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Dive into the research topics where Bente Langvad Hansen is active.

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Featured researches published by Bente Langvad Hansen.


Apmis | 1990

Induction of experimental chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa lung infection with P. aeruginosa entrapped in alginate microspheres

Svend Stenvang Pedersen; Geoffrey H. Shand; Bente Langvad Hansen; Georg Nørgaard Hansen

Alginate‐producing, mucoid P. aeruginosa is frequently found in the lungs of patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), where it causes a chronic infection. The importance of alginate in the pathogenesis was demonstrated by the ability to establish chronic P. aeruginosa lung infection in rats if P. aeruginosa entrapped in minute alginate‐beads were inoculated transtracheally. Alginate beads containing P. aeruginosa were formed by nebulizing a suspension of seaweed sodium‐alginate and P. aeruginosa into a calcium solution. The alginate bead method of establishing infection was compared to an agar‐bead method and proved to be quantitatively similar after 4 weeks. The ability of the two methods to induce formation of precipitins, IgA and IgG antibodies against P. aeruginosa antigens, including outer membrane proteins, flagella, exoenzymes and alginate, was assessed by crossed immunoelectrophoresis, enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay and immunoblotting. The two methods of inducing infection were comparable and infected rats had significantly higher antibody response than rats inoculated with sterile beads. We suggest that the alginate bead model closely resembles the later stages of CF‐lung infection and that it offers the theoretical advantage of using a substance which is chemically similar to the alginate produced in vivo by P. aeruginosa.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1982

Immunoreactive material resembling vertebrate neuropeptides in the corpus cardiacum and corpus allatum of the insect Leucophaea moderae

Bente Langvad Hansen; Georg Nørgaard Hansen; Berta Scharrer

SummaryThe presence and differential distribution of substances antigenically related to known vertebrate neuropeptides demonstrated within the corpus cardiacum of the insect Leucophaea are as follows: Of ten mammalian antisera tested, six yielded substantial immunoreactive deposits resembling oxytocin, somatostatin, Substance P, met-enkephalin, bombesin, and neurotensin, respectively. In the remaining four, the reaction was moderate (vasopressin, β-endorphin) or marginal (LH-RF, calcitonin). With regard to their regional distribution, these biochemically distinct reaction products seem to fall into two groups: (1) Materials resembling oxytocin, vasopressin, met-enkephalin, β-endorphin (and presumably also neurotensin and LH-RF) predominate in the central release area of the organ and are considered to be of extrinsic (cerebral) origin. (2) Substances localized primarily in areas rich in intrinsic glandular cells of the corpus cardiacum, and revealed by antisera raised against somatostatin, Substance P, and bombesin, are judged to be synthesized and stored within this organ. In peptidergic fibers entering the adjacent corpora allata, thus far Substance P-, β-endorphin-, and LH-RF-like immunoreactivities have been demonstrated. Some of these “new” neuropeptides may be contained in classical neurosecretory neurons, formerly identified by less specific methods, others must be assigned to additional peptidergic neurons heretofore unknown.


International Journal of Epidemiology | 2009

Cohort Profile: The Copenhagen School Health Records Register

Jennifer L. Baker; Lina W. Olsen; Ingelise Andersen; Seija Pearson; Bente Langvad Hansen; Thorkild I. A. Sørensen

The Copenhagen School Health Records Register(CSHRR) is a database of health examination infor-mation on more than 350000 schoolchildren who everattended school in the central municipality of thecapital city of Denmark. For longer than 100 years,school-based health care has been provided to chil-dren in Copenhagen,


Acta Paediatrica | 2010

Overweight and obesity trends in Copenhagen schoolchildren from 2002 to 2007

Seija Pearson; Bente Langvad Hansen; Thorkild I. A. Sørensen; Jennifer L. Baker

Aim:  The purpose of this study is to monitor the prevalence trend in overweight and obesity among Copenhagen schoolchildren from the school years 2002 to 2007.


European Archives of Oto-rhino-laryngology | 1992

Epidermal growth factor receptor expression on oral mucosa dysplastic epithelia and squamous cell carcinomas.

Maria E. Christensen; Marianne Hamilton Therkildsen; Bente Langvad Hansen; H. Albeck; Georg Nørgaard Hansen; Poul Bretlau

SummaryThe expression of the receptor for epidermal growth factor (EGF) has been determined on oral squamous cell carcinomas. Immunoreactive receptor was localized using a monoclonal anti-EGF-receptor antibody which reacts with sequences in the external domain of the receptor. Frozen sections were studied from 40 patients with squamous cell carcinomas. In 16 sections from the patients with the squamous cell carcinomas, normal differentiated oral mucosa was included and in 7 of these the patients had received preoperative radiotherapy. Sections from 6 other patients with squamous cell carcinoma contained dysplastic epithelia. EGF-receptor-positive cells were present in the basal cell layer on normal differentiated oral mucosa. In sections from patients receiving preoperative radiotherapy the EGF-receptor-positive cells were also found in the spinous cells. In dysplastic epithelia nearly all cells stained for the receptor. The distribution and staining intensity of the EGF receptor varied in the oral squamous cell carcinomas, 36 were positive. The staining pattern in the carcinomas obtained from patients receiving preoperative radiotherapy was not altered qualitatively. Nearly all poorly differentiated cells were stained, but when the tumor was moderately to well differentiated a reduction in the extent of staining in certain areas was seen, paralleling the findings observed in the differentiated upper layers of the normal oral mucosa. This was most pronounced for the epithelial pearls, where the EGF-receptor-positive cells were localized to the undifferentiated cells in the periphery. The results of the present investigation confirm the presence of the EGF receptor on undifferentiated cells, with the extent of the staining reaction on oral squamous cell carcinomas varying inversely with cellular differentiation.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1982

Immunoreactive material resembling ovine prolactin in perikarya and nerve terminals of the rat hypothalamus.

Bente Langvad Hansen; Georg Nørgaard Hansen; Claus Hagen

SummaryThe presence of prolactin (PRL)-like material is demonstrated in the brain of rats with the aid of anti-ovine PRL (oPRL) IgG as primary antibody in the unlabeled antibody-enzyme method. Immunoreactive deposits are visualized as an intraneuronal constituent with a widespread distribution in the hypothalamus and neural lobe of the pituitary. Dense networks of reactive nerve terminals derived from two prominent fibre tracts, a ventral (VHT) and a dorsal hypothalamo-neurohypophysial tract (DHT) are seen. The VHT is confined to the median eminence and pars oralis tuberis, the DHT to the pars caudalis tuberis. Both fibre tracts pass through the infundibular stalk into the neural lobe. The origin of the immunoreactive nerve terminals can be elucidated only to some extent. The VHT gives off beaded fibres entering the ependymal and glandular layer of the median eminence. Immunoreactive perikarya are observed in the supraoptic nucleus, the paraventricular nucleus, the anterior hypothalamic nucleus, the anterior commissural nucleus, the preoptic nucleus and the interstitial nucleus of the stria terminalis. A few of the immunoreactive perikarya are observed in close connection with brain vessels and the ependymal cells of the third ventricle. The results indicate that the anti-oPRL has a unique region specificity implying that only a segment of the mammalian PRL molecule is present in these nuclei of the brain. Fragments of PRL may function as neuromodulators or neurotransmitters in the rat brain.


Acta Paediatrica | 1997

Urinary tract infection, day wetting and other voiding symptoms in seven‐to eight‐year‐old Danish children

Anne Vinkel Hansen; Bente Langvad Hansen; Tl Dahm

In this cross‐sectional epidemiological questionnaire survey of 7–8‐y‐old Danish school entrants with focus on voiding habits, 29% were found to have symptoms that could suggest that bladder control was not fully developed. The frequency of day wetting, urgency, emptying difficulties, nocturnal enuresis, nocturia and encopresis, and the median frequency of voidings are presented. Furthermore, the relationship between urinary tract infections, day wetting, encopresis and voiding habits is investigated. There was an association between previous urinary tract infection in girls and current voiding symptoms, suggesting bladder dysfunction as a predisposing factor to infections. In particular, focus should be placed on girls with squatting on urge and/or emptying difficulties.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1982

Immunocytochemical demonstration of somatotropin-like and prolactin-like activity in the brain of Calamoichthys calabaricus (Actinopterygii)

Bente Langvad Hansen; Georg Nørgaard Hansen

SummaryCellular binding of anti-bSTH and anti-oPRL IgG is demonstrated in the brain and the pituitary gland of the African freshwater fish Calamoichthys calabaricus by means of the unlabeled antibody enzyme method at the light microscopic level. In the brain, somatotropin and prolactin are demonstrated in separate neurons in the preoptic area. The somatotropinergic and prolactinergic perikarya are distinct from those of the hypothalamic-hypophysial neurosecretory neurons, i.e., those stainable with aldehyde fuchsin presumed to be vasotocinergic and isotocinergic. The somatotropinergic and prolactinergic neuronal perikarya give rise to separate beaded axons which pass either ventroposteriorly into the infundibulum, terminating in the neurohypophysis, or ventro-laterally through the wall of the preoptic recess, terminating near the superficial capillary bed covering this part of the brain surface. Moreover, coarse dendrite-like processes of both kinds of immuno-reactive neurons extend towards, and end in, the third ventricle. Binding sites in the brain to antisera against hLHβ, hFSHβ, hTSHβ and anti-(1–24) ACTH IgG, all reactive in the pituitary, are not observed in the neurons confined to the preoptic area.


Insect Biochemistry | 1981

Vitellogenin and vitellin from the blowfly Calliphora vicina: Occurrence, purification and antigenic characterization

P.V. Jensen; Bente Langvad Hansen; Georg Nørgaard Hansen; Ellen Thomsen

Abstract The occurrence and purification of vitellogenin and vitellin from Calliphora vicina Rob.-Dev. (= C. erythrocephala (Meig.)) are described together with the preparation of specific anti-vitellogenin antibodies. C. vicina vitellogenin and vitellin were purified from ovaries and eggs respectively; both proteins contain two polypeptide subunits identical to the dominating polypeptides in the growing oocytes. The polypeptides show molecular weights of 52,000 and 48,500 respectively, and are associated with carbohydrate and lipid. Polypeptides of similar size could be identified in haemolymph from yolk-depositing females, but were absent in ovariectomized females. The anti-bodies specifically precipitated the vitellogenin polypeptides from fat body homogenates of females depositing yolk or from the purified vitellogenin. Therefore, these antibodies were judged suitable for use in a study on the ultrastructural localization of vitellogenin in fat body cells ( Thomsen et al. , 1980).


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 1983

Autoantibodies against pituitary peptides in sera from patients with multiple sclerosis

Bente Langvad Hansen; Georg Nørgaard Hansen; Claus Hagen; Poul Brodersen

Autoantibodies against pituitary peptides were demonstrated in sera from multiple sclerosis (MS) patients. Ten patients with lupus erythematosus disseminatus (SLE) and 97 healthy blood donors served as controls. The sera were used as primary antibodies in the indirect immuno-enzyme cytochemical (IEC) method, with fixed, paraffin-embedded rat brains and rat and hog pituitaries as antigen substrates. Eleven of the 33 MS sera reacted with peptides in the neural lobe/hypothalamic nuclei or distal lobe. The MS had a significantly higher incidence of peptide antibodies than sera from controls (11/33 vs 9/97). The mean antibody titers were significantly different (1577 vs 333). Comparison with rabbit reference antibodies specific to each of the 6 distal lobe hormones showed that the 9 distal lobe-positive MS sera reacted with cells harboring peptides of the somatotropin family. The presence of peptide autoantibodies was not related to clinical status or medical treatment. No antibodies against pituitary peptides were found in the SLE sera. One of the 11 positive MS sera showed antibodies against gastric parietal cells. None of the 11 sera showed antibodies against muscle, mitochondria, thyroid, adrenal, or parotid antigens. We propose that in a proportion of patients with MS, these autoantibodies might be involved in the demyelinization process by interfering with the peptide/receptor interplay, thus placing MS as a disease in analogy with myasthenia gravis. Alternatively, these autoantibodies might be involved in the altered immunoregulation of MS or be secondary to the disease.

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Claus Hagen

University of Copenhagen

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Ellen Thomsen

University of Copenhagen

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Lina W. Olsen

Copenhagen University Hospital

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P.V. Jensen

University of Copenhagen

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