Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0153470 (Spleen)
4,015 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The changes in the fractional volume of six structural components in the spleens of Balb/C mice injected with Herpes simplex virus Type 2-transformed cells (H238 tumor cells) were quantitated during progressive tumor growth. Spleen stereology was performed at three time intervals during the early stages of tumor development. The results revealed that the volume of the compact myeloid tissue and reaction center of lymphoid nodules increased about four- to five-fold from 10 to 33 days after H238 tumor cell injection. A progressive increase was also seen in the red pulp volume. Although an increase in volume of the marginal zones around the lymphoid nodules was evident early during the test period, by day 33 the mean value was similar to the control value. These results indicate that the spleen undergoes significant morphological changes in three splenic components during progressive growth of a tumor produced by subcutaneous injection of a virally-transformed cell line.
Anat Rec 1980 Jul
PMID:Responses of mouse spleen morphology to the growth of subcutaneously injected virally transformed cells. 625 96

Localization of eosinophil granule major basic protein by immunofluorescence permits recognition of both eosinophil infiltration and degranulation. Over the past decade and a half, our laboratory has shown that eosinophil infiltration and degranulation occur in many diseased tissues in humans; among normal tissues studied as controls, only the gut showed striking eosinophil infiltration and degranulation. Using an indirect immunofluorescence procedure for the detection of major basic protein, we extended our analyses of normal human tissues to include tissues from essentially all body organs; a total of 117 biopsy/autopsy specimens were analyzed. To determine whether the method of tissue procurement affected the level of eosinophil degranulation in the normal gastrointestinal tract, normal proximal jejunum from six patients was biopsied using either an endoscopic forceps or a scalpel at the time of elective surgery and examined by immunofluorescence. Spleen, lymph node, and thymus tissues showed eosinophil infiltration with scant evidence of degranulation, but the only organ showing both eosinophil infiltration and remarkable degranulation was the gastrointestinal tract. Eosinophil degranulation was significantly increased in specimens obtained by endoscopic forceps compared to those obtained by scalpel (P = 0.021). These results indicate that tissue procurement methods affect the degree of eosinophil degranulation in the gut. Thus, among normal human body organs, both eosinophil infiltration and appreciable degranulation consistently occur only in the gut.
Anat Rec 1998 11
PMID:Eosinophil infiltration and degranulation in normal human tissue. 981 Dec 20