“
“Two new sesquiterpene pyridine alkaloids hypoglaunines E (1) and F (2) and a new triterpenoid saponin hypoglaside A (3), together with a known diterpenoid glucoside 11-O-beta-D-glucopyranosyl neotriptophenolide (4) and two known triterpenoids 23-nor-oxopristimerol (5) and 2,3-dihydroxy-6-oxo-D:A-froedo-24
nor-1,3,5(10), 7-oleanate-traen-29-oic acid (6), have been isolated from the root barks of Tripterygium hypoglaucum. Their structures were elucidated by NMR spectroscopy and MS analysis. Compounds 1-3 were screened for their cytotoxic activities against five cancer cell lines, but all of them were inactive.”
“Excess adiposity is an established risk factor for incident colorectal cancer (CRC) but whether this
association extrapolates to poorer survival is unclear. We undertook a systematic review to examine relationships SCH 900776 in vivo between selleck compound measures of adiposity and survival in patients with CRC. For distinction, we included pre-diagnosis exposure and CRC-related mortality. We performed dose-response meta-analyses and assessed study quality using eight domains of bias. Six study categories were identified based on (i) timing of adiposity measurement relative to survival analysis time zero and (ii) clinical setting. Several types of adiposity measurements were reported; body mass index (BMI) was the commonest. For pre-diagnosis cohorts, baseline BMI negatively impacted on CRC-related mortality in men only (risk estimate selleckchem per 5 kg m(-2) = 1.19, 95% confidence intervals: 1.14-1.25). The other groups were pre-diagnosis BMI but diagnosis as time zero; population-based cohorts; treatment cohorts; observational analyses within adjuvant chemotherapy trials; patients with metastatic CRC – each had several biases (e.g. treatment selection, reverse causality) and sources of confounding (e.g. chemotherapy ‘capping’). Overall, there was insufficient evidence for a strong link between adiposity and survival. These findings
demonstrate an important principle: an established link between an exposure (here, adiposity) and increased cancer incidence does not necessarily extrapolate into an inferior post-treatment outcome.”
“Objectives: To study the preventive effects of chlorhexidine against root caries under oral biofilm in an artificial mouth.
Study Design: Sixteen human tooth-root disks were inoculated with a salivary sample that was produced by mixing the unstimulated saliva of three adults who had no untreated caries. The disks were incubated in an artificial mouth fed with a 5% sucrose solution three times daily for one week. Eight disks received a twice daily rinse of 0.12% chlorhexidine (test group). The other eight disks were rinsed in distilled water (control). The biofilm was then studied with three techniques: colony forming unit (CFU) counting, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM).