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Dive into the research topics where Frederick B. Reitz is active.

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Featured researches published by Frederick B. Reitz.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Choriodecidual Group B Streptococcal Inoculation Induces Fetal Lung Injury without Intra-Amniotic Infection and Preterm Labor in Macaca nemestrina

Kristina M. Adams Waldorf; Michael G. Gravett; Ryan M. McAdams; Louis Paolella; G. Michael Gough; David J. Carl; Aasthaa Bansal; H. Denny Liggitt; Raj P. Kapur; Frederick B. Reitz; Craig E. Rubens

Background Early events leading to intrauterine infection and fetal lung injury remain poorly defined, but may hold the key to preventing neonatal and adult chronic lung disease. Our objective was to establish a nonhuman primate model of an early stage of chorioamnionitis in order to determine the time course and mechanisms of fetal lung injury in utero. Methodology/Principal Findings Ten chronically catheterized pregnant monkeys (Macaca nemestrina) at 118–125 days gestation (term = 172 days) received one of two treatments: 1) choriodecidual and intra-amniotic saline (n = 5), or 2) choriodecidual inoculation of Group B Streptococcus (GBS) 1×106 colony forming units (n = 5). Cesarean section was performed regardless of labor 4 days after GBS or 7 days after saline infusion to collect fetal and placental tissues. Only two GBS animals developed early labor with no cervical change in the remaining animals. Despite uterine quiescence in most cases, blinded review found histopathological evidence of fetal lung injury in four GBS animals characterized by intra-alveolar neutrophils and interstitial thickening, which was absent in controls. Significant elevations of cytokines in amniotic fluid (TNF-α, IL-8, IL-1β, IL-6) and fetal plasma (IL-8) were detected in GBS animals and correlated with lung injury (p<0.05). Lung injury was not directly caused by GBS, because GBS was undetectable in amniotic fluid (∼10 samples tested/animal), maternal and fetal blood by culture and polymerase chain reaction. In only two cases was GBS cultured from the inoculation site in low numbers. Chorioamnionitis occurred in two GBS animals with lung injury, but two others with lung injury had normal placental histology. Conclusions/Significance A transient choriodecidual infection can induce cytokine production, which is associated with fetal lung injury without overt infection of amniotic fluid, chorioamnionitis or preterm labor. Fetal lung injury may, thus, occur silently without symptoms and before the onset of the fetal systemic inflammatory response syndrome.


Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine | 2003

Labview virtual instruments for calcium buffer calculations.

Frederick B. Reitz; Gerald H. Pollack

Labview VIs based upon the calculator programs of Fabiato and Fabiato (J. Physiol. Paris 75 (1979) 463) are presented. The VIs comprise the necessary computations for the accurate preparation of multiple-metal buffers, for the back-calculation of buffer composition given known free metal concentrations and stability constants used, for the determination of free concentrations from a given buffer composition, and for the determination of apparent stability constants from absolute constants. As implemented, the VIs can concurrently account for up to three divalent metals, two monovalent metals and four ligands thereof, and the modular design of the VIs facilitates further extension of their capacity. As Labview VIs are inherently graphical, these VIs may serve as useful templates for those wishing to adapt this software to other platforms.


Sensors | 2013

A Low-Cost, Computer-Interfaced Drawing Pad for fMRI Studies of Dysgraphia and Dyslexia

Frederick B. Reitz; Todd L. Richards; Kelvin Wu; Peter Boord; Mary K. Askren; Tom Lewis; Virginia W. Berninger

We have developed a pen and writing tablet for use by subjects during fMRI scanning. The pen consists of two jacketed, multi-mode optical fibers routed to the tip of a hollowed-out ball-point pen. The pen has been further modified by addition of a plastic plate to maintain a perpendicular pen-tablet orientation. The tablet is simply a non-metallic frame holding a paper print of continuously varying color gradients. The optical fibers are routed out of the MRI bore to a light-tight box in an adjacent control room. Within the box, light from a high intensity LED is coupled into one of the fibers, while the other fiber abuts a color sensor. Light from the LED exits the pen tip, illuminating a small spot on the tablet, and the resulting reflected light is routed to the color sensor. Given a lookup table of position for each color on the tablet, the coordinates of the pen on the tablet may be displayed and digitized in real-time. While simple and inexpensive, the system achieves sufficient resolution to grade writing tasks testing dysgraphic and dyslexic phenomena.


Theory in Biosciences | 2012

A “lookup table” schema for synthetic biological patterning

Frederick B. Reitz

A schema is proposed by which the three-dimensional structure and temporal development of a biological organism might be encoded and implemented via a genetic “lookup table”. In the schema, diffusive morphogen gradients and/or the global concentration of a quickly diffusing signal index sets of kinase genes having promoters with logarithmically diminished affinity for the signal. Specificity of indexing is enhanced via concomitant expression of phosphatases undoing phosphorylation by “neighboring” kinases of greater affinity. Combinations of thus-selected kinases in turn jointly activate, via multiple phosphorylation, a particular enzyme from a virtual, multi-dimensional array thereof, at locations and times specified within the “lookup table”. In principle, such a scheme could be employed to specify arbitrary gross anatomy, surface pigmentation, and/or developmental sequencing, extending the burgeoning toolset of the nascent field of synthetic morphology. A model of two-dimensional surface coloration using this scheme is specified, and LabVIEW software for its exploration is described and made available.


Ultramicroscopy | 2002

Fluorescence anisotropy near-field scanning optical microscopy (FANSOM): a new technique for nanoscale microviscometry

Frederick B. Reitz; Mark E. Fauver; Gerald H. Pollack

A near-field scanning optical microscope system was implemented and adapted for nanoscale steady-state fluorescence anisotropy measurement. The system as implemented can resolve approximately 0.1 cP microviscosity variations with a resolution of 250 nm laterally in the near field, or approximately 10 microm when employed in a vertical scanning mode. The system was initially used to investigate the extent of microviscous vicinal water over surfaces of varying hydrophilicity. Water above a cleaved mica surface was found to have a decreased microviscosity, while water above a hydrophobic surface showed no change (detection limit approximately 0.1 cP at approximately 30 + nm from the surface).


Journal of Applied Polymer Science | 2003

Potentials in anionic polyelectrolyte hydrogels

F. Gao; Frederick B. Reitz; Gerald H. Pollack


Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine | 2003

''Minimum average risk'' as a new peak-detection algorithm applied to myofibrillar dynamics

S.Yu. Sokolov; Alexey A Grinko; A.V. Tourovskaia; Frederick B. Reitz; O. Yakovenko; Gerald H. Pollack; Felix A. Blyakhman


Cellular and Molecular Biology | 2001

Phase transitions and molecular motion in the cell.

Gerald H. Pollack; Frederick B. Reitz


Archive | 2004

Natural Muscle as a Biological System

Gerald H. Pollack; Frederick B. Reitz; Felix A. Blyakhman; Olga Yakovenko; Dwayne L. Dunaway


Archive | 2015

Java/Javascript software for calcium buffer calculations

Frederick B. Reitz; Jason Edward Demorrow; Robert James Mock

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Kelvin Wu

University of Washington

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Mary K. Askren

University of Washington

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Peter Boord

University of Washington

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Tom Lewis

University of Washington

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Aasthaa Bansal

University of Washington

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