Remaining Groups (remaining + groups)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Gravitational unloading inhibits the regenerative potential of atrophied soleus muscle in mice

ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA, Issue 3 2009
Y. Matsuba
Abstract Aim:, The present study was performed to investigate the influence of unloading on the regeneration of atrophied and injured skeletal muscle. Methods:, Male mice (C57BL/6J), aged 8 weeks, were used. Cardiotoxin (CTX) was injected into soleus muscles bilaterally. Gravitational unloading on soleus muscle was performed by hind limb suspension for 2 weeks before and additionally 6 weeks after CTX injection in one group. Soleus muscles in the remaining groups were loaded keeping the mice in the cages and were dissected 14, 28 and 42 days after the injection. Results:, Recovery of the wet weight and protein content of soleus in the CTX-injected group was inhibited by unloading. Increase in satellite cell number, induced by CTX injection and loading, was also inhibited by unloading. Disappearance of infiltration of mononucleated cells into the necrotic area was also delayed. This phenomenon suggests that regeneration, which is indicated by the appearance of fibres with central nuclei, was inhibited by unloading. Conclusion:, Results suggested that loading plays an important role in the activation of the regenerating potential of injured skeletal muscle. [source]


Ultrasound-guided core needle biopsy of breast masses: How many cores are necessary to diagnose cancer?

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ULTRASOUND, Issue 7 2007
Clécio, nio Murta de Lucena MD
Abstract Purpose. To investigate the number of cores required to diagnose breast cancer using ultrasound (US)-guided core needle biopsy. Methods. US-guided core biopsy of 150 masses was performed in 144 patients. For each mass, 6 cores were obtained and analyzed separately. The histopathologic diagnosis was classified as benign, malignant, or normal breast tissue. Each core was analyzed separately. For diagnostic purposes, the cases were grouped as follows: group G1 comprised the first core; group G2 comprised the first and second core; group G3 comprised the first 3 cores; up to group G6, which included all 6 cores. The results were also analyzed by tumor size (,2 cm and >2 cm). Results. The sensitivity in the diagnosis of breast cancer was 90.1% in group G1 and 94.1% in the remaining groups (G2,G6). In tumors ,2 cm, the sensitivity was 88.4% for group G1 and 90.7% for the others, whereas for tumors >2 cm the sensitivity was 91.4% for group G1 and 96.6% when 2 or more cores were obtained. Conclusion. It appears that 2 cores are sufficient to diagnose breast cancer in this study population assuming no technical error occurred in US guidance of the needle through the mass. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Clin Ultrasound, 2007 [source]


Nutritional regulation of intestine morphology in larval cyprinid fish, silver bream (Vimba vimba)

AQUACULTURE RESEARCH, Issue 12 2008
Teresa Ostaszewska
Abstract The present study includes the evaluation of morphological changes in the digestive tract of larval, stomachless fish silver bream (Vimba vimba) fed with various diets , live Artemia nauplii, commercial feed Aglo Norse (NOR) and semi-purified formulated diets: casein,gelatin (CG), dipeptide-protein (50P), dipeptide (100P), no-arginine dipeptide diet (100Pw/oArg) and a free amino acid (FAA) mixture diet. The supranuclear area of enterocytes in the posterior intestine contained enlarged absorptive vacuoles in the FAA, 100P and 100Pw/oArg groups, compared with the remaining groups. Hepatocytes' cytoplasm in fish fed with FAA, 100P and 100Pw/oArg contained mainly glycogen, and no lipid vacuoles were found. Fish fed with 100Pw/oArg showed the lowest hepatocyte surface areas while in those fed with 50P, the largest nuclei diameters were observed. Fish fed with Artemia, NOR and CG diets showed significantly (P<0.05) higher number of proliferating cells compared with the remaining groups. Chromogranin A staining showed endocrine-immunoreactive cells (CgA-IR) in the taste buds in the oral cavity and in the enterocytes' supranuclear areas of the anterior and posterior intestine. We conclude that the growth rate and histological examination of the digestive tract in the 50P group of silver bream showed no nutritional deficiency. [source]


Excessive maternal caffeine exposure during pregnancy is cataractogenic for neonatal crystalline lenses in rats: a biomicroscopic and histopathologic study

ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 5 2004
Cem Evereklioglu
Abstract. Purpose:,To investigate histologically the influence of maternal caffeine exposure during pregnancy in vivo on crystalline lenses in neonatal rats. Methods:,Experimentally naive, female Wistar-albino rats (200,220 g) were mated with adult male rats over 2 days for copulation. After confirming pregnancy with a vaginal smear method, 50 gravid rats (dams) were randomly divided into five groups (n = 10 in each), consisting of one control and four experimental groups. Groups 1, 2 and 3 experimental dams were treated with intraperitoneal (i.p.) caffeine at doses of 25, 50 and 100 mg/kg/day, respectively, during pregnancy from gestational day 9 through to day 21. Group 4 dams were treated with caffeine in distilled water in a gavage at a dose of 50 mg/kg/day. Group 5 control dams were given i.p. saline solution daily for the same period. After normal delivery, the eyes were examined by slit-lamp biomicroscopy. The neonates were then killed by decapitation at postnatal days 1 or 30 and the eyes removed for histopathologic investigation of the lenses. Results:,Group 1 and control eyes had normal anterior lens capsules with a single layer of anterior cuboidal epithelial cells, regularly oriented cortical and nuclear lens fibres, and a clear posterior lens capsule with no lining epithelial cells behind the equator. In the remaining groups, histopathologic findings suggesting cataractogenesis included eosinophilic degeneration, lens fibre cell swelling and liquefaction, central lens fibres with retained nuclei, and prominent epithelial cells lining the posterior lens capsule behind the equator. Moreover, some lenses in group 3 had immature cataract on slit-lamp biomicroscopic examination at postnatal day 30. Conclusion:,Excessive maternal caffeine exposure during pregnancy had cataractogenic effects on developing crystalline lenses in newborn rat eyes, both macroscopically and histopathologically. If an appropriate dose of caffeine can be identified, caffeine-induced cataract formation may be used as a new experimental cataract model in animal studies. [source]