70 research outputs found
Some effects of the degeneration of the perivascular nerve plexus in Rana pipiens.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityThe literature on degenerative studies of the unmyelinated perivascular nerve plexus combined with histological examination is quite sparse. Tuckett (1895-1896) found that upon section of the branches of the superior cervical ganglion in the ox and rabbit histological and physiological changes began within twenty-four hours. At forty-three hours the irritability and conductivity of the peripheral stump were lost and the Remak fibers were degenerating. He believed that the Remak fiber had a sheath with a nucleus and that the "core" was homogenous and not composed of many fibrillae. In 1906 Lapinsky investigated the effects of denervation in the hind paw of the dog. The immediate effect was an increase in blood flow and vasodilation following denervation. The smooth muscle coat on the large arteries separated into individual cells and their nuclei swelled up and disintegrated. He was not able to find smooth muscle cells on the smaller arteries. He described the denervated arteries as losing tonus and being more fragile than normal. A somewhat more extensive study of the rabbit ear and the frog mesentery was published by Eugling (1908). Fifteen to sixteen days after denervation he found spindle-shaped nuclei with processes near the blood vessels. He believed that these were part of the degenerated nerve plexus. Since the nerve plexus had degenerated, Eugling did not think that these nuclei were ganglion-like though he did believe that they were part of the nervous system. Langley studied the effects of cutting the frog sciatic nerve and the nervus descendens communis in 1909. He reported that degeneration began in fourteen days and that the nerves disappeared in forty-two days. He believed that the axis cylinder lost its function throughout its whole length at about the same time. The sympathetic ganglia supplying the hind limbs of the cat were extirpated by Woollard (1926). He found no evidence for any "neural mechanism which survived proximal denervation". He also described the large branching spindle-shaped cells which persist after the degeneration of the nerve network. He thought that these cells were simply entwined with the nerve plexus proper. In 1929 Busch published on the problem of the innervation of the blood vessels and found no real histological differences among the frog, the guinea pig, the rabbit and man. According to Busch blood vessels, the sympathetic nerves of which had degenerated, did not completely regain tone up to ninety days following denervation. He considered the perivascular plexus to be sympathetic in nature. It was not possible for him to demonstrate autonomic ganglion cells in the limbs, and he believed that they were found only in the viscera . He obtained local contractions only, when stimulating vessels the nerve plexus of which had degenerated.
In the present investigation the transilluminated denervated retrolingual membranes of living frogs, Rana pipiens, were observed directly through the microscope and simultaneously photographed with a motion picture camera by means of a light-splitting prism. Denervation was accomplished by sectioning the glossopharyngeal and hypoglossal nerve trunks. The animals were maintained at room temperature and fed one gram of hog liver three times weekly. When the required period of time (zero to two hundred and sixty-three days) had elapsed the retrolingual membrane was exposed according to the method of Pratt and Reid (1930), as modified by Fulton and Lutz (1942). Physiological observations were then made using unipolar electrical stimulation with an especially developed micro-electrode (Fulton, 1941) and a micromanipulator. Adrenalin was administered by means of the microinjection apparatus of the Emerson micromanipulator. Dilutions of Parke-Davis adrenalin of 1:4xl06 to 1:1x103 were used. At the conclusion of the physiological testing the retrolingual membranes were prepared for histological study
by a modified Ehrlich's method (Busch, 1929). [TRUNCATED
The policy of the United States towards the recognition of the Soviet Union, 1917-1933
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University, 1941. This item was digitized by the Internet Archive
The Classic: Congenital Club Foot: The Results of Treatment
This Classic article is a reprint of the original work by Ignacio V. Ponseti and Eugene N. Smoley, Congenital Club Foot: The Results of Treatment. An accompanying biographical sketch on Ignacio V. Ponseti, MD, is available at DOI 10.1007/s11999-009-0719-8 and a second Classic article is available at 10.1007/s11999-009-0721-1. This article is ©1963 by the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Inc., and is reprinted with permission from Ponseti IV, Smoley EN. Congenital Club Foot: The Results of Treatment. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 1963;45:261–344
Quantitative autoradiographic evaluation of the influence of protein dose on monoclonal antibody distribution in human ovarian adenocarcinoma xenografts
We studied the effect of monoclonal antibody protein dose on the uniformity of radioiodinated antibody distribution within tumor masses using quantitative autoradiography. Groups ( n = 11–13/group) of athymic nude mice with subcutaneous HTB77 human ovarian carcinoma xenografts were injected intraperitoneally with an 125 I-labeled anticarcinoma-associated antigen murine monoclonal antibody, 5G6.4, using a high or a low protein dose (500 µg or 5 µg). At 6 days post-injection the macroscopic and microscopic intratumoral biodistribution of radiolabeled antibody was determined. The degree of heterogeneity of the labeled antibody distribution within each tumor was quantified and expressed as the coefficient of variation (CV) of the activity levels in serial histological sections. Tumors from mice given the 500-µg protein doses had substantially lower CV values, 0.327±0.027, than did tumors from animals given 5-µg protein doses, 0.458±0.041, ( P = 0.0078), indicating that the higher protein dose resulted in more homogeneous distribution of radioactivity in tumors than did the lower dose. While the percentage of the injected dose reaching the tumor was comparable between groups, injecting the higher dose of protein resulted in significantly lower tumor to non-tumor uptake ratios than those obtained for the lower protein dose. These data indicate, in this system, that to achieve more uniform intratumoral antibody (and radiation for radioimmunotherapy) delivery, a relatively high protein dose must be administered. However, to obtain this increased uniformity, a substantial drop in tumor/background uptake ratios was seen. Quantitative autoradiographic evaluation of human tumor xenografts is a useful method to assess the intratumoral distribution of antibodies.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/46859/1/262_2005_Article_BF01789014.pd
The effect of cobra venom (Naja naja) on the incorporation of H3-thymidine into brain of normal and dystrophic animals
Clinical and cytokinetic aspects of remission induction of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL): Addition of an anthracycline to vincristine and prednisone
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