Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (cage)
29,987 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. The external surface of the rib cage and abdominal wall in anaesthetized cats was surgically exposed in order to record their movements cinematographically in spontaneous breathing and in paralysed cats, during artificial positive pressure ventilation. 2. Cine-stereophotography was used to allow the recording of the movements of a set of markers placed on the external surface of the trunk wall and the corresponding stereometric data were numerically and graphically processed into three-dimensional drawings. The cine-film frames corresponding to the phases of maximum inflation and deflation of the lungs were analysed to reveal the changes in configuration associated with the respiratory movements of the trunk wall. 3. The changes in shape of the diaphragm and the diaphragm and the displacements of the abdominal viscera between extreme inflation and deflation were recorded by X-ray photography. 4. During spontaneous inspiratory movements, the ribs rotated outwards and rostrally about the costovertebral joints, bringing about an increase in the transverse dimensions of the cage all along its length; these movements were accompanied by a clear-cut caudad displacement of the sternum, caused by the straightening of the costal cartilages and by the widening of the angles defined at sternochondral joints between the sternum and each of the costal cartilages. 5. Neuromuscular blockade abolished muscle tone in the trunk wall, allowing the weight of the viscera markedly to deform its configuration. 6. The inspiratory rib movements of the paralysed animal during artificial inspiration were similar to those during spontaneous breathing but the movements of the sternum were inverted and showed small cranial displacements. 7. The loss of muscular tone under neuromuscular blockade made the abdominal wall more compliant than the rib cage to the positive lung pressure and allowed greater mobility of the viscera with consequent distortion of the shape of the diaphragm. 8. The role of rib cage muscle tone in meeting requirements of purely configurational character in such a shell-like structure is discussed in relation to the optimal mechanical performance of the diaphragm.
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PMID:The changes in configuration of the rib cage and abdomen during breathing in the anaesthetized cat. 14 Feb 38

We examined 13 Beall model 104 prostheses recovered at surgery or autopsy 10 to 84 1/2 months after insertion and observed the pattern of prosthesis wear. We defined wear as "mild" when the disc was notched but neither the metal of the struts was exposed not the cloth seat torn. In "moderate" wear the disc was notched, the Teflon coating of the struts was worn away exposing the underlying metal but the cloth of the set was not torn. The cloth seat was torn in "severe" wear, exposing the metal seat and causing a different pattern of disc erosion. In one case this allowed the disc to tilt into the valve lumen and, later, to escape from its cage. Most of the prostheses studied showed "moderate" or "severe" wear. We believe that some degree of wear is inevitable. Clinical signs and symptoms were not specific but a rough correlation existed between the severity of hemolysis, as indicated by serum LDH levels, and the degree of prosthesis wear. When wear was "severe", the results of cardiac catheterization studies usually mirrored the change, but there were a few exceptions. All patients with the Beall model 104 prosthesis may eventually develop "severe" wear, and we recommend regular reassessment with a view toward prosthesis replacement.
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PMID:The pathology of wear in the Beall model 104 heart valve prosthesis. 14 53

Normally weaned females (at 30 days) displayed seasonal cyclic changes in natality and the characteristics of the young. Natality in the spring and summer was high, the litters were large, the proportion of females and males in the litter was equal and deaths among the unweaned young were very few. Natality in the autumn and winter was low and the litters were small and consisted mainly of males. The death rate among the young was higher than in the spring and summer. Prematurely weaned females (at 15 days) displayed no seasonal cycle either in natality or in the characteristics of the young. The studied parameters corresponded to the values found in the spring and summer in normally weaned females. No differences were found in maternal retrieving, but there was a marked difference in nest-building. The normally weaned female tore up paper (building material) into small fragments 24 hours before giving birth and dropped the young into a soft nest of finely shredded paper. On leaving the nest it covered the young up. The prematurely weaned female scattered the paper about the cage 24 hours before giving birth and dropped the young into a depression stamped out among whole pieces of paper. It did not cover the young up on leaving the nest. The cause of the difference in building behaviour is evidently that prematurely weaned females failed to acquire early experience of this behaviour between the 15th and 30th day of life.
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PMID:Significance of the weaning period for natality and maternal behaviour of laboratory rats. 14 79

We related diaphragm electromyographic activity (Edi) to transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) in man during graded inspiratory efforts. Estimates of rib cage and abdominal volume displacements were based on their anteroposterior (AP) diameter changes. The diaphragm was assumed to contract isometrically when subjects performed inspiratory efforts against a closed airway at specified abdominothoracic configurations, increasing Edi and Pdi while holding lung volume and rib case and abdominal AP diameters constant. The relationship between Pdi and Edi depends primarily on abdominothoracic configuration rather than lung volume. For equal increments in lung volume, the Pdi developed at constant Edi is four to eight times more sensitive to changes in abdominal than in rib cage AP diameter. We demonstrate an isofunctional state of the diaphragm at different lung volumes, when increases in lung volume and rib cage AP diameter are compensated for by slight decreases in abdominal AP diameter, resulting in a constant relationship between Edi and Pdi. We conclude that diaphragm shortening is reflected more directly in abdominal displacement than in lung volume change.
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PMID:Mechanics of the human diaphragm during voluntary contraction: statics. 14 76

The effects of para-chlorophenylalanine (PCPA) on mouse killing behavior were examined in natural killer rats. Forty-eight hr after injection, this serotonin synthesis inhibitor, at relatively low doses of 75 and 150 mg/kg, facilitated mouse killing, as indicated by a decrease in latency to attack the mouse. This effect was revealed in a test of satiation, in which five successive mice were presented to the rat, and also in a novel cage situation. Other than the shorter latencies to attack and kill mice, the killing response was similar in topography to the natural kill. The increase in killing after PCPA injection was associated with a reliable reduction in brain serotonin and in 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, and the time courses of the behavioral and biochemical changes were generally similar. In contrast to PCPA, injection of the serotonin precursor 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP, 100 mg/kg) reliably lengthened attack and kill latencies in killer rats. In rats pretreated with PCPA, 5-HTP not only reversed this drug's facilitation of killing, but completely blocked killing in 67% of the rats tested. These results strengthen the hypothesis that brain serotonergic neurons are involved in the inhibition of mouse killing.
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PMID:Effects of para-chlorophenylalanine and 5-hydroxytryptophan on mouse killing behavior in killer rats. 15 66

A technique was developed for continuous iv infusion chemotherapy in an inbred rat model of acute myelogenous leukemia. Polyethylene tubing was inserted surgically into the internal jugular vein of adult WF rats, burrowed sc to the base of the tail, and connected to an infusion pump. A flexible spring was sutured at the base of the tail and fastened to the cage wall; it protected the infusion catheter and allowed movement of the rat within the cage. This technique was used to compare bolus with continuous infusion therapy with adriamycin, cytosine arabinoside, and neocarzinostatin. Only small differences were noted in host toxicity and in antitumor effect against tumor grown as a subcutaneous myeloblastoma. Nearly three times more neocarzinostatin was required by continuous infusion for an effect equivalent to that of bolus injection. In contrast, continuous infusion of methotrexate with concurrent thymidine infusion prevented toxicity, enhanced the antitumor effect, and prolonged survival. This infusion system should facilitate rapid preclinical evaluation of drugs considered for constant iv infusion therapy.
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PMID:Technique for preclinical evaluation of continuous infusion chemotherapy with the use of WF rat acute myelogenous leukemia. 15 52

In man, there is wide interindividual range in the tidal volume response to CO2. To determine which (rib cage or abdomen-diaphragm) compartment had a greater influence on this range, ventilatory response to CO2 was measured, using Read's method, in eight men and two women seated in a constant-pressure body plethysmograph. Rib cage and abdominal tidal volume was simultaneously measured using magnetometers. Correcting for body size, the tidal volume response of the abdominal compartment was similar in all subjects, whereas that of the rib cage was larger in subjects with high tidal volume response to CO2; a significant correlation was found (P less than 0.01). Rib cage volume displacement lagged behind abdominal in all subjects; phase lag was greatest in the subject with the lowest ventilatory response to CO2. These results suggest that, at high levels of ventilation, a larger volume displacement of the rib cage may reflect a more effective coupling of the diaphragm pressure generator to it or alternatively a reduction in its impedance relative to the abdominal compartment.
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PMID:Contribution of rib cage and abdomen-diaphragm to tidal volume during CO2 rebreathing. 15 12

In a series of experiments, the effect of parachlorophenylalanine (PCPA) on shock-induced fighting was assessed rats raised and maintained under either a 12-hr alternating light-dark cycle (LD) or constant light conditions (LL). PCPA increased shock-induced aggression only in LL groups when testing was accomplished using a 2 mA shock; PCPA resulted in increased aggression in groups from the LD condition only when testing was done at 1 mA. A procedure that used castrated and intact cagemates to manipulate home-cage social experience provided evidence for a role for social experience in determining differences between LL and LD reared rats in shock-induced aggression. However, these data also suggested that home-cage social experience was not a factor in the lighting condition influence on the effect of PCPA on shock-induced aggression. Finally, a separate experiment demonstrated that diurnal rhythms in shock-induced aggression were disrupted by handling and vehicle injection in the control procedures, so the possible role of serotonin in diurnal rhythms of aggression behavior could not be assessed.
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PMID:Influence of PCPA, shock level, and home-cage conditions on shock-induced aggression. 16 May 69

A colony of rabbits free from coccidia was established in 1974 by weaning young at 25 days of age from dams infected with coccidia. Until now Bordetella, Pasteurella and Psoroptes cuniculi have not been detected either, and neither diarrhea nor death has occurred in weanlings of the colony. However, the mortality of sucklings was significantly high owing to cannibalism and tread by their dams. The weaning rate was effectively improved by use of a large nursing cage (3,100 cm2) and sterilized hay on a stainless steel mesh floor of the nursing cage.
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PMID:[Establishment of a colony of Japanese white rabbits free from coccidia and their breeding performance (author's transl)]. 16 Aug 72

Herpesvirus saimiri was naturally transmitted from squirrel monkeys excreting the virus to one of two owl monkeys housed in the same cage. The owl monkey became infected approximately three months after contact was initiated. H. saimiri was consistently isolated from the peripheral lymphocytes until this animal died eight months later. During this period the owl monkey developed specific antibody to H. saimiri to a maximal neutralization index of 5.5 logs. The other monkey remained uninfected for an ovservation period of one year. The documentation of this horizontal transmission of H. saimiri infection from squirrel monkeys to an owl monkey suggests that owl monkeys developing spontaneous malignant lymphomas associated with H. saimiri infection may also have acquired the infection in this manner.
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PMID:Experimental horizontal transmission of Herpesvirus saimiri from squirrel monkeys to an owl monkey. 17 63


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