Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Left ventricular dimensions were measured in Cd2+ arrested (presumably diastolic), open-chest rats. Aortic pressure was maintained at 137 cm H2O (100 mm Hg) and left-ventricular (luminal) pressures were established and maintained at their chosen values, each by means of reservoir systems. The selected left-ventricular pressures were chosen to be within or to even broaden the range of conceivable diastolic pressures (-3 to 48 cm H2O). After in situ fixation with 4% formaldehyde and gelatin embedding, the hearts were serially sectioned in the apex base direction to obtain information at 11 levels (10, 20, . . . 90, 100%). Tracings of selected sections were made along the edge of the left ventricular lumen and the pericardial surface. Volumes, surface areas, and mean external and internal radii of the left ventricle were derived. To quantify the circularity of sections a form factor (FF) was introduced (FF = 1 for a circular cross-section and less than one for other shapes). Ventricular lengths, radial dimensions, endocardial and epicardial surface areas, and total and luminal volumes increased with the increasing intraventricular pressures; as expected, the wall simultaneously thinned. Though its appearance was altered by the wall thinning, the curving muscle fascicular pattern was present over the entire pressure range examined. Endocardial surface areas increased more than did the epicardial surface areas. The endocardial FF value increased (more circular) at each section level as the pressure increased. The epicardial FF relationship was apparently constant (0.798 +/- 0.014) for all section levels from 10% through 90%, regardless of luminal pressure. These results, when taken in conjunction with the results of our previous published studies, prompted the following speculation. The wall of the diastolic ventricle is a fluid-filled chamber with intramyocardial pressures that may be higher than ventricular pressures.
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PMID:Left ventricular shape-luminal pressure relationship. An open-chest study. 195 75

To assess the effects of left ventricular chamber volume on the mechanism of changes in left ventricular developed pressure we performed phosphorous-31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, hydrogen-1 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy with a shift reagent, two-dimensional echocardiography, atomic absorption spectrophotometry, microsphere analysis, and surface fluorometry on isovolumic isolated perfused rat hearts with incremental intraventricular balloon volumes, while left ventricular pressure was concurrently monitored. A three-phasic response of developed pressure was noted: 0 to 100 microliters balloon volumes resulted in an increase in developed pressure, whereas developed pressure remained constant at 250 microliters and fell at 400 microliters. Oxygen consumption and [Ca2+]i transients followed the same pattern as developed pressure and coronary flow. Intraventricular volumes of 250 microliters or greater (a volume overload) caused endocardial ischemia, a greater decrease in extracellular versus intracellular water, thinning of the left ventricular free wall, and an increase in chamber size. Mechanical pressure on the tissue, induced by the volume overload, caused ischemia as further evidenced by (1) a negative effect on developed pressure, (2) a decrease in [Ca2+]i transients, (3) a [Ca2+]i overload, (4) a moderate decrease in the phosphorylation potential, and (5) an increase in the oxidation-reduction state (nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide). The high intracellular calcium associated with volume overload may have been due to both compression and ischemia, which leads to an increased number of cross-bridges in rigor, a high end-diastolic pressure, and an increase in wall stress.
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PMID:Mechanism for depressed cardiac function in left ventricular volume overload. 199 Jul 59

The distribution and size of colonies, residue levels of DDE, DDT, HCB, dieldrin, mirex and PCBs in eggs, productivity and eggshell thickness were determined for herring gulls at 14 sites in Lake Erie and connecting channels. The centre of distribution for breeding herring gulls was the Western Basin where approximately 90% of the 6200 nests in the study area were located. Seven of 22 colonies showed an average annual population increase of 48.3%. Most of the increase in breeding herring gulls on Lake Erie is directly associated with sites that have undergone habitat modification by man. Levels of PCBs and DDE ranged from 35 to 140 ppm (wet weight) and from 2.8 to 9.4 ppm, respectively; all other residues were less than 0.49 ppm. Most organochlorine residue levels were highest in eggs from colonies in or near the Niagara or Detroit Rivers. Mirex residues were greatest in the Niagara River and decreased significantly to the west. PCB residues were greatest in the Detroit River and decreased significantly to the east. The lowest levels generally came from colonies in the Sandusky Basin and near Pelee Island in western Lake Erie. Discriminant function analysis of six organochlorine contaminants correctly classified 90% or more of the eggs from up to four colonies in one or more years. Levels of PCBs and HCB appeared to have the greatest discriminating power. Herring gull productivity at all colonies (1-1.7 young gulls/pair) was normal and showed no significant geographical variation. Eggshell thickness was greatest in colonies in the Sandusky Basin and least in colonies in the Detroit River and extreme west end of the lake; mean eggshell thickness was 0.350 +/- 0.02 mm (6.7% thinning), which was weakly, but significantly correlated to DDE concentration. The variation in contaminants in herring gull eggs on a Basin basis (i.e., Western, Eastern, Sandusky, etc.) paralleled those known for sediments, water and fish. Thus, we suggest that in addition to its role as an indicator of lake-wide contamination of the Great Lakes, the herring gull, under some circumstances, may function as an indicator of "regional" contamination. This is an important distinction as it improves the geographical specificity of the herring gull as an indicator species on the Great Lakes, where it is a non-migratory species.
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PMID:Geographical distribution of contaminants and productivity measures of herring gulls in the Great Lakes: Lake Erie and connecting channels 1978/79. 210 95

A strain of Agrobacterium sp. S-1231 was isolated from one of the soil samples taken from Beijing area. In 4 days' cultivation it was found to produce extracellular polysaccharide and about 24 grams per liter of sugar-containing substrate. At the same concentrations, the polymer produced higher viscosity than that of xanthan gum (Kelzan). The viscosities of 0.2%, 0.5% and 1.0% solutions of this polymer were found to be 840, 5200 and 15000 cp respectively, measured with a Brookfield LVF viscosimeter at 6 rpm. Besides its pseudoplastic rheological properties and the excellent stability towards pH, it had unusual compatibility with high levels of salts and provided shear thinning properties similar to that in fresh water. Moreover, it is also compatible with cationic dyes without precipitation. Unlike other microbial polysaccharides, the viscosities of this polymer remained constant at different temperatures under 65 degrees C, but it decreased sharply in a narrow range of temperatures between 70-75 degrees C.
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PMID:Rheological properties of the extracellular polysaccharide from Agrobacterium sp.S-1231. 212 92

Silicone tissue expanders were inserted subcutaneously in the buttocks of nine young pigs and gradually inflated to maximum capacity over 5 weeks. On the control side the expanders were left uninflated. Island buttock flaps were then raised, the expanders removed and the flaps spread into the same sites for 10 days. The tissue was harvested. Area measurements and full thickness skin biopsies were taken 10 days after flap inset in order to study the changes in collagen composition and isotypes in the skin layers. Ten days after inset of the flap the expanded skin had a mean 47% increase in surface area, was 9% thinner (from surface to implant), mostly due to thinning of the subcutaneous zone, but was not significantly different in water content, relative to the control skin. The expanded skin had a significant 9.3% increase (p less than 0.01, t test) in collagen content of the dermis. The relative proportions of Types I and III were not significantly changed by skin expansion in either the dermal/epidermal or subcutaneous/capsular zones. It is speculated that tensile factors during expansion stimulate the biosynthetic activity and/or mitotic activity of fibroblasts in the dermis to produce this gain in collagen in the expanded compared with unexpanded tissue.
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PMID:The redistribution of collagen in expanded pig skin. 222 52

This investigation monitored the response of established contact lens wearers using contact lenses made from Filcon 4a 77% water-content material in three different thicknesses (0.08, 0.10 and 0.12 mm) over a 6-hour period of wear under adverse environmental conditions. The results obtained showed the following. (1) In accordance with previous studies carried out with lenses of similar water content, the present lenses produced corneal desiccation staining under the challenging conditions of use. However, the staining produced was similar for all three lens thicknesses tested. (2) Corneal desiccation staining was present despite the good and stable fitting characteristics observed during the study, confirming that mechanical trauma is not a necessary cause for soft-lens-induced desiccation staining. (3) Corneal desiccation staining was associated with a rapidly destabilizing pre-lens tear film (PLTF) and a thinning lipid layer. The initial break-up of the PLTF and corneal staining were recorded with a higher incidence in the vertical quadrants than in the horizontal quadrants. The PLTF is thinnest and most unstable at the tear prism margin border, hence least efficacious at preventing evaporation. Corneal desiccation staining may be due, at least partly, to excessive evaporation at the contact lens front surface.
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PMID:Corneal desiccation staining with hydrogel lenses: tear film and contact lens factors. 226 67

Submandibular salivary glands of male rats weighing 330-350 g were examined after space flight and ground-based control study. Light microscopy was carried out using hematoxylin-eosin staining and PAS-reaction. Electron microscopy was performed using glutaraldehyde and osmium tetroxide fixation and contrasting according to Reynolds. Light microscopy revealed no destructive changes in the gland parenchyma; differences between flight and control rats remained within physiological limits. Electron microscopy of acinar cells of flight animals showed chromatin condensation, darkening of cells and nuclei, appearance of electron-dense vacuoles, fragmentation fo the granular endoplasmatic reticulum as well as enlargement of interstitial spaces, lumens of acini and intercellular canaliculi, loosening of basal membranes, and thinning of capillary walls. Electron microscopy of acinar cells of control rats demonstrated chromatin condensation in nuclei and fragmentation of the GER. Thus, both animal groups exhibited ultrastructural signs of inhibition of the synthesis and excretion of salivary protein. In addition, flight animals showed increased excretion and, probably, secretion of water and electrolytes. Examinations of granulocytes revealed enlargement of secretory granules in both animal groups, the largest granules being seen in flight animals. They also showed mitochondrial swelling which was most significant in control rats. After the ground-based study cells of the striated compartment also displayed a very distinct mitochondrial swelling which may reduce the reabsorption capacity and enhance salivation of the compartment. However the mechanism of these changes seems to be different from that underlying changes after real space flight.
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PMID:[Ultrastructure of the submandibular glands in rats kept in weightlessness]. 245 45

Some patients who undergo aortocoronary bypass develop lesions in the graft and recurrence of symptoms. Hydraulic distension is used for preparation of veins. We have studied properties of vein interstitium, before and after peroperative distension, in 30 consecutive unselected patients. Segments of vein were studied for water content, swelling behaviour, tracer distribution, and uronic acid content. Initial water content was the same in distended and undistended vein; initial uronic acid content was slightly lower in distended veins, 8.7 (SD = 2.3) micrograms/m, n = 4 vs 10.5 (SD = 5.1) micrograms/mg dry weight, n = 6, not significant. The initial ratio, uronate/hydroxyproline was less in distended veins, 0.14 (SD = 0.05) n = 4 vs 0.19 (SD = 0.07), n = 6 in controls, not significant. Distended veins swelled less during incubation in saline. Average weight gain/initial weight was 0.65 (SD = 0.45), n = 27, and 1.1 (SD = 0.66), n = 25 in controls (p less than 0.01); change in water content/dry weight was 1.2 (SD = 1.1), n = 22, and 1.7 (SD = 1), n = 23 (p less than 0.02), in controls. Distended veins desorbed less uronic acid into the bath; 0.40 (SD = 0.2) microgram/mg wet tissue, n = 26 and 0.59 (SD = 0.3), n = 25 in controls (p less than 0.01). The pattern of uptake of two tracers 125I Serum albumin and 51Cr EDTA, was similar in both groups. These findings suggest alteration of the interstitial matrix of veins during distension. Histologic examination of glutaraldehyde-fixed tissue by light and electron microscopy revealed mural thinning and endothelial cell damage in distended veins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Changes in vein interstitium following distension for aortocoronary bypass. 260 Jan 35

Thin films of surface-active compounds, with or without particulate material, can be obtained by immersing and withdrawing a bare specimen grid from a solution/suspension of the compound. Immediately after withdrawing the grid, thinning of the film starts. Thinning is initially powered by gravity and capillary forces and will proceed in thin films (less than 100 nm) driven by intermolecular forces until the London-van der Waals attractive forces come to an equilibrium with electrostatic repulsion of similarly charged surfaces of the film. With small unilamellar vesicles prepared from the phospholipid dimyristoyl phosphatidyl choline (DMPC) the draining behaviour of these films was studied by cryo-electron microscopy. Small unilamellar vesicles were observed within the film as well as the coalescence of these vesicles into sheets ('leaky' membrane fusion). Sheets dominate the images when films are allowed to drain for longer periods (greater than 3 min). Thin films were formed on grids from catalase crystals suspended in a DMPC suspension and vitrified by cooling. High-resolution information was obtained by electron diffraction at low temperature and under low-dose conditions from catalase crystals surrounded by small vesicles as well as from catalase crystals surrounded by sheets of DMPC. In the latter case the water content drops from 99% (DMPC in small vesicles) to less than 30% (DMPC in sheets) during draining. Ferritin was added to a DMPC suspension and thin films were prepared and vitrified. After prolonged draining ferritin molecules were deposited in layers with a stepwise increase in thickness. Draining of thin films has thus a dehydrating effect as well as a sorting and ordering effect. These effects must be considered when using surface-active compounds at air-water interfaces as a slide and cover slip for electron microscopy.
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PMID:Phospholipid, nature's own slide and cover slip for cryo-electron microscopy. 270 3

Pleural pressure was measured by a capsule in 9th or 10th intercostal space (ics) of dogs during tetanic stimulation of phrenic nerves (PS). When lung border passed under capsule (bor.I) a marked negative spike occurred, reflecting pleural liquid pressure (Pliq). In 9th ics spike was briefer than during spontaneous breathing (SB), speed of lung border being 4.6 times greater. During PS spike was greater and longer in 10th than in 9th ics, lung volume at bor.I being 228 ml greater. Lung volume at bor.I was smaller during PS than passive inflation because of chest wall deformation. Dynamic fall in Pliq at bor.I has been estimated about 4 cm H2O during SB, and at least 12 and 16 cm H2O (in 9th and 10th ics, respectively) during PS. Dynamic fall in Pliq seems essentially a viscous loss: it increased with thinning of pleural liquid (increase in lung volume), and with speed and displacement of lung border. Results suggest that at ordinary lung volume viscous loss of pleural liquid in this region is about 2 cm H2O per cm displacement at a speed of 1 cm/sec.
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PMID:Lung border sweep upon phrenic stimulation: dynamic fall in pleural liquid pressure. 278 Nov 72


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