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EN
Surgical trauma is associated with depression of the immune system, which results in a high complication rate following abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair. Monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1) and regulated-on-activation normal T cell expressed and secreted (RANTES) protein are important mediators of the immune and inflammatory response. The aim of this study was to determine whether there is any relationship between MCP-1 or RANTES and operative injury and ischemia-reperfusion during AAA surgery in human. Peripheral blood samples were taken from 12 patients before surgery, after anesthesia induction, before unclamping of aorta (PreXoff), 90 min after unclamping (90minXoff), and at 24 and 48 h after surgery. The MCP-1 and RANTES serum concentrations were measured with the ELISA technique. MCP-1 concentration significantly increased after reperfusion (90minXoff) in comparison with the PreXoff level (p=0.001). Twenty-four hours after AAA repair, MCP-1 significantly decreased 269?225 pg/ml (p=0.005) and reached preoperative value. RANTES level was higher in AAA patients before surgery than in controls (p=0.025) and decreased significantly after ischemia-reperfusion to 13 ng/ml (p< 0.001) at 90minXoff. We showed increases in RANTES concentration to 26 ng/ml on the 1st and to 31 ng/ml on the 2nd day after surgery (p=0.020, p=0.012, respectively) compared with the 90minXoff level. Ischemia-reperfusion during AAA repair results in an increase in MCP-1 and decrease in RANTES concentrations in serum. The changes in chemokine concentrations may influence the development of immunosuppression after AAA repair, contributing to the postoperative course.
EN
The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of small unilateral lesions to the ventromedial portion of the prefrontal cortex on two memory functions: memory for objects and memory for object locations. Patients, who had undergone surgery of the anterior communicating artery aneurysm, and normal control subjects, participated in the study. The patients were subdivided into two groups: with and without unilateral resection of the gyrus rectus. Subjects were presented with two memory tests, that required remembering either simultaneously presented visual stimuli (object memory test; OMT) or locations of the stimuli (location memory test; LMT). In the OMT, patients with resection of the gyrus rectus were impaired in comparison to patients without resection and normal control subjects. In the LMT, the three groups did not differ from each other. Our results suggest that the ventromedial prefrontal cortex is specifically involved in memory for objects.
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