Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The fine structure of hibernating bat spermatozoa (Vesperugo savi and Rinolophus f.e.) has been studied by SEM and TEM, during their prolonged storage in female reproductive tract. The main morphological aspects of sperm portions: head, neck, middle piece, principal piece and terminal piece have been described. The Author besides comparisons with other mammalian species and Chiroptera, suggests some typical ultrastructural features of these Chiroptera, as the complete absence of vacuoles in the nuclear chromatin and corrugated structures in the post-acrosomal zone. Moreover electron-dense material in the subacrosomal space and three mitochondria in the neck were observed. Two areas of fusion between outer dense fibers 3 and 8 and the inner ends of the respective longitudinal columns of the fibrous sheath and asymmetrical arrangement of the outer dense fibers of the principal piece were found.
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PMID:[The fine structure of spermatozoa from Chiroptera]. 624 6

A series of 52 patients in whom 0.5% bupivacaine was used to produce spinal analgesia for awake Caesarean section is described. Analgesia tended to be asymmetrical and of limited extent until the patients were turned from the left lateral to the right lateral position immediately after injecting the spinal solution. This movement produced a more symmetrical block with better cephalic spread. Initially 26-gauge spinal needles were passed through a Sise introducer, but this was modified to a needle through needle technique whereby a long-shafted 26-gauge needle was passed through a Tuohy needle which was subsequently used to insert an extradural catheter. The optimal volume of bupivacaine was 2.25-2.75 ml. The mean +/- SEM time to achieve maximal spread of analgesia was 17.5 +/- 0.6 min. The mean- +/- SEM time to the administration of the first postoperative analgesic was 163.5 +/- 7.0 min. The disadvantages of the technique were hypotension and the unpredictable spread of analgesia.
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PMID:Subarachnoid bupivacaine 0.5% for caesarean section. 653 16

The response of ependyma to injury was investigated in rats following placement of bilateral lesions in the floor of the fourth ventricle. Animals were sacrificed from 2-60 days post-operatively and the brains were prepared in the conventional manner for comparative LM, SEM and TEM examination. For LM radioautography, randomly selected lesioned rats received either a single i.p. injection (5 muCi/g BW) or multiple injections (2 muCi/g) of 3H-thymidine prior to sacrifice. Focal disruption of the lining resulted in significant qualitative and quantitative changes in the ependyma at the wound margins. Labelling of normally quiescent ependymal cells occurred from day 2-6 post-operatively, however, the level of turnover was relatively low. Labelling was maximum on day 2 and was greater at the medial than lateral margin of the wound. During the first postoperative week, a gradual increase was observed in the number of ependymal cells per unit length at the margins of the wound concomitant with an abrupt reduction in wound diameter. This was consistent with the assumption that newly formed cells were added to the ependymal sheet at the leading edges of the wound. From 14-60 days after injury, further repair resulted from asymmetrical spreading and thinning of the ependymal sheet in the absence of mitotic activity. Quantitatively, this was reflected in a reduction in cell number at the leading edges of the wound that was most pronounced at the lateral margin. At day 60 neither epithelialization nor wound closure was complete and the normal architecture of the lining had not been fully restored. These results suggest that ependyma in the fourth ventricle of the postnatal rat undergoes a process of only limited repair following injury.
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PMID:Ependymal cells of the rat fourth ventricle: response to injury. 663 67

Hypoglycaemia may cause transient cognitive impairment and neurological deficits that are frequently unilateral. The effect of mild hypoglycaemia (serum glucose level 3.4 +/- 0.1 mmol/l; mean +/- SEM) on regional cerebral blood flow and cerebrovascular resistance was studied in eight right-handed children with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (age 14.9 +/- 0.7 years; diabetes duration 7.4 +/- 1.1 years; six males) using the intravenous xenon-133 clearance method. Global mean cerebral grey and white matter blood flow, adjusted to mean pCO2 of cohort, showed a trend towards an increase from 54.7 +/- 3.5 ml.100 g-1.min-1 at baseline euglycaemia to 58.0 +/- 4.1 ml.100 g-1.min-1 during hypoglycaemia (p = 0.075). Statistically significant changes were seen in global mean cerebral grey matter blood flow, as indexed by initial slope, which increased from 88.0 +/- 6.5 min-1 before hypoglycaemia to 96.3 +/- 7.2 min-1 during hypoglycaemia (p < 0.05). Cerebral grey matter blood flow was significantly higher in the right hemisphere compared to the left during hypoglycaemia (p < 0.01) but not at baseline euglycaemia. Measurements of global cerebrovascular resistance showed a borderline decrease from 1.64 +/- 0.11 to 1.54 +/- 0.11 mm Hg.ml-1.100 g-1.min-1 (p < 0.09). In conclusion, mild hypoglycaemia is associated with increases in cerebral blood flow which are greater in grey matter flow indices and in the right hemisphere. We speculate that asymmetrical cerebral blood flow changes may explain the frequent laterality of neurological deficits during severe hypoglycaemia.
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PMID:Regional cerebral blood flow during hypoglycaemia in children with IDDM. 859 24

It is well known that arginine vasopressin (AVP) produces up to a 40-fold increase (0.1 to 4.0 microL/min.cm2) in net water flux across the amphibian urinary bladder under an osmotic gradient (mucosal side 10% hypotonic). No AVP effect is observed when the gradient is in the opposite direction (serosal hypotonic). Similar asymmetrical behavior to osmotic gradients occurs in the frog corneal epithelium. This rectification phenomenon has not been satisfactorily explained. We measured net water fluxes in bladder sacs and confirmed that AVP has no effect when the serosal bath is hypotonic. We reasoned that the 'abnormal' serosal osmolarity was inducing changes in membrane water permeability, the very parameter being measured. Thus, we studied the effect of solution osmolarity on diffusional water flow (Jdw) across the frog bladder using 3H2O. As expected, AVP doubled Jdw (in either direction from 12 to 21 microL/min.cm2) when the serosal solution was iso-osmolar regardless of mucosal osmolarity. However, in the AVP-stimulated bladders, hypo-osmolarity of the serosal solution reduced Jdw by 42%, an effect that was reversible when normal osmolarity was re-established. Amphotericin B (instead of AVP) was used to irreversibly increase the permeability to water of the apical membrane. Under these conditions, basolateral hypotonicity also reversibly decreased Jdw by 32%, suggesting the basolateral membrane as the site where permeability is reduced. SEM and TEM of the tissue shows extreme swelling when it was exposed to serosal hypotonicity with or without AVP and typical surface morphology changes following hormone stimulation. We conclude that this swelling may initiate a signaling mechanism that reduces basolateral water permeability. These findings constitute evidence of basolateral water channel permeability regulation, which can also contribute to cell volume regulation.
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PMID:Evidence of basolateral water permeability regulation in amphibian urinary bladder. 946 4

The aim of this study was to characterize propagating contractions in the unprepared colon of freely ambulating mini pigs. A telemetric method was used to record colonic motility continuously for six consecutive days in a 40-cm segment of proximal colon. Propagating contractions occurred over a wide range of propagation rates (0.4-16.7 cm/sec), peak amplitudes (10-116 mm Hg) and pressure wave durations (5.3-40.0 sec). Propagating contractions were divided into two groups by duration and wave-form: short-duration symmetrical and long-duration asymmetrical. Short-duration (7.8 +/- 0.9 sec) symmetrical wave-from propagating contractions exhibited a higher frequency (27.9 +/- 2.6 events/day), more rapid propagation rate (3-16.7 cm/sec; mean +/- SEM: 4.9 +/- 1.7 cm/sec), and a lower peak amplitude (31.2 +/- 0.9 mm Hg) compared to long-duration (19.2 +/- 5.1 sec) asymmetrical propagating contractions, which were less frequent (6.1 +/- 0.7 events/day), slower in propagation rate (0.4-2 cm/sec; mean +/- SEM: 1.5 +/- 0.7 cm/sec), and higher in peak amplitude (51.6 +/- 2.4 mm Hg). The results show that propagating contractions occur over a wide spectrum, from short-duration, low-amplitude, rapidly propagating contractions to long-duration, high-amplitude, slowly propagating contractions.
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PMID:Characterization of propagating contractions in proximal colon of ambulatory mini pigs. 959 Apr 7

Continuous high frequency stimulation of the ventral intermediate nucleus of the thalamus (Vim), delivered through surgically implanted quadripolar electrodes, alleviates tremor in Parkinson's disease (PD) and essential tremor (ET). The Vim is adjacent to the thalamic reticular nuclei, where sleep spindles originate according to animal models. In order to determine whether Vim stimulation affects sleep spindles, six patients (4 PD, 2 ET), aged 60-69 years, were recorded on a control night and a stimulation night (130 Hz, 2-3 V; right stimulation in five patients and bilateral stimulation in one patient). Stimulation did not modify sleep quality or architecture. Sleep spindles were present and symmetrical in five out of six patients under stimulation. However, in one patient with a sustained 'thalamotomy-like effect' that abolished tremor, spindles were asymmetrical even without stimulation. In each patient, spindle density was similar on both nights (mean+/- SEM: 2.25+/-0. 61 spindles per min of stage 2 sleep vs. 1.84+/-0.31). In an attempt to promote sleep two different patterns of stimulation were applied in the region of ventrooralis posterior and reticularis nuclei in five patients in the awake state. Continuous low frequency stimulation (5 Hz, 0.1 V), and repeated trains of 15 Hz for 1 s every 15 s mimicking the pattern of physiological spindles, each failed to induce sleep or cortical synchronization. We conclude that Vim stimulation, unlike thalamotomy, selectively reduces tremor without altering sleep or sleep spindles. Our results also suggest that low frequency stimulation applied in the region of the reticular nuclei does not induce sleep.
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PMID:Effect of low and high frequency thalamic stimulation on sleep in patients with Parkinson's disease and essential tremor. 1073 90

This report describes the characteristics for the development of a compound lens that consists of a single pole-piece objective lens and an electrostatic bipotential lens. By applying a relatively small voltage of around 1 kV to the specimen and the bipotential lens, the image quality for low acceleration voltage is improved to a condition better than with just a single pole-piece lens. Even if the wafer is tilted to a large angle, the electric field near the specimen does not become asymmetrical, and there is no occurrence of astigmatic aberration or a reduction of the secondary electron signal. Therefore, 300 mm diameter wafers can be tilted with large angles to observe patterns, particles and defects with high-resolution SEM. Lastly, when the specimen is not tilted, a topographic image of the specimen surface can be obtained by detecting the secondary electron with dual detectors.
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PMID:Single pole-piece objective lens with electrostatic bipotential lens for SEM. 1211 22

This review qualitatively and quantitatively compares the gross shape and size of lenses from different species as a function of their fibre cell organization. Grossly, all vertebrate lenses are asymmetrical, oblate spheroids with size and spheroidicity that varies considerably between species. Correlative LM and SEM analysis of the basic structural element of lenses, the fibre cell, shows that the average equatorial fibre width and thickness is relatively constant between most species. This indicates that inter-species differences in lens size is primarily a function of fibre number. Comparable analysis demonstrates that lens spheroidicity is due at least in part, to differences in the average anterior and posterior fibre end segment thickness in relation to that at the equator. In addition, the above analysis, supplemented by 3D-CAD reconstructions, illustrates how lifelong lens growth produces crescent fibres, that become arranged in age-related, concentric growth shells overlaid in slightly imprecise register. The reason for the non-exact registering of growth shells is that, while the vast majority of fibres are hexagonal in cross-section, a very small minority are pentagonal in cross-section and of inconstant width and thickness. Hexagonal and pentagonal fibres are required because the increase in the circumference of successive growth shells is frequently less than the widths of hexagonal fibres. Thus, lens growth is likely accomplished by a combination of the addition of successive growth shells containing more fibres, as well as by the addition of growth shells containing equal numbers of fibres that are incrementally wider as a function of radial location. Finally, SEM analysis, supplemented by 3D-CAD reconstructions, highlights the fact that the end-to-end arrangement of fibres within growth shells, the suture patterns, is not identical in all vertebrate lenses. This is important because lens optical quality is directly related to lens suture type and a negative influence of sutures on lens optical quality increases with age and as a result of some ocular surgeries (vitrectomy and trabeculectomy). These facts suggest that future research efforts should be directed at determining the factor or factors that influence or direct the differences in fibre shape, size and organization in branched and unbranched suture lenses.
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PMID:Fibre cell organization in crystalline lenses. 1510 47

The study of cystic cavities and collagen fibers fragmentation is useful to for a better knowledge of pathogenesis and surgical therapy of medial ascending aortic degeneration. Thus, the aim of this study was to describe by scanning electron microscopy the surfaces and shape of the cysts, measure their area, and identify microcystic spaces related to this degenerative disease. Scanning electron microscopy analysis was performed in 16 out of 36 patients who underwent surgery for ascending aorta dilatation with associated aortic valve disease. The aortic medial wall showed a cribrose appearance at low magnification (x50-100) and the intima was effuse. At high magnification (x500-2000), small cavities (clefts) lined by normal or fragmented elastic fibers and large cavities (pseudocystes) with anfractuous borders lined by fragmented elastic fibers and smooth muscle cells were observed. Furthermore, in the outer media wall microvessels lined by endothelium were also observed. These changes were lacking or less pronounced in normal aorta. SEM allows one to better identify the pathological cavities and to differentiate them from microvessels. These pathological cavities are more numerous and larger in the convexity than in the concavity of the aorta in according to our previous morphological and morphometric findings in asymmetrical aorta dilatation.
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PMID:Scanning electron microscopy of aortic medial changes in aortic ascending dilatation. 1547 26


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