(C) 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci 100: 4225-4233, 2011″
“A case of a uterine fibro-osteochondroma in a 61-year-old woman with postmenopausal bleeding was presented. Ultrasound revealed a calcified lesion in the posterior wall of the www.selleckchem.com/products/ferrostatin-1-fer-1.html uterus and a hysterectomy was performed. Histopathologic examination showed a well-circumscribed triphasic tumor composed of peripheral lobules of mature hyaline cartilage and foci
of trabecular bone with a core of loosely arranged fibroblast-like, spindle cells. This is the second reported case of fibro-osteochondroma, which has been described only in the uterus. Diagnosis requires thorough histopathologic examination to exclude metaplasia within a leiomyoma or uterine sarcoma. It is histologically benign and complete excision should be curative.”
“Questions\n\nDominance and occurrence of plant species change distinctly along soil reaction gradients; this has been attributed to different chemicals that can be either toxic or nutritional factors, varying with soil pH. The availability of different chemical forms of nitrogen (N) is one such
factor, but the extent to which this can explain species distribution is yet unclear. We asked (1) is it possible to correlate the extent of species’ physiological preference for ammonium vs nitrate to species occurrence along the
soil reaction gradient; (2) how strong is the explanatory power of species occurrence along the MLN2238 nmr soil reaction gradient for this preference, i.e. how much variation in species preference is explained by Ellenberg indicator values (EIV) for soil reaction; and (3) does inter-specific competition result in any shifts selleck inhibitor of this preference?\n\nLocation\n\nDry sandy grasslands in Southern Germany, with soil reactions ranging from acidic to calcareous.\n\nMethods\n\nWe carried out a common garden experiment and a greenhouse experiment with species from Central European sandy grasslands. In addition, we re-analysed previously published data. Availability of ammonium and nitrate was manipulated in the presence and absence of interspecific competition, while other factors including soil pH were kept constant. Growth responses were used to calculate species preferences concerning chemical N forms.\n\nResults\n\nSpecies habitat niches for soil reaction, represented by their EIV, were found to strongly correlate with species preferences for certain N forms, with acidophilous species preferring ammonium and calciphilous species preferring nitrate. This was the case in all experiments and treatments without species interaction, but surprisingly not for species mixture treatments that might have involved additional soil biota with impact on N cycling.