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Query: UMLS:C0001511 (
Adhesion
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5,955
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effect of heparin upon the clinical and pathologic course of experimentally induced peritonitis in the rat was studied. Peritonitis was induced in 40 rats by creating a closed ileal loop 4 centimeters long at a distance of 5 centimeters from the ileocecal valve. The rats were divided into two groups of 20 each. The first group served as the control group while each rat of the second group received 30 units of heparin subcutaneously per day postoperatively. Survival was drastically increased in the group receiving heparin (p = 0.001).
Adhesion
or abscess formation was considerably reduced in this group. The results of peritoneal cultures showed decreased incidence of Escherichia coli and clostridia in the heparin-treated group. Blood cultures also showed decreased incidence of both aerobes and anaerobes in the treated group. It is concluded from this that the administration of heparin significantly prolongs survival time of animals with peritonitis and reduces the development of adhesions and abscesses in the peritoneal cavity. This beneficial effect could be attributed to decreased fibrinogen deposits within the peritoneal cavity, thus rendering the bacteria more susceptible to cellular and noncellular clearing mechanisms.
Surg Gynecol Obstet 1983
Sep
PMID:The effect of heparin upon fibrinopurulent peritonitis in rats. 635 6
Adhesion
of a 3H-thymidine-labeled reference strain of enterococci to epithelial cells of buccal mucosa from 20 young female patients with rec. UTI (aged 3 to 15 years) and 19 urologically healthy girls was investigated. Bacterial attachment in children with rec. UTI was significantly higher statistically than in the healthy control group and did not show any alteration when tested separately during acute UTI (14 cases) and infection-free intervals (17 cases). There was no difference in adherence between patients with rec. UTI connected with diverse anomalies of the urinary tract (12 girls) and UTI patients without anomalies (8 girls). Within the patient group 3 cases under antimicrobial prophylaxis with co-trimoxazole showed bacterial adhesion similar to that in healthy controls. Our examination results lead to the assumption that attachment of enterococci to buccal epithelial cells can be used as a diagnostic criterion for rec. UTI.
Monatsschr Kinderheilkd 1984
Sep
PMID:[Bacterial adhesion to buccal epithelial cells as a permanent indicator of recurrent urinary tract infections]. 638 53
The relationship between the variability in the fibronectin (Fn) content on human buccal epithelial cells and the capacity of the cells to bind gram-positive (Streptococcus pyogenes) or gram-negative (Escherichia coli or Pseudomonas aeruginosa) bacteria was investigated.
Adhesion
experiments performed with mixtures of epithelial cells and mixed suspensions of either S. pyogenes and E. coli or S. pyogenes and P. aeruginosa exhibited three major populations of buccal cells: one of these was able to bind S. pyogenes (gram positive) but neither of the gram-negative bacteria; a second population was able to bind the gram-negative but not the gram-positive bacteria; and a third was able to bind various numbers of both types of organisms. Further adhesion experiments performed with a mixture of epithelial cells and a mixed suspension of S. pyrogens, E. coli, and fluoresceinconjugated methacrylate beads coated with immune immunoglobulin G directed against Fn revealed that the epithelial cells recognizing the gram-positive bacteria were rich in Fn, whereas those recognizing the gram-negative organisms were poor in Fn. Immunoelectron microscopy confirmed that cells of S. pyogenes bound to epithelial cells coated with Fn, whereas cells of E. coli bound to epithelial cells lacking Fn. These results suggest that Fn on the surfaces of epithelial cells may modulate the ecology of the human oropharyngeal cavity, especially with respect to the colonization of these surfaces by pathogenic gram-negative or gram-positive bacteria.
Infect Immun 1983
Sep
PMID:Adherence of streptococcus pyogenes, Escherichia coli, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa to fibronectin-coated and uncoated epithelial cells. 641 21
Adhesion
studies were carried out to determine the relative ability of glioma cells and ovary-derived teratoma cells to adhere to endothelial cells obtained from mouse brain capillaries (designated MBE cell line) or mouse ovaries (designated MOE cell line). The teratoma cells showed preferential adhesion to MOE cells, whereas the glioma cells showed preferential adhesion to the MBE cell line. In contrast, the glioma and teratoma cells adhered equally to L929 and 3T3 fibroblasts. A testicular teratoma with ovary-seeking properties in vivo also adhered preferentially to MOE cells, while the preference for MBE cells was shared by glioma cells with an endothelioma and a bladder tumor line. The endothelioma, interestingly, showed a marked preferential adhesion to 3T3 cells, thus distinguishing it from the glioma. The experiments demonstrate that capillary endothelial cells derived from different sources are not alike and that differences expressed at the cell surface of these cells can be distinguished by tumor cells.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1984
Sep
PMID:Differential adhesion of tumor cells to capillary endothelial cells in vitro. 659 84
We have measured separation distances between live human red blood cells and simple or modified glass surfaces, using the finite aperture technique of microscope interferometry. In general, separation increases as the ionic strength falls, in isotonic solutions. Restriction on movement parallel to the glass in all except the most dilute salt solutions, coupled with the absence of Brownian motion, indicates direct molecular contact with the substratum. Thus increased separation must be due to swelling of the glycocalyx under electrostatic forces. However, at approximately less than to 2mM adherent cells show a separation greater than 100 nm, execute Brownian motion and the restriction on lateral motion is less evident. This suggests that secondary minimum adhesion by long-range forces with little or no direct molecular connection occurs at extreme dilution only. Treatment of cells with trypsin reduces separation by up to 40 nm, but the extent to which this reflects reduced double-layer repulsion due to loss of surface charge, as opposed to the reduced opportunity for swelling in a trimmed-down glycocalyx, is unclear.
Adhesion
at a separation approximately 100 nm in 1 mM buffer after trypsinization supports the view that adhesion can occur without very long glycoprotein connections, but does not prove it.
Adhesion
to unwettable methylated glass and completely wettable unmethylated glass, with an identical ionic strength dependence of the separation, shows that hydrophilicity is not an absolute requirement. Red cells interact closely at all ionic strengths with glass made polycationic with poly-L-lysine, owing to electrostatic attraction. The interference technique also shows that adherent cells can be spaced from the glass by an intervening layer of previously absorbed serum albumin.
J Cell Sci 1983
Sep
PMID:Conformational response of the glycocalyx to ionic strength and interaction with modified glass surfaces: study of live red cells by interferometry. 663 Mar 5
Total colectomy, mucosal proctectomy and ileo-anostomy were performed on 10 dogs to observe the healing process of the space between the rectal muscle cuff and the pulled through ileum.
Adhesion
was complete in six cases. The ileal and rectal muscle layers were well preserved, but two weeks after the surgery the healing was not completed. One month after the operation, there was little scar formation between the rectal muscle cuff and the ileum, in the absence of infection. If there was infection between the ileum and the rectal muscle cuff, abscess and scar formation was seen even one month after the operation. This operation is thought to be rational from a histological viewpoint and the most important factor is the prevention of infection in the space between the ileum and rectal muscle cuff.
Jpn J Surg 1983
Sep
PMID:Histology of the healing process after total colectomy, mucosal proctectomy and ileo-anostomy. 666 82
Escherichia coli strain S5 (O15:K+:H21) isolated from a septicaemic lamb and previously shown to possess a virulence plasmid, Vir, attached in vitro to calf epithelial tissue from the ileum, oesophagus and trachea in the presence of 0.5% (w/v) D-mannose. The Vir+ recombinant strains 711v and H209av, which had received the Vir plasmid(s) from strain S5, also attached to these epithelia but the parent strains 711 and H209a without the Vir plasmid were non-adhesive. The attachment of the Vir+ strain 711v to intestinal brush borders was inhibited by antiserum to live Vir+ strain H209av but not by antiserum to strain H209a lacking Vir. No adherence occurred with Vir+ organisms grown at 18 degrees C or after heating at 65 degrees C.
Adhesion
was unaffected by 0.5% (w/v) formaldehyde. Glucosamine, mannosamine, their N-acetyl derivatives and wheat germ lectin each inhibited attachment of Vir+ strain 711v to brush border epithelia.
J Gen Microbiol 1982
Sep
PMID:Adhesive properties associated with the Vir plasmid: a transmissible pathogenic characteristic associated with strains of invasive Escherichia coli. 675 81
An "optimal" technique of vein graft preparation with papaverine and tissue culture was compared with an "injury" technique with 37 degrees C saline storage for 1 hr. Paired interposition cephalic vein grafts were placed in the femoral arteries of dogs. Specimens were taken at the time of implantation, at 3 and 24 hr, and at 7 and 30 days for light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy. Veins obtained by the injury method showed extensive initial disruption of the endothelium and platelet and white cell adhesion at 3 and 24 hr. At 7 days the endothelium was restored, but there was marked inflammation and neovascularization of the media. At 30 days this had resolved; however, the smooth muscle cells appeared modulated (increase in relative numbers of metabolic organelles with contractile apparatus disassembly). Extracellular matrix was substantially increased, with abundant amorphous ground substance. In contrast, veins obtained by the optimal method had intact endothelium both at implantation and thereafter.
Adhesion
of white cells and platelets to the endothelium did not occur. The media remained compact without inflammation and without modulation of the smooth muscle cells. We conclude that vein grafts prepared by the optimal technique do not develop early or late evidence of endothelial or medial injury. This should result in a nonthrombogenic graft immediately after surgery and diminished late intimal/medial hyperplasia.
Circulation 1983
Sep
PMID:Integrity of vein grafts as a function of initial intimal and medial preservation. 687 81
In past years, lumbar nerve lateral entrapment seldom has been diagnosed. A presumptive preoperative diagnosis has been made based on clinical findings and radiographs demonstrating disc resorption. The Computed Tomography scan has made it possible to diagnose the lesion with certainty and accuracy. Treatment for patients who do not respond to conservative measures is a bilateral minimal partial laminectomy. The lateral canal is enlarged by removing the medial and anterior parts of the superior articular process.
Adhesion
formation is prevented by placing a free fat graft posterior to the dura. Instability is diagnosed by examining stress radiographs and, when present, is treated by a one level posterolateral fusion. After operation, marked improvement was obtained in 62% of patients and slight improvement in another 21%; 17% were unimproved. Sixty-two per cent of patients reported no pain or mild pain. Sixty-six per cent resumed their previous occupation.
Clin Orthop Relat Res 1982
Sep
PMID:Lumbar spinal nerve lateral entrapment. 710 75
The study of the adhesive and hemagglutinating properties of the strains of different Lactobacillus species isolated from the human digestive tract and sour milk products were carried out. 49 strains of 9 Lactobacillus species were studied; of these, 10 strains had been isolated from saliva, 11 strains from feces, 7 strains from milk and 5 strains from sour cream. 11 collection strains and 2 strains used in the production of lactobacterin served as controls.
Adhesion
was studied in vitro on human red blood cells used as a model. Red blood cells used in the experiments had been taken from 23 donors aged 25-52 years. Lactobacilli were found to have certain inter and intraspecific differences in their adhesiveness. The adhesiveness of the lactobacilli isolated from human feces was considerably greater than that of the strains isolated from sour milk products and of the collection strains. Only the strains of lactobacilli with low adhesiveness possessed pronounced hemagglutinating properties.
Zh Mikrobiol Epidemiol Immunobiol 1982
Sep
PMID:[Adhesive and hemagglutinating properties of lactobacilli]. 714 29
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