occurrence based on our<br>knowledge on gas resorption in other body cavities. Compliance of intestinal and<br>abdominal walls makes pressure in the liquid chyme bubbles near 760 mmHg.<br>Intestinal gases are from three sources. Air can be swallowed, CO2 come from the<br>gastric acid neutralisation and from intestinal bacterial colonies that also<br>produce hydrogen and methane. In continuously mixed liquid chyme, the total<br>pressure of blood gases is similar or lower than in the venous blood (&lt;or=706),<br>well below the bubble forming pressure (&gt;or=760 mmHg). Some local production of<br>bacterial gases with partial pressure of more than 90 mmHg is required, so the<br>resulting small bowel bubbles would contain less than 20% of bacterial gases. If<br>peristaltic mixing of chyme is prevented by an obstacle, local pressures of<br>bacterial gases build up, form bubbles that fuse and finally make X-ray visible<br>aeroliquid levels. Bacterial gases make almost 3\/4 of the flatulence. Formation<br>of bubbles destined to become flatulence might depend on altered rheological<br>condition of the large bowel content, with local abundant production of bacterial<br>gases near bacterial colonies. Gases are unable to diffuse rapidly through the<br>dense liquid content and local accumulation allows formation of bubbles mainly of<br>bacterial gases. Their pressure can be higher 760 mmHg, since they are stretching<br>the thick content. Poor diffusion of gases keeps them almost free of blood gases<br>and their entrance makes them bigger. As the content moves along the colon, the<br>content is becoming more solid and gases are becoming entrapped in large bubbles.<br>Some blood and bacterial gases are absorbed and exhaled, but the remaining<br>quantity has no other escape except flatulence. Flatulence rich in bacterial<br>gases might be the price for the large bowel water reabsorption. It seems that<br>beside the peroral use of antibiotics active in the colon, little can be done to<br>reduce flatulence.<br><br>PMID: 16574342&nbsp; [PubMed \u2013 indexed for MEDLINE]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>25. Preservation of HER2\/neu gene during evolution: possible physiological role and<br>survival advantages.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Kurbel S, Dmitrovi\u0107 B, Golci\u0107 G, Dovhanj J.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Med Hypotheses. 2006;66(5):1039-40. Epub 2006 Jan 30.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>PMID: 16446054&nbsp; [PubMed \u2013 indexed for MEDLINE]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>26. Breast or colon cancer patients with more than one tumor: Are tumor and adjacent<br>normal tissue sharing same mutations?<br>Kurbel S, Kovaci\u0107 D, Misevi\u0107 T, Kovaci\u0107 B.<br>Med Hypotheses. 2006;66(3):676-7. Epub 2005 Dec 2.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>PMID: 16326026&nbsp; [PubMed \u2013 indexed for MEDLINE]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>27. Mutations that modulate receptor-hormone congruency as a cause of the primate GH<br>receptor species specificity.<br>Kurbel S, Gulam D, Kovaci\u0107 D, Mihaljevi\u0107 I, Faj D.<br>Theory Biosci. 2005 Apr;123(4):435-40. doi: 10.1016\/j.thbio.2004.10.004.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Department of Physiology, Osijek Medical Faculty, Osijek Clinical Hospital,<br>Huttlera 4, 31000, Osijek, Croatia, sven@jware.hr.<br><br>Peptide hormones depend on reliable recognition by their receptors. Any mutation<br>that compromises recognition of hormone and receptor molecules is dangerous, the<br>carrier animal would not procreate and the mutation would be lost. Although, most<br>of the hormones from one mammalian species are active when injected into another,<br>the incompatibility of human GH receptor toward nonprimate GHs is a notable<br>exception. It is reported that the coevolution of GH and GHR in primates includes<br>two crucial steps (Mol. Biol. Evol. 18 (2001) 945). The first was mutation of GH<br>His\u2013&gt;Asp at position 171 that happened before the split of Old world and New<br>world monkeys. The second event was Leu\u2013&gt;Arg change at position 43 in the GH<br>receptor molecule that happened in the ancestor of Old world monkeys. The<br>proposed model is based on the possibility that certain mutations can modify the<br>surface of one of interacting molecules to form a confined empty space, a niche<br>in the otherwise congruent hormone\/receptor interface. Altoough affinity between<br>molecules is probably slightly reduced, recognition and function are not<br>compromised in this special case. Further mutations of hormone and receptor<br>molecules are allowed under the condition that they remain confined to the niche<br>space. Mutations that do not compromise hormone function can be passed to<br>offsprings. If the consequent mutation of one molecule change its shape to fill<br>the niche space, further mutations without function loss will become less<br>probable. Without the niche space, the phase of fast evolution is closed and both<br>genes become conserved. In this setting, accumulated mutations before the niche<br>closing mutation are the cause of species specificity. To become a dominant<br>variety, carrier animals must possess survival advantage in comparison to the<br>carriers of other less advantageous mutations.<br><br>PMID: 18202875&nbsp; [PubMed]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>28. Association of skin rash and tumor response to HER1\/EGFR inhibition: does HER1<br>stimulated tumor growth depend on circulatory instead of paracrine ligands?<br>Kurbel S, Faj D.<br>Med Hypotheses. 2005;64(6):1244-5.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>PMID: 15823732&nbsp; [PubMed \u2013 indexed for MEDLINE]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>29. Selective reduction of estrogen receptor (ER) positive breast cancer occurrence<br>by estrogen receptor modulators supports etiological distinction between ER<br>positive and ER negative breast cancers.<br>Kurbel S.<br>Med Hypotheses. 2005;64(6):1182-7.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Department of Physiology, Osijek Medical Faculty, J. Huttlera 4, 31000 Osijek,<br>Croatia. sven@jware.hr<br><br>Reports that selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) reduce occurrence of<br>only estrogen receptor (ER) positive tumors strongly support the etiological<br>distinction between ER positive and ER negative breast cancers. Based on these<br>evidences three concepts are described: Concept I. The occurrence of ER negative<br>tumor cells might be a consequence of the clonal selection among tumor cells.<br>This would lead to mosaicism in the ER expression. If ER negative cells become<br>the most prevalent clone, the patient will be diagnosed to have an ER negative<br>breast cancer. Since all cancers start as ER positive, SERMs should equally<br>prevent occurrence of ER positive and ER negative breast cancers, but this<br>prediction is evidently wrong. Concept II. Mammary ducts normally contain ER<br>positive and ER negative cells, both prone to malignancy. Cancer occurrence in<br>ductal cells that normally lack ER would be unrelated to estrogen exposure or<br>SERMs protection. Estrogen and SERMs can influence cancer occurrence only in ER<br>positive ductal cells. The main drawback is that this concept does not predict<br>occurrence of mosaicism in ER expression among tumor cells. Unified Concept I and<br>II. To overcome limitations of described concept a unified concept is presented.<br>Cancers from ER positive ductal cells start as pure ER positive tumors and those<br>from ER negative ductal cells as pure ER negative tumors. During the preclinical<br>phase, in some ER positive tumors, clonal selection introduces ER negative<br>clones. These tumors become mosaic in the cellular ER expression, some of them<br>predominantly ER positive other ER negative. Estrogen deprivation, or SERMs can<br>help mostly to patients with pure ER positive, or mosaic ER positive tumors.<br>Since the dominant metastatic clone can have different ER status from the primary<br>breast tumor, both surprising successes and failures of endocrine therapy can be<br>expected in tumors with mosaic ER expression.<br><br>PMID: 15823713&nbsp; [PubMed \u2013 indexed for MEDLINE]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>30. Estrogen receptor (ER) in breast cancer tissue of premenopausal patients: are<br>some ER- findings false due to down-regulation?<br>Kurbel S, Kovaci\u0107 D, Kristek J, Sisljagi\u0107 V, Mihaljevi\u0107 I.<br>Med Hypotheses. 2005;64(5):1069-70.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>PMID: 15780520&nbsp; [PubMed \u2013 indexed for MEDLINE]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Prof. Sven Kurbel MD, PhD \u2013 personal web pagesDept. of Physiology, Osijek Medical FacultyJ. Huttlera 4, 31000 Osijek, Croatiae-mail: sven@jware.hr 21. Duplex sonography of arteriovenous fistula in chronic hemodialysis patients.Misevi\u0107 T, Brkljaci\u0107 B, Zibar L, Jaki\u0107 M, Kurbel S, Radi\u0107 R, Misevi\u0107 S. Coll Antropol. 2006 Sep;30(3):535-41. Department of Radiology, University Hospital Osijek, Osijek, Croatia.misevic.tonci@kbo.hr Duplex sonography was used to assess functional features of arteriovenous fistula(AVF) for hemodialysis (HD). Internal diameter (ID), resistance index (RI) andblood flow (BF) velocity in&hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-88","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/88","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=88"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/88\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":89,"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/88\/revisions\/89"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=88"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}