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The Journal of Physiology Oct 19711. (24)Na, (36)Cl and (35)S thiourea were infused I.V. in rabbits according to schedules designed to yield approximately level activity in plasma for periods up to 5 hr....
1. (24)Na, (36)Cl and (35)S thiourea were infused I.V. in rabbits according to schedules designed to yield approximately level activity in plasma for periods up to 5 hr. Cerebrospinal fluid was sampled before ending the experiment by decapitation and the radioactivities in cerebrospinal fluid and in homogenized brain were compared in each case to a time weighted mean value for plasma.2. The results are considered in terms of a simplified model which specifically acknowledges the continuity of the extracellular and cerebrospinal fluids and thus the coupling between processes which occur at the interfaces bordering those fluids.3. From the rate constants for exchange across the blood-brain interface that were necessary for simulation of the observed behaviours, permeability coefficients for that interface were estimated for the materials studied and, from experiments of others, for (42)K.
Topics: Animals; Blood-Brain Barrier; Brain; Capillary Permeability; Cell Membrane Permeability; Cerebral Ventricles; Cerebrospinal Fluid; Chlorides; Extracellular Space; Models, Biological; Potassium; Potassium Isotopes; Rabbits; Sodium; Sodium Isotopes; Sulfur Isotopes; Thiourea
PubMed: 5124569
DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.1971.sp009621 -
Cell Host & Microbe Sep 2014Planarians famously can regenerate after decapitation. In this issue, Abnave et al. (2014) find they resist infection by multiple bacterial species pathogenic to...
Planarians famously can regenerate after decapitation. In this issue, Abnave et al. (2014) find they resist infection by multiple bacterial species pathogenic to humans, Drosophila and C. elegans, including M. tuberculosis. These results identify a conserved gene controlling phagocytosis and establish planarians as a powerful system for analyzing host-pathogen interactions.
Topics: Animals; Helminth Proteins; Humans; Legionella pneumophila; Microtubule-Associated Proteins; Phagocytosis; Planarians; Staphylococcus aureus
PubMed: 25211069
DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2014.08.016 -
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery :... Jan 2021Hepatic cyst disease is often asymptomatic, but treatment is warranted if patients experience symptoms. We describe our management approach to these patients and review...
BACKGROUND
Hepatic cyst disease is often asymptomatic, but treatment is warranted if patients experience symptoms. We describe our management approach to these patients and review the technical nuances of the laparoscopic approach.
METHODS
Medical records were reviewed for operative management of hepatic cysts from 2012 to 2019 at a single, tertiary academic medical center.
RESULTS
Fifty-three patients (39 female) met the inclusion criteria with median age at presentation of 65 years. Fifty cases (94.3%) were performed laparoscopically. Fourteen patients carried diagnosis of polycystic liver disease. Dominant cyst diameter was median 129 mm and located within the right lobe (30), left lobe (17), caudate (2), or was bilobar (4). Pre-operative concern for biliary cystadenoma/cystadenocarcinoma existed for 7 patients. Operative techniques included fenestration (40), fenestration with decapitation (7), decapitation alone (3), and excision (2). Partial hepatectomy was performed in conjunction with fenestration/decapitation for 15 cases: right sided (7), left sided (7), and central (1). One formal left hepatectomy was performed in a polycystic liver disease patient. Final pathology yielded simple cyst (52) and one biliary cystadenoma. Post-operative complications included bile leak (2), perihepatic fluid collection (1), pleural effusion (1), and ascites (1). At median 7.1-month follow-up, complete resolution of symptoms occurred for 34/49 patients (69.4%) who had symptoms preoperatively. Reintervention for cyst recurrence occurred for 5 cases (9.4%).
CONCLUSIONS
Outcomes for hepatic cyst disease are described with predominantly laparoscopic approach, approach with minimal morbidity, and excellent clinical results.
Topics: Cysts; Female; Hepatectomy; Humans; Laparoscopy; Liver Diseases; Neoplasm Recurrence, Local
PubMed: 33083858
DOI: 10.1007/s11605-020-04821-1 -
Plant Physiology May 2023The inhibition of shoot branching by the growing shoot tip of plants, termed apical dominance, was originally thought to be mediated by auxin. Recently, the importance...
The inhibition of shoot branching by the growing shoot tip of plants, termed apical dominance, was originally thought to be mediated by auxin. Recently, the importance of the shoot tip sink strength during apical dominance has re-emerged with recent studies highlighting roles for sugars in promoting branching. This raises many unanswered questions on the relative roles of auxin and sugars in apical dominance. Here we show that auxin depletion after decapitation is not always the initial trigger of rapid cytokinin (CK) increases in buds that are instead correlated with enhanced sugars. Auxin may also act through strigolactones (SLs) which have been shown to suppress branching after decapitation, but here we show that SLs do not have a significant effect on initial bud outgrowth after decapitation. We report here that when sucrose or CK is abundant, SLs are less inhibitory during the bud release stage compared to during later stages and that SL treatment rapidly inhibits CK accumulation in pea (Pisum sativum) axillary buds of intact plants. After initial bud release, we find an important role of gibberellin (GA) in promoting sustained bud growth downstream of auxin. We are, therefore, able to suggest a model of apical dominance that integrates auxin, sucrose, SLs, CKs, and GAs and describes differences in signalling across stages of bud release to sustained growth.
Topics: Plant Growth Regulators; Indoleacetic Acids; Decapitation; Cytokinins; Sucrose; Sugars; Pisum sativum; Plant Shoots; Gene Expression Regulation, Plant
PubMed: 36690819
DOI: 10.1093/plphys/kiad034 -
Poultry Science Aug 2003Three independent trials were conducted to determine the effects of high frequency electrical stunning followed by decapitation on broiler breast meat rigor development...
Three independent trials were conducted to determine the effects of high frequency electrical stunning followed by decapitation on broiler breast meat rigor development and meat quality. All birds were stunned and half of the birds were killed using a conventional unilateral neck cut, half were killed by decapitation, and both groups were allowed to bleed for 90 s prior to scalding and picking. New York dressed carcasses were chilled in a static ice-water bath for 90 min and held at 2 degrees C prior to deboning. Breast fillets were removed from the carcasses at 2, 4, and 24 h postmortem. From the right breast fillet, R-values and pH were determined at time of deboning. The left fillet was wrapped in plastic and held for 24 h at 2 degrees C prior to determining lightness (L*), redness (a*), yellowness (b*), cook yield, and Allo-Kramer shear. Deboning time affected raw meat pH, R-value, cook loss, and shear value but had no effect on color. The breast meat from the decapitated birds had significantly higher pH values at 2 and 24 h postmortem than the conventionally killed birds. Other than for the effect on breast meat pH, decapitation had no effect on rigor development, R-value, meat color, or meat quality as measured by cooked-meat yield and Allo-Kramer shear.
Topics: Adenine Nucleotides; Animals; Cold Temperature; Color; Electricity; Food Handling; Hot Temperature; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Inosine Nucleotides; Meat; Muscle, Skeletal; Poultry; Quality Control; Rigor Mortis; Time Factors
PubMed: 12943309
DOI: 10.1093/ps/82.8.1352 -
Journal of Visualized Experiments : JoVE Apr 2017In the study of adult stem cells and regenerative mechanisms, planarian flatworms are a staple in vivo model system. This is due in large part to their abundant...
In the study of adult stem cells and regenerative mechanisms, planarian flatworms are a staple in vivo model system. This is due in large part to their abundant pluripotent stem cell population and ability to regenerate all cell and tissue types after injuries that would be catastrophic for most animals. Recently, planarians have gained popularity as a model for eye regeneration. Their ability to regenerate the entire eye (comprised of two tissue types: pigment cells and photoreceptors) allows for the dissection of the mechanisms regulating visual system regeneration. Eye ablation has several advantages over other techniques (such as decapitation or hole punch) for examining eye-specific pathways and mechanisms, the most important of which is that regeneration is largely restricted to eye tissues alone. The purpose of this video article is to demonstrate how to reliably remove the planarian optic cup without disturbing the brain or surrounding tissues. The handling of worms and maintenance of an established colony is also described. This technique uses a 31 G, 5/16-inch insulin needle to surgically scoop out the optic cup of planarians immobilized on a cold plate. This method encompasses both single and double eye ablation, with eyes regenerating within 1-2 weeks, allowing for a wide range of applications. In particular, this ablation technique can be easily combined with pharmacological and genetic (RNA interference) screens for a better understanding of regenerative mechanisms and their evolution, eye stem cells and their maintenance, and phototaxic behavioral responses and their neurological basis.
Topics: Animals; Eye; Models, Biological; Nerve Regeneration; Ocular Physiological Phenomena; Photoreceptor Cells; Planarians; Pluripotent Stem Cells; RNA Interference; Regeneration
PubMed: 28448039
DOI: 10.3791/55594 -
Plant Physiology Aug 2014Strigolactone (SL), auxin, and cytokinin (CK) are hormones that interact to regulate shoot branching. For example, several ramosus (rms) branching mutants in pea (Pisum...
Strigolactone (SL), auxin, and cytokinin (CK) are hormones that interact to regulate shoot branching. For example, several ramosus (rms) branching mutants in pea (Pisum sativum) have SL defects, perturbed xylem CK levels, and diminished responses to auxin in shoot decapitation assays. In contrast with the last of these characteristics, we discovered that buds on isolated nodes (explants) of rms plants instead respond normally to auxin. We hypothesized that the presence or absence of attached roots would result in transcriptional and hormonal differences in buds and subtending stem tissues, and might underlie the differential auxin response. However, decapitated plants and explants both showed similar up-regulation of CK biosynthesis genes, increased CK levels, and down-regulation of auxin transport genes. Moreover, auxin application counteracted these trends, regardless of the effectiveness of auxin at inhibiting bud growth. Multivariate analysis revealed that stem transcript and CK changes were largely associated with decapitation and/or root removal and auxin response, whereas bud transcript profiles related more to SL defects. CK clustering profiles were indicative of additional zeatin-type CKs in decapitated stems being supplied by roots and thus promoting bud growth in SL-deficient genotypes even in the presence of added auxin. This difference in CK content may explain why rms buds on explants respond better to auxin than those on decapitated plants. We further conclude that rapid changes in CK status in stems are auxin dependent but largely SL independent, suggesting a model in which auxin and CK are dominant regulators of decapitation-induced branching, whereas SLs are more important in intact plants.
PubMed: 24904042
DOI: 10.1104/pp.114.239996 -
Journal of Andrology 1986To investigate the relationship between free testosterone and sexual maturation in the male rat, animals were decapitated every 5 days from 25 through 75 days of life.... (Comparative Study)
Comparative Study
To investigate the relationship between free testosterone and sexual maturation in the male rat, animals were decapitated every 5 days from 25 through 75 days of life. Serum was assayed for androgen binding protein and total testosterone by radioimmunoassay. Free testosterone concentrations were calculated from the total testosterone concentration and the free testosterone fraction. The free testosterone fraction was determined by ultrafiltration. The pubertal increase in relative prostate and relative seminal vesicle weights began between 45 and 50 days and 40 and 45 days, respectively. Although the over-all trend in the free testosterone fraction was to increase with increasing age (r = 0.46, P less than 0.0001), there was a significant secondary peak at 50 days. The serum concentration of androgen binding protein was highest on day 25, fell rapidly until day 40, and declined slowly thereafter. Despite these variations in both androgen binding protein and the free testosterone fraction during sexual maturation, the calculated serum concentration of free testosterone was remarkably similar in pattern to that of total testosterone (r = 0.99, P less than 0.0001). These data indicate that the serum concentration of total testosterone is an accurate reflection of the serum concentration of free testosterone during the sexual maturation of the male rat.
Topics: Aging; Androgen-Binding Protein; Animals; Male; Organ Size; Prostate; Rats; Sexual Maturation; Testis; Testosterone
PubMed: 3944019
DOI: 10.1002/j.1939-4640.1986.tb00867.x -
Veterinaria Italiana Jul 2023This study aimed to investigate the comparison of effect of anticoccidal drugs including lasalocid and diclazuril with probiotic and synbiotic on the growth performance...
This study aimed to investigate the comparison of effect of anticoccidal drugs including lasalocid and diclazuril with probiotic and synbiotic on the growth performance and intestinal morphology in broiler chicken. One hundred eighty chickens (Ross 308, 1 day old) were randomly divided into 6 equal groups (n=30) including the negative control (basal diet), the positive control (basal diet+oral inoculation of 3×104 sporulated oocytes of E. tenella, and four treatment groups. At days of 28 and 49 of age, 9 chickens were blindly chosen from each group were scarified by decapitation and their various segments of small intestine including ileum, jejunum, and duodenum were evaluated histomorphologically. We found that the economic losses resulted from coccidial infection in the poultry industry are caused by the decreased performance of broiler chicken induced by morphological changes in the any three segments specially jejunum. The anticoccidial drugs, synbiotic and probiotic can partially prevent morphological changes in any three segments of small intestine in broiler chicken with coccidiosis. Since morphological changes in the jejunum begin earlier than in other parts and surface area of jejunal villi is important for nutrition absorbance as well as growth performance, lasolacid was found to a be more efficient treatment in this regard.
Topics: Animals; Lasalocid; Coccidiostats; Chickens; Probiotics; Intestine, Small; Poultry Diseases; Nitriles; Triazines
PubMed: 38625750
DOI: 10.12834/VetIt.2587.17307.2 -
Cureus May 2024People are constantly exposed to formaldehyde, a volatile and poisonous gas, in indoor environments. In particular, anatomists, pathologists, histologists, and those...
INTRODUCTION
People are constantly exposed to formaldehyde, a volatile and poisonous gas, in indoor environments. In particular, anatomists, pathologists, histologists, and those involved in embalming are exposed to higher amounts of formaldehyde continuously due to their work. This study aimed to investigate the effect of N-acetylcysteine on endostatin and humanin values in male rats exposed to experimental formaldehyde.
METHODS
In the study, 28 male Spraque-Dawley rats aged 12-14 weeks (seven animals in each group: control group, formaldehyde group, N-acetylcysteine group, formaldehyde+N-acetylcysteine group) were used. Four weeks later, the animals were sacrificed by decapitation. Following decapitation, endostatin and humanin levels in the serum of rats were studied by the enzyme-linked immunoassay (ELISA) method. In all analyses, p<0.05 was accepted as statistically significant.
RESULTS
Humanin and endostatin values were checked in the serum of rats. When humanin levels were compared between groups, a statistically significant difference was found between the formaldehyde group and both the control group (p<0.05) and the N-acetylcysteine group (p<0.05). In the formaldehyde+N-acetylcysteine group, it was determined that the humanin level was impaired due to formaldehyde exposure, approaching the control group values with the administered N-acetylcysteine. When the endostatin level was compared between the groups, a statistical significance (p<0.05) was found only between the formaldehyde group and the N-acetylcysteine group. In the formaldehyde+N-acetylcysteine group, it was determined that the endostatin level was impaired due to formaldehyde exposure, approaching the control group values with the administered N-acetylcysteine.
CONCLUSION
In this study, the effects of N-acetylcysteine on humanin and endostatin on rats exposed to formaldehyde were demonstrated for the first time. Formaldehyde exposure negatively affected humanin and endostatin levels in rat sera. N-acetylcysteine ameliorated the negative effects of formaldehyde, bringing humanin and endostatin levels closer to the healthy control group.
PubMed: 38947691
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.61354