Search results for " bodies"
showing 10 items of 250 documents
Experimental emetine myopathy: enzyme histochemical, electron microscopic, and immunomorphological studies.
1993
Ipecac, containing emetine hydrochloride, is used by patients with anorexia nervosa to induce vomiting. Its chronic usage may result in a myopathy and a cardiomyopathy, the former marked by cytoplasmic bodies. We studied myopathological changes after daily injections of female Wistar rats with emetine hydrochloride intraperitoneally for periods of 4, 5, 9, and 10 weeks. the extensor digitorum longus muscle and the soleus muscle showed core-like lesions, streaming of the z-discs, nemaline bodies, cytoplasmic bodies, and spheroid cytoplasmic bodies. Immunomorphological studies revealed increased amounts of desmin. During a period of repair, i.e., 2, 4, and 6 weeks after termination of emetine…
Hysteroscopic Management of Endometrial Osseous Metaplasia Mimicking a Foreign Body.
2021
Neurochemical and morphological studies on demyelination in multiple sclerosis with special reference to etiological aspects.
1972
Light microscopic studies were used as control for neurochemical studies and these showed that some micro plaques could be found also in areas which were normal on visual inspection. Also foreign cell infiltrates were found outside any clear plaque material. The number of these cells did not correlate with other findings like lipid or enzyme chemistry. In electronmicroscopic studies astrocytes demonstrated most lysosomes and phagocytosis of myelin. This increased lysosomal reaction was demonstrated also in biochemical analyses performed on MS biopsy specimens. Occasional nuclear changes like inclusion bodies and protrusion of inner nuclear membrane were observed suggesting some exogenous, p…
Neonatal form of nemaline myopathy, muscle immaturity, and a microvascular injury.
1990
An infant with a neonatal form of nemaline myopathy showed ultrastructural features of muscle immaturity. Immaturity was characterized by an abnormal presence of myotubes, as well as cells in clusters within a common basement membrane and a great number of satellite cells adhering to very small muscle fibers. In addition, degenerative changes and a severe microvascular lesion were observed. The pathologic findings in the muscle of this patient were those of neonatal nemaline myopathy complicating severe microvascular injury, possibly induced by an unknown toxic agent. ( J Child Neurol 1990;5:122-126).
Surplus protein myopathies.
2001
Abstract Certain muscular dystrophies are marked by absence or reduction of mutant proteins, foremost dystrophinopathies and sarcoglycanopathies. Conversely, other sporadic and familial neuromuscular conditions are marked by a surplus of proteins present in a granular or filamentous form, such as desmin-related myopathies, actinopathy and, perhaps, hyaline body myopathy. This emerging group of congenital myopathies is clinically, immunohistochemically, and genetically diverse. Clinically, early- and late-onset diseases with variable courses are described. Immunohistochemically, mutant gene-related and other proteins have been identified by immunohistochemistry. Mutations in the desmin and α…
Desmin-related neuromuscular disorders
1995
Desmin, the intermediate filament protein of skeletal muscle fibers, cardiac myocytes, and certain smooth muscle cells, is a member of the cytoskeleton linking Z-bands with the plasmalemma and the nucleus. The pathology of desmin in human neuromuscular disorders is always marked by increased amounts, diffusely or focally. Desmin is highly expressed in immature muscle fibers, both during fetal life and regeneration as well as in certain congenital myopathies, together with vimentin. Desmin is also enriched in neonatal myotonic dystrophy and small fibers in infantile spinal muscular atrophy. Focal accretion of desmin may be twofold, in conjunction with certain inclusion bodies, cytoplasmic an…
Silver Impregnation of Alzheimer's Neurofibrillary Changes Counterstained for Basophilic Material and Lipofuscin Pigment
1988
A method is described in which selective silver staining of Alzheimer's neurofibrillary changes is combined with staining of cell nuclei, Nissl material, and lipofuscin granules. Formalin fixed, paraffin embedded sections of human autopsy tissue are silver stained according to a method proposed by Gallyas. Lipofuscin is stained by crotonaldehyde fuchsin following performic acid oxidation. Nissl substance is visualized by either Darrow red or gallocyanin-chrome alum staining. Architectonic units showing the specific pathology and the neuronal types prone to develop the neurofibrillary changes can be recognized using this technique.
Primary desminopathies.
2007
• Introduction • Desmin is an essential component of the extrasarcomeric cytoskeleton in striated muscle cells • Distal myopathy,cardiac arrhythmias,cardiomyopathy:classical criteria of primary desminopathies • Sub-sarcolemmal and cytoplasmic desmin-positive protein aggregates:the morphological hallmark of primary and secondary desminopathies • The spectrum of pathogenic desmin gene mutations • The molecular pathogenesis of primary desminopathies: some answers gained,but even more questions raised • Diagnostic work-up to distinguish primary from secondary desminopathies • Treatment and clinical management of primary desminopathy patients Abstract Mutations of the human desmin gene o…
Granular nuclear inclusion body disease: Fine structure of tibial muscle and sural nerve
1985
Fine granular (hyaline) intranuclear inclusion bodies were found in perivascular cells of a muscle and a sural nerve biopsy from a 32-year-old woman with slowly progressive motor disturbances. The hyaline nuclear inclusion bodies could be distinguished from other intranuclear hyaline inclusions by their granularity, the size of the granules (approximately 5-15 nm), and the positive iron staining reaction. They were not seen in muscle fibers or Schwann cells. Because of these apparently pathognomonic structural features the patient appears to present a condition that has not been described before.
HIGH PROPORTION OF DEMENTIA WITH LEWY BODIES IN THE POSTMORTEMS OF A MENTAL HOSPITAL IN GERMANY
1997
Objective. Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is under-recognized in Germany. No data on the number of patients suffering from this condition in Germany are available at present. We were interested in the proportion of DLB in the postmortems of demented inpatients in the care of a psychogeriatric service. Design. In a retrospective study we examined consecutive postmortems of inpatients who died in one mental hospital. Setting. A suburban and rural old age psychiatry service in Germany. Patients. 103 consecutive postmortems had been performed from 9/1987 to 6/1995. Fifty-nine (57.3%) of all cases warranted the clinical diagnosis of dementia (DSM-III-R). Measures. The causes of dementia were ex…