NobleBlocks

Wirral Women and Children's Hospital

Hospital / health systemMoreton, United Kingdom

Research output, citation impact, and the most-cited recent papers from Wirral Women and Children's Hospital (United Kingdom). Aggregated across the NobleBlocks index of 300M+ scholarly works.

Total works
7
Citations
73
h-index
5
i10-index
5
Also known as
Wirral Women and Children's Hospital

Top-cited papers from Wirral Women and Children's Hospital

Extraskeletal fibroblastic osteosarcoma in a rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus)
Helen Renfrew, Joan Rest, A. R. Holden
2001· Journal of Small Animal Practice22doi:10.1111/j.1748-5827.2001.tb02502.x

A seven-year-old rabbit was presented with a non-painful mass in the right upper lip. Tissue samples from the mass at three different stages of the disease process were diagnosed sequentially as an osteogenic sarcoma, a fibroblastic tumour with rudimentary osteoid formation and, lastly, a fibrosarcoma. No bone involvement or metastatic disease was found. The final diagnosis was of an extraskeletal fibroblastic osteosarcoma, which is, to the authors' knowledge, the first reported such case in a domestic rabbit. Without the first two tissue samples, an incorrect diagnosis would have been reached; therefore, this disease may be underrepresented in the literature.

Calmodulin activation of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase in the B16 mouse melanoma
S. W. Walker, S. Mac Neil, H. Jennifer Senior, S.S. Bleehen +1 more
1984· Biochemical Journal10doi:10.1042/bj2190941

Mouse B16 melanoma extracts of both cultured cells and tumour tissue contain cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity, with 95% present in the soluble fraction. Although activation of the enzyme by added calmodulin did not occur, it was found that endogenous calmodulin was present at a level sufficient to activate fully the enzyme. The ability of Ca-calmodulin to stimulate cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase in this tissue was shown by the inhibitory effect of N-(6-aminohexyl)-5-chloronaphthalenesulphonamide (W7), a known calmodulin antagonist; by the activation of the enzyme with exogenous calmodulin observed in supernatants depleted of endogenous calmodulin by passage over fluphenazine-Sepharose 6B in the presence of Ca2+; by the Ca-dependent binding of the enzyme to calmodulin-agarose and its activation by Ca-calmodulin after elution from the column with EGTA-containing buffer. It was calculated that about 50% of the total cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity was calmodulin-activated in this tissue.

Watch out! High vigilance at small waterholes when alone in open trees
Gerhard Hofmann, Claudia Mettke‐Hofmann
2024· PLoS ONE5doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0304257

An animal's environment contains many risks causing animals to scan their environment for potential predators and threats from conspecifics. How much time they invest in such vigilance depends on environmental and social factors. Most vigilance studies have been conducted in a foraging context with little known about vigilance in other contexts. Here we investigated vigilance of Gouldian finches at waterholes considering environmental and social factors. Gouldian finches are colour polymorphic with two main head colours in both sexes co-occurring in the same population, black-headed and red-headed. Data collection was done on birds sitting in trees surrounding waterholes by measuring the frequency of head movements, which reflects how frequently they change their field of view, i.e., scan different areas in their environment. A higher frequency generally reflects higher vigilance. Gouldian finches had a higher frequency of head movements when at small waterholes and when sitting in open, leafless trees. Moreover, head movements were higher when birds were alone in the tree as compared to groups of birds. Finally, birds in same head colour morph groups had a higher frequency of head movements than birds in mixed head colour groups. Results indicate heightened vigilance with increased perception of predation risk (small waterholes, open exposed perch, when alone) but that social vigilance also played a role (group composition) with particularly the aggressive red-headed birds being more vigilant when together with other red-headed birds. Future research should investigate the effect of smaller waterholes as global warming will cause smaller waterholes to become more common for longer periods of time, which can increase stress in the birds.