scholarly journals Type I Jejunal Atresia in Identical Twins: A Rare Occurrence

2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 68
Author(s):  
Amrollah Salimi ◽  
Shervin Rashidinia ◽  
Seyed Shahin Eftekhari ◽  
Mahsa Besharati ◽  
Sara Shahmoradi

Jejunoileal atresia is of familial and non-familial in origins and classified into four different types. We herein report a rare occurrence of type I jejunal atresia in identical twins who were presented with neonatal intestinal obstruction. This report points towards common etiology of atresia in our cases and factors more than vascular accident appear to be involved.

2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 (sep08 1) ◽  
pp. bcr2014204276-bcr2014204276 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. V. Patel ◽  
P. De Coppi ◽  
E. Kiely ◽  
A. Pierro

Author(s):  
E.M. Kuhn ◽  
K.D. Marenus ◽  
M. Beer

Fibers composed of different types of collagen cannot be differentiated by conventional electron microscopic stains. We are developing staining procedures aimed at identifying collagen fibers of different types.Pt(Gly-L-Met)Cl binds specifically to sulfur-containing amino acids. Different collagens have methionine (met) residues at somewhat different positions. A good correspondence has been reported between known met positions and Pt(GLM) bands in rat Type I SLS (collagen aggregates in which molecules lie adjacent to each other in exact register). We have confirmed this relationship in Type III collagen SLS (Fig. 1).


1989 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hernan M. Reyes ◽  
Janet L. Meller ◽  
Deborah Loeff

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mostafa Kotb ◽  
Ahmed Aboelela ◽  
Ahmed Eshiba ◽  
Eman Sheta ◽  
Dina Abdallah

1981 ◽  
Author(s):  
V Sachs ◽  
R Dörner ◽  
E Szirmai

Anti human plasminogen sera of the rabbit precipitate human plasma in the agar gel diffusion test by means of intra-basin absorption with plasminogenfree human plasma with three different types: type I is represented by one strong precipitation line, type II by two lines, a big one and a small one, and type III by three slight but distinct lines. The following frequencies of the different types have been observed in a sample of 516 human plasmas: type I 65%, type II 33% and type III 2%. Suppose the types are phenotypical groups of a diallelic system where the types I and III represent the homozygous genotypes and the type II the heterozygous the estimated gene frequencies are in good agreement with the expected values. There is also a good agreement of the distribution of plasminogen groups determined by electrofocussing from RAUM et al. and HOBART. The plasminogen groups possibly may have also a biological meaning because the plasmas of type III always have a lesser fibrinolytic activity than the plasmas of the other types.


2009 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 98 ◽  
Author(s):  
OsarumwenseDavid Osifo ◽  
JonathanChukwunalu Okolo

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xueyun Wang ◽  
Xueqiao Xu ◽  
Philip B Snyder ◽  
Zeyu Li

Abstract The BOUT++ six-field turbulence code is used to simulate the ITER 11.5MA hybrid scenario and a brief comparison is made among ITER baseline, hybrid and steady-state operation (SSO) scenarios. Peeling-ballooning instabilities with different toroidal mode numbers dominate in different scenarios and consequently yield different types of ELMs. The energy loss fractions (ΔWped/Wped) caused by unmitigated ELMs in the baseline and hybrid scenarios are large (~2%) while the one in the SSO scenario is dramatically smaller (~1%), which are consistent with the features of type-I ELMs and grassy ELMs respectively. The intra ELM divertor heat flux width in the three scenarios given by the simulations is larger than the estimations for inter ELM phase based on Goldston’s heuristic drift model. The toroidal gap edge melting limit of tungsten monoblocks of divertor targets imposes constraints on ELM energy loss, giving that the ELM energy loss fraction should be smaller than 0.4%, 1.0%, and 1.2% for ITER baseline, hybrid and SSO scenarios, correspondingly. The simulation shows that only the SSO scenario with grassy ELMs may satisfy the constraint.


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