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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This study describes the effects of CO2 laser radiation on the histology of the normal rabbit arterial wall, using models that simulate laser angioplasty and anastomosis. Rabbit arteries were exposed to laser treatments similar to those used clinically; 40, 0.5 sec pulses of 40-60 mW, CO2 continuous wavelength laser, or a 1/2-circumferential laser anastomosis with a 60-80 mW continuous pulse. Aneurysms developed in 8 of 22 femoral, 1 of 22 carotid, and no controls at 12 week. There were small breaks in the internal elastic lamina with atrophy, loss of muscularis, "packing" of the elastica, thinning of the muscularis at the damage site, and enlargement of the arterial diameter. Aneurysms developed in one femoral and no carotid anastomosed artery. Laser anastomoses demonstrated more muscle damage and loss, with extensive scarring and a wider area of elastic loss than the controls. The intima was reestablished with focal reduplication of the internal elastic lamina. There were no histologic differences between the arteries which developed aneurysms and those which did not in either series. These results suggest that low power laser damage of the arterial wall consists mainly of destruction of the muscularis propria, with minimal damage to the elastica.
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PMID:CO2-laser radiation damage of the arterial wall. 197 23

Contact lens materials over the last 20 years have progressed from polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) through hydrogels to high Dk rigid and semi-soft lenses. Our understanding of how and why contact lenses affect the eye has also advanced considerably. We now know that: (1) the oxygen demands of the eye are high and (2) carbon dioxide accumulates and corneal acidosis occurs with most current contact lenses, especially with extended wear (EW). The effects of these perturbations on the epithelium include decreased metabolic rate, thinning, microcysts, and reduced adhesion. In addition, stromal edema and thinning and, with pressure, distortion occur with the long-term use of low to moderate oxygen transmissible lenses. Endothelial polymegethism also occurs and is a relatively permanent effect of inadequate oxygen permeability (Dk). The major consequence of chronic hypoxia and acidosis is, for a significant number of patients, corneal intolerance and discontinuation of lens wear. High permeability materials (100 Dk) that provide adequate gaseous exchange for daily wear and minimal changes in EW are now available and should be used where possible. The more obvious problems of contact lens-induced chronic inflammation, e.g., contact lens-induced papillary conjunctivitis (CLPC), and acute inflammation, e.g., acute red eye (ARE), are less well understood. Protein deposits, lens ageing, occlusion, mechanical effects, and bacterial contamination have all been implicated. The remaining frontiers include understanding and avoiding the stimuli to low grade irritation and inflammation by making contact lenses more comfortable and improving their compatibility with the ocular surfaces.
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PMID:The Glenn A. Fry Award lecture 1988: the ocular response to contact lens wear. 251 6

Continuous wave (CW) CO2 laser using a power of 20 W and a spot size of 0.2 mm was used to cut the left uterine horn in 15 rats. Pulsed CO2 laser using a power of 14 W, pulse repetition rate of 400 pps, and a spot size of 0.2 mm was used to cut the left uterine horn in 16 rats. The right uterine horn was sham-operated and used as a control in each group. Microsurgical anastomosis of the cut horn was performed. The effect on fertility showed a pregnancy rate of 66.6% and 81.25% for the CW and pulsed CO2 laser, respectively. Histopathology studies of the anastomotic site revealed thinning of muscularis with fibrosis of both muscularis and subserosal layers in the CW CO2 laser-treated group. There was no thinning, disruption, or fibrosis of muscularis in pulsed laser-treated group. Adhesion score was not different in the two groups.
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PMID:Comparative study of continuous and pulsed CO2 laser on tissue healing and fertility outcome in tubal anastomosis. 310 8

The surface pH of rat distal colonic mucosa and human rectal mucosa was measured in vitro using first a small pH electrode with a flattened tip. In buffer with pH 7.56 the mean rat colonic surface pH was 6.72. Lowering the buffer pH in steps resulted in a small fall in surface pH, the values being buffer pH 7.06 surface pH 6.64, buffer pH 6.58 surface pH 6.61 and finally buffer pH 6.09 surface pH 6.39. Similar results were obtained with a buffer where butyrate, 30 mmol/l replaced chloride and when a CO2/bicarbonate buffer was used. During the time taken for the study transmural potential difference only changed by 1-2 mV. Serosal surface pH changed with buffer pH, suggesting that the maintained surface pH is a property of the mucosal surface only. The surface pH of human rectal mucosa was similar to that of rat distal colonic mucosa. As buffer pH fell from pH 7.51 to 5.96 mucosal surface pH only fell from pH 6.80 to 6.26. The values obtained in ulcerative proctitis did not differ from normal mucosa. Secondly pH microelectrodes were used to measure the juxta mucosal pH and the pH-microclimate thickness when luminal pH was controlled. The microclimate had a pH 6.63 adjacent to the mucosa with a thickness of 840 micron. The importance of mucus in maintaining the microclimate was shown by n-acetyl cysteine thinning and prostaglandin E2 thickening the layer. These results describe a surface microclimate in the large intestine of appreciable thickness and a constant juxta mucosal pH. Luminal pH changes produce only a small change in microclimate pH.
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PMID:Mucosal surface pH of the large intestine of the rat and of normal and inflamed large intestine in man. 362 17

Specular microscopy was used to measure thickness changes of stroma-endothelium preparations from rabbit corneas in vitro. The preparations were first bathed on both sides for 90 min with different bicarbonate-Ringer solutions (2 to 50 mM bicarbonate) maintained in equilibrium with 5% CO2-air (pH 6.2 to 7.9). During this equilibration, the stroma attained a stable thickness that was inversely related to the hydrostatic pressure (20 to 100 cm H2O) applied to the endothelial surface. After equilibration and at 20 cm H2O pressure, covering the anterior stromal surface with silicone oil (Dow Corning 200 dielectric fluid, 20 cs viscosity) resulted in stromal thinning. The rate of this deturgescence increased (from 5 to 75 micron/h) as the equilibration solution bicarbonate level increased from 2 to 30 mM. The net size of the thickness change was also related to the equilibration bicarbonate level. However, indirect studies on the cornea using phenol red indicator and pH electrode measurements of solutions revealed that the stromal bathing solutions became more alkaline under the silicone oil layer. CO2 is soluble in silicone oil. Implications of these CO2 and pH effects on mechanisms of corneal deturgescence are discussed.
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PMID:New observations on bicarbonate-pH effects on thickness changes of rabbit corneas under silicone oil in vitro. 393 62

A moderately severe thermal injury of the central cornea of 48 Dutch-belted rabbit eyes was produced with a carbon (CO2) laser. The lesions were photographed with a slit lamp (SL) camera immediately following the injury and at 1, 2, 4, 7, 14, 21, 30 and 60 days after the exposure. Lesion size, opaqueness, and depth were graded clinically by SL biomicroscopy at the same intervals. No significant differences were found (p less than or equal to 0.05) between groups of eyes treated with flurbiprofen (0.03%), prednisolone acetate (1%), and vehicle control four-times-a-day for three weeks following injury. Additionally, eyes were studied histopathologically at 3 and 60 days following injury by light and transmission electron microscopy, and clinically at 30 and 60 days by endothelial specular microscopy. Important clinical and histopathological findings included coagulative necrosis of the corneal epithelium, epithelial sloughing, fusion of stromal collagen, stromal edema and inflammatory cell infiltration, stromal scar formation, corneal thinning, endothelial hyperplasia and metaplasia, fibrinous anterior chamber reaction with hypopyon, and retrocorneal fibrous membrane formation.
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PMID:Laser induced thermal injury of rabbit cornea and treatment with anti-inflammatory agents. 400 71

Quantitative and qualitative pathological changes in mouse bones are described after continuous exposure to 0.24% v/v of carbon monoxide in air for periods of up to 180 days. Planimetric measurements of five bones (parietal bone, sternum, lumbar vertebrae, ribs and shafts of femurs) showed a considerable increase in the amount of bone tissue in all bones except the femurs. The greatest amount of new bone formation was found, in decreasing order, in the skull, ribs, lumbar vertebrae and sternal segments. The cortex of the femur shafts showed some thinning, although there was more trabecular bone in the metaphyses. At the same time an expansion of marrow cavities was found in ribs, parietal bones and femurs. Possible pathomechanisms responsible for the excessive bone formation are explored. It is suggested that an increased rate of blood flow through the bone and marrow tissues played an important role.
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PMID:Bone changes in mice after prolonged continuous exposure to a high concentration of carbon monoxide. 668 56

Hypertension and atherosclerotic coronary arterial obstruction frequently coexist in patients. However, the effect of increased aortic pressure on ischemic segmental dysfunction is not well understood. We studied the effects of aortic pressure increases on segmental left ventricular function during myocardial ischemia. Eighty-two dogs instrumented with three to six pairs of pulse-transit piezoelectric crystals were studied in an awake, unsedated state to measure segmental wall thickness. A pneumatic balloon occluder was positioned around the proximal left anterior descending artery (LAD). Thirty-three dogs underwent LAD occlusion and served as normotensive controls (group A). Group B dogs (n = 23) received a 6-hour infusion of phenylephrine (PE) beginning 5 minutes after LAD occlusion to increase aortic diastolic arterial pressure to 120-130 mm Hg; aortic pressure was then allowed to return to normal for the subsequent 18 hours. The eight dogs in group C received a 6-hour infusion of PE, but no coronary arterial occlusion was produced. In group D (n = 12), distal constriction of the thoracic aorta was maintained for 24 hours after LAD occlusion. Regional myocardial blood flow (RMBF) was measured with radioactive microspheres in six conscious dogs and both RMBF and intramyocardial PCO2 were measured in seven open-chest dogs to assess alterations in regional myocardial oxygen supply and demand. Segments of myocardium were arbitrarily grouped according to the amount of net systolic thickening (NET) present 5 minutes after LAD occlusion and before increasing aortic pressure: group 1 retained 67-100+% of control NET, group 2 0-67%, and group 3 less than 0% (paradoxic motion). In dogs receiving PE plus LAD occlusion and in dogs with aortic constriction and LAD occlusion, NET was transiently depressed in groups 1 and 2 compared with the normotensive cohort; 24 hours after occlusion, NET in groups 1, 2 and 3 did not differ significantly from that in the normotensive dogs. Systemic hypertension resulted in a significant increase in endocardial and midwall RMBF and, in seven open-chest dogs, decreased the intramyocardial accumulation of carbon dioxide after LAD occlusion. Increased aortic pressure in dogs without coronary occlusion produced reversible decreases in end-diastolic wall thickness, NET and LV dP/dt. Thus, the production of systemic hypertension with diastolic pressures of 110-120 mm Hg acutely or for 6 hours during evolving canine myocardial infarction does not appear to exert an important deleterious effect on myocardial oxygen supply and demand. However, 24 hours of mildly increased aortic pressure accentuates end-diastolic wall thinning in segments with paradoxic systolic motion and results in a failure of their return to control values at this period.
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PMID:Effects of systemic hypertension on ischemic and nonischemic regional left ventricular function in awake, unsedated dogs after experimental coronary occlusion. 679 86

Evidence exists from both congenital anomalies and animal models that normal fetal lung development is dependent on maintenance of fluid pressure within the developing "airways." Fetal tracheostomy, allowing free egress of airway fluids, results in lung hypoplasia, indicating that some airway distending pressure is required for normal lung development to occur. In contrast, fetal tracheal ligation, which increases fetal airway pressure, reverses lung hypoplasia in animal models. The authors' experiments test the hypothesis that large airway obstruction accelerates the development of murine lungs in vitro in whole-organ culture. Fetuses from time-dated pregnant CD-1 mice at day 14 of gestation were removed (term, 20 days), and the lungs were excised. The left bronchus of each lung was ligated (n = 26), after which the left lung was isolated and cultured at 37 degrees C (95% air, 5% CO2) in BGJb media supplemented with vitamin C and antibiotics. Some fetal lungs were cultured under similar conditions without bronchial ligation (n = 11). After 7 days in culture, the lungs were taken for various analyses. The lungs were fixed in either formaldehyde and processed for paraffin embedding for light microscopic evaluation and morphometric data collection, or were freshly minced and aliquots taken for total protein and DNA content. Several more ligated and unligated lungs were processed for ultrastructural analysis. Morphometric analysis on transverse sections of lungs showed significant differences in the lung tissue size, thickness, epithelial cell height, luminal areas, perimeters, and total number of airspaces (airway + primordial alveolar airspaces). It was evident that bronchial ligation promoted lung development. The ligated lungs displayed thinning of the primordial alveolar walls with cuboidal epithelial cells. The total number of airspaces per field was lower for better developed ligated lungs because of the increased area of airspaces compared with that of the unligated lungs. The dorsoventral tissue thickness (in micrometers) of the ligated lungs was significantly greater than that of the unligated lungs (124.1 +/- 7.0 v 89.6 +/- 8.0); the average outer perimeter of the primordial alveolar airspaces was greater for ligated lungs (404.56 +/- 19.0 microns v 256.85 +/- 17.0 microns). Similarly, the luminal diameter of the spaces of ligated lungs was almost double that of the unligated lungs (38.0 +/- 2.0 microns v 20.3 +/- 2.0 microns), as was the luminal surface area. The morphometric data, which suggest enhanced maturation of the ligated lungs, are supported by results of ultrastructural studies. Ligated lungs had significantly more lamellar bodies. Although total protein and DNA content were greater among the ligated lungs, the protein/DNA ratios did not differ among the groups. The intraluminal pressure (airway pressure) of ligated lungs was 2.9 mm Hg and 3.1 mm Hg at 2 and 4 days in organ culture; the respective pressures for unligated lungs were 1.0 mm Hg and 0.8 mm Hg. These data support the hypothesis that mechanical distending pressure resulting from airway obstruction not only improves pulmonary architecture but also accelerates lung development in vitro. Although these effects have been seen in in vivo models, this is the first proposed in vitro organ culture model. This model may prove to be a powerful tool for the study of molecular mechanisms of mammalian lung development with respect to mechanical and chemical (cytokines, hormones) stimuli.
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PMID:Bronchial ligation enhances murine fetal lung development in whole-organ culture. 881 46

To expand the indicational spectrum of the myocutaneous vastus lateralis flap, which is often too voluminous for intraoral application, we performed extreme, primary thinning of the fat and muscle component of this microsurgical transplant in 14 patients. After subfascial localization of the 0.5- to 1.0-mm-thick perforating vessel, it is exposed through the fascia and muscles up to its exit from the descending branch of the lateral circumflex femoral artery. After isolating the perforating vessel, it is no longer necessary to include parts of the vastus lateralis muscle in the flap. The fatty tissue of the remaining epifascial fat component is completely removed except for a ca. 1- to 2-cm-wide cuff of fatty tissue and fascia around the perforating vessel. When performing this primary radical removal of the subcutaneous fatty tissue, care should be taken not to injure the deep subdermal vascular plexus. In addition to the thinning procedure, de-epithelialization of the skin was performed using scalpel blade dissection (five patients) or carbon dioxide laser (6 W, five patients). This thinning technique was used for covering ten intraoral and four extraoral defects and enabled the raising of skin flaps with a thickness of 3-5 mm even in obese patients. The vessel pedicle length of thinned flaps was between 12 and 16 cm; flap size varied between 4 x 5 and 9 x 15 cm, and the donor sites were directly closed. In one case, there was a partial necrosis (20%), but the remaining flaps healed without complications. On the intraoral flaps, a thin, smooth and pliable surface developed after re-epithelialization within 3-6 weeks. The described method expands the application possibilities of the myocutaneous vastus lateralis flap for a large number of intraoral and flat defects with minimal donor-site morbidity.
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PMID:[Primary thinning and de-epithelialization of microsurgical transplants from the lateral thigh]. 1085 81


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