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Query: UMLS:C0034067 (
emphysema
)
11,506
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical, parasitological and pathological findings in a group of six donkeys naturally infected with D arnfieldi larvae are described. One animal had to be sacrificed at an early date because it developed pneumonia. The remaining five were unthrifty, showed mild clinical respiratory signs and had heavy strongyle infections. They had varying numbers of adult worms in the airways of the lungs and eggs were found coiled up in the smaller bronchi where they had apparently lead to an obstruction to airflow in that segment. The most striking gross pathological changes were circular discrete areas of over-inflation surrounding such bronchi. Histologically the infected bronchi exhibited a marked bronchiolitis with goblet cell hyperplasia and a mainly
lymphoid
inflammatory infiltrate. These areas also showed a localised bronchiolitus and overinflated alveolar tissue although true
emphysema
was not present. It is postulated that the parasite is well-adapted to its host and is able to survive for long periods within the lung without causing a debilitating amount of damage to the host. The immunological aspects of the infection are discussed briefly.
...
PMID:Lungworm: (Dictyocaulus arnfieldi) infection in donkeys. 15 90
A study of the pathogenesis of bovine ephemeral fever confirmed that the major clinical signs were fever lasting no more than 2 days, with increased respiratory rate, dyspnoea and some degree of lameness. Haematological observations revealed a neutrophilia with a left shift and a lymphopaenia at the time of peak clinical reaction. The net result was a slight leucopaenia on the day after this reaction. The most prominent pathological changes involved the lungs and synovial joints.
Pulmonary emphysema
and alveolar collapse with bronchiolitis, degenerative changes in synovial membranes and increased synovial fluid were observed. Specific fluorescence indicating the presence of BEF viral antigen could be detected at the time of peak clinical response in individual cells in the lungs, spleen and lymph nodes as well as neutrophils. Before and after the peak fever some fluorescence was seen in cells which appeared to be reticular cells in the lymph nodes. Viral isolation in mice could be made from blood, lungs, spleen and lymph nodes over a period of no more than 3 days. It is postulated that viral growth takes place mainly in the reticuloendothelial cells in the lungs, spleen and lymph nodes and not in vascular endothelium or
lymphoid
cells.
...
PMID:Studies on the pathogenesis of bovine ephemeral fever. 33 60
The gross and microscopic pathology of phocine distemper is described. The most striking features were pulmonary congestion and
emphysema
associated with proliferation of type II pneumocytes, often forming syncytia. Secondary bacterial infection was common and associated with marked atrophy of
lymphoid
tissues and degenerative changes in the mucosa of the airways.
...
PMID:The pathology of phocine distemper. 159 27
Inhalation of the brown coal samples caused anthracosis with progressive growth in the postinhalation period and concomitant catarrhal-desquamative bronchitis,
lymphoid
tissue hyperplasia,
emphysema
, along with granuloma formation. The cases studied were marked with increased number and thickness of the argyrophile and reticuline fibres around the bronchi, vessels, granuloma and in the interalveolar septum. Changes were detected in the immunocompetent organs' state which might influence the homeostasis and the immune system. Complex cytomorphological investigation of the bronchopulmonary and immunocompetent systems can be applied to in biological studies of different aerosols.
...
PMID:[Biological effect of brown coal dust on the bronchopulmonary system and immunocompetent organs (experimental morphological study)]. 233 83
Considerable progress has been made in the localization of chemical substances within the gas-exchange zones of vertebrate lungs since cytochemical techniques suitable for use with the electron microscope have been developed. The light microscope, an instrument with an effective resolution limit of about 0.2 micron, is ill-suited for studying regions such as these where small tissue elements are arranged in a complex manner. A wide range of acid hydrolases have been detected in the vacuoles and dense bodies of alveolar macrophages by means of cytochemical techniques. The enzymes demonstrated in this way include acid phosphatase, aryl sulphatase, cathepsin D, beta-glucuronidase, acetyl glucosaminidase, nonspecific esterase, dipeptidyl peptidase II and dipeptidyl peptidase IV. Such enzymes are, of course, to be expected in the lysosomes of cells which have a primary phagocytic role. Nevertheless, it must be confessed that very little is yet known about the actual mechanism of phagocytosis or of the fate of the digested material. It is fortunate, however, that some of the tools which are likely to be of value in research on these aspects of macrophage function are currently being developed. Of particular interest in this connection are the immunocytochemical techniques which permit the localization of surface-associated antigens and intracellular contractile proteins. It must be emphasized that phagocytosis is not the only function of macrophages in the gas-exchange zone of the lung. These cells are thought to be involved in the presentation of exogenous antigenic material to the reactive cells of the
lymphoid
system. Recent research has also indicated that mammalian alveolar macrophages synthesize a diverse range of substances. Furthermore, the elastases associated with pulmonary macrophages are now thought to be involved in the pathogenesis of
emphysema
. All of the above-mentioned activities are of great biological and clinical significance and, consequently, merit the cytochemists' attention in future. The epithelial lining of the greater part of the pulmonary gas-exchange area is composed of type I pneumonocytes. In terms of ultrastructure, these are very specialized cells; their extensive and highly-attenuated cytoplasmic processes form the outer layer of the air-blood barrier. No special carrier systems have been identified within type I pneumonocytes and this is in keeping with the claims that oxygen is transferred across the alveolar tissue barrier by a process of simple diffusion. Type II pneumonocytes, in contrast, have considerable metabolic activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cytochemistry of the gas-exchange area in vertebrate lungs. 355 66
Groups of F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice were exposed to aerosols of nickel subsulfide (Ni3S2) 6 hr/day for 12 days not including weekends. Actual exposure concentrations were within 3% of target (target = 10.0, 5.0, 2.5, 1.2, 0.6, and 0.0 mg Ni3S2/m3). Nickel lung burdens of exposed rats and mice increased linearly with exposure concentration. Two male rats and all mice exposed to 10.0 mg Ni3S2/m3 died before the end of the exposures. Exposure to Ni3S2 had no effect on the natural killer cell activity of mouse spleen cells. Lesions in rats and mice related to inhalation of Ni3S2 were found in the nasal epithelium, lung, and bronchial lymph nodes. The most extensive lesions were found in the lung and included necrotizing pneumonia.
Emphysema
developed in rats exposed to 5.0 or 10.0 mg Ni3S2/m3, while fibrosis developed in mice exposed to 5.0 mg Ni3S2/m3. Degeneration of the respiratory epithelium and atrophy of the olfactory epithelium of the nose occurred in rats exposed to as low as 0.6 mg Ni3S2/m3 and mice exposed to 1.2 mg/m3. Results indicate that inhalation exposure of rats and mice to Ni3S2 aerosol concentrations near the current threshold limit value (TLV) for nickel compounds (1 mg/m3 for Ni metal and roasting fume and dust and 0.1 mg/m3 as Ni for soluble compounds) can produce lesions in the respiratory tract. Atrophy of
lymphoid
tissues (spleen, thymus, and bronchial lymph nodes) was found in animals of the highest exposure concentration. Degeneration of the testicular germinal epithelium was also observed in mice and rats that survived 5.0 or 10.0 mg/m3 exposure concentrations.
...
PMID:Comparative inhalation toxicity of nickel subsulfide to F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice exposed for 12 days. 365 67
Gross changes in the lungs of Ascaris suum- infected calves consisted of atelectasis and hemorrhagic foci, edema and
emphysema
, frequently with bullae. Prominent microscopic lung lesions were edema and
emphysema
of the interlobular septa with large numbers of eosinophils within and around lymphatics, peribronchiolar
lymphoid
nodules and parasitic granulomas. Many of the microscopic features were consistent with those found in atypical interstitial pneumonia. Changes in the alveoli were atelectasis, the exudation of plasma proteins, mononuclear cells and eosinophils, and alveolar wall thickening. Lesions found later included fibrosis and fetalization of the alveolar walls. Plasma cells and neutrophils were not common. Challenge with Toxocara canis after sensitization with A. suum resulted in the lungs developing a few areas of atelectasis. Migration of T. canis to lungs of calves is slower than A. suum. A. suum larvae were always found in bronchi, bronchioles and alveoli of calves that died. Lesions were observed in the liver but not the kidney of A. suum infected calves; both lung and liver lesions tended to resolve with time.
...
PMID:Ascaris suum infection in calves. 3. Pathology. 424 44
Placental transmogrification of the lung was described by Chesney in 1978 as an unusual cystic lesion involving a single pulmonary lobe (3). We studied three additional cases with identical clinical and pathologic features. The patients were a 33-year-old woman and men aged 24 and 27 years. Each patient was first seen with respiratory distress; one had repeated pneumothoraces. Radiographically, an enlarging cystic lesion was present in a lower (two) or middle (one) lobe. The lesion had been present for 10 years in one patient. In two patients, mediastinal shift was noted. Lobectomy was curative in all instances. Grossly there was a uni- or paucilocular cyst lined by papillary structures. Microscopically, the papillae contained proliferating blood vessels,
lymphoid
nodules, smooth muscle, and fat. Sclerotic foci obliterated the vessels in some areas. The growth pattern and topography resembled those of placental villi. Systematic review of the histologic features in other lungs with marked
emphysema
revealed a spectrum of similar changes and suggested that the lesion in our patients may be a complication of bulla formation and is most likely the clinico-pathologic analog of the "vanishing lung" syndrome (idiopathic giant bullous
emphysema
).
...
PMID:Placental transmogrification of the lung, a histologic variant of giant bullous emphysema. Clinicopathological study of three further cases. 772 66
Rats were exposed to repeated, intermittent exposure to smoke generated from combustion of 1g wood/15 min, total period for 75 min daily under dynamic exposure conditions, over a period of 15, 30 and 45 days. First 15 days exposure caused mild bronchiolitis, hyperplasia and hypertrophy of bronchiolar epithelial lining cells, some necrosed lining cells desquamated into lumens, congestion of parenchymatous blood vessels, oedema, hyperplasia of
lymphoid
follicles, peribronchiolar and perivascular infiltration of polymorphonuclear cells, and mild
emphysema
. These lesions progressed further during 30 and 45 days of exposure, though emphysematous changes remain constant. By 30 days and 45 days, hyperplastic and hypertrophic changes of bronchioles become quite marked, with mononuclear cells infiltration and alveolar septa thickening. Hematological studies show marginal alterations in hemoglobin levels, ESR, PCV and TLCS during 15 days, where as significant changes in eosinophil were observed during 30 and 45 days, and ESR during 45 days only. The results indicate progressive pathomorphological pulmonary lesions with subsequent exposure to wood smoke in controlled conditions.
...
PMID:Histomorphological changes in lung of rats following exposure to wood smoke. 827 45
The following hypothesis is proposed: Experimental lung disease in old rats is different from this disease in adult rats. In order to demonstrate this, we performed a morphometrical evaluation of the pulmonary state of two groups of rats at different ages and to which Goodpasture's syndrome had been induced. 115 Wistar rats were used. They were divided into four different groups as follows: 1) Healthy adult rats which had not been subjected to treatment; 2) diseased adult rats to which antipulmonary serum had been administered; 3) healthy old rats; and 4) diseased old rats. With the help of a computerized system, the length of the alveolar chord, the thickness of the alveolar wall and the surface of the bronchial-associated
lymphoid
tissue in each group was calculated. We also counted the number of alveolar macrophages (AM) with haemosiderin, the percentage of goblet bronchial cells and that of AM, lymphocytes and polymorphonuclear leukocytes of the broncho-alveolar lavage (BAL). The following results were obtained. When related to the diseased adult rats, the diseased old rats showed an increase in the alveolar chord and a decrease in the thickness of the alveolar wall, as well as in the number of AM with haemosiderin, goblet cells and BAL lymphocytes. These results support the proposed hypotheses, since the diseased adult animals showed signs of alveolar inflammation with interstitial edema, while in the diseased old animals these results are compatible with
emphysema
.
...
PMID:Goodpasture's syndrome in aging. An experimental study on the rat. I. 830 14
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