Search results for "Denervation"
showing 10 items of 60 documents
Biomaterials and bioactive molecules to drive differentiation in striated muscle tissue engineering
2015
International audience; The generation of engineered tissues and organs has entered into the clinical practice in response to the chronic lack of organ donors. In particular, for the skeletal and cardiac muscles the translational potential of tissue engineering approaches has clearly been shown, even though the construction of these tissues lags behind others given the hierarchical, highly organized architecture of striated muscles. Failure of the cardiac tissue leads to cardiovascular diseases, which are the leading cause of death in the developed world (Di Felice et al., 2014). On the other hand, there are many clinical cases where the loss of skeletal muscle due to a traumatic injury, an…
Changes of energy metabolism, myosin light chain composition, lactate dehydrogenase isozyme pattern and fibre type distribution of denervated fast-tw…
1985
The influence of low frequency (8-10 Hz) electrical stimulation on denervated fast-twitch muscle from rabbit was investigated. Prolonged direct stimulation of denervated muscle resulted in higher oxidative enzyme activities. Furthermore, single fibre analyses for succinate dehydrogenase showed a more uniform distribution of activity in stimulated-denervated muscle when compared to normal muscle. As was also the case following stimulation of innervated muscle, glycolytic enzymes were decreased in activity and the LDH-isozyme pattern was also shifted towards heart type. No change of the myosin light chain pattern could be observed after 56 days of stimulation.
The fine structure of de-and reinnervated muscle spindles
1974
Reinnervated muscle spindles in lower lumbrical muscles of rats studied 17 days to 24 months after crushing the sciatic nerve showed a series of alterations which have not been analysed, thus far, by electron microscopy. There was a striking increase of the number of intrafusal muscle fibers seen in approximately 20% of reinnervated spindles. These spindles showed 5–11 intrafusal muscle fibers whereas normal spindles usually contained 3–4 fibers only.
Bilateral olfactory deprivation reveals a selective noradrenergic regulatory input to the olfactory bulb.
2001
Unilateral olfactory deprivation in the rat induces changes in the catecholaminergic system of the olfactory bulb. Nevertheless, evidence suggests that unilateral deprivation does not fully prevent stimulation of the deprived bulb. The present report analyses the response of the catecholaminergic system of the olfactory bulb in fully deprived rats obtained by bilateral naris occlusion. The complete deprivation produces more rapid and dramatic changes in both the intrinsic and extrinsic catecholaminergic systems of the olfactory bulb. Intrinsic responses involve a rapid decrease in dopamine-containing cells to about 25% of controls, correlated with a decreased Fos expression in juxtaglomerul…
Synaptopodin regulates denervation-induced homeostatic synaptic plasticity
2013
Synaptopodin (SP) is a marker and essential component of the spine apparatus (SA), an enigmatic cellular organelle composed of stacked smooth endoplasmic reticulum that has been linked to synaptic plasticity. However, SP/SA-mediated synaptic plasticity remains incompletely understood. To study the role of SP/SA in homeostatic synaptic plasticity we here used denervation-induced synaptic scaling of mouse dentate granule cells as a model system. This form of plasticity is of considerable interest in the context of neurological diseases that are associated with the loss of neurons and subsequent denervation of connected brain regions. In entorhino-hippocampal slice cultures prepared from SP-de…
Carcinoma of the tongue and bulbar-onset amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: unusual differential diagnosis.
2007
We present a 72-year-old woman with progressive dysphagia, dysarthria and tongue palsy who was initially diagnosed with bulbar-onset amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). However, the absence of atrophy or fasciculations in the tongue, as in other voluntary muscles, and the lack of reproducible neurophysiological evidence of denervation, prompted a revision of the diagnostic work-up, which eventually led to the discovery of a carcinoma of the tongue. This case report describes a relatively rare type of oropharyngeal carcinoma that, in its early stage, resembled a bulbar-onset ALS. This differential diagnosis is unusual, and it was fostered by the persistent lack of atrophy of the tongue and …
Desmin pathology in neuromuscular diseases
1993
Desmin is an intermediate filament protein that in striated muscle is normally located at Z-bands, beneath the sarcolemma, and prominently at neuromuscular junctions. It is abundant during myogenesis and in regenerating fibers, but decreases in amount with maturation; in regenerating and denervated muscle fibers it is co-expressed with vimentin. Aggregates of desmin occur as nonspecific cytoplasmic bodies or cytoplasmic spheroid complexes, similar to the aggregates of keratin filaments in Mallory bodies or the neurofilament aggregates in Lewy bodies. In all three instances, alpha-B crystallin may be associated with desmin. There are now increasing numbers of neuromuscular disorders in which…
Die Wirkung von Acetylcholin, Dekamethonium und d-Tubocurarin am isolierten Rattenzwerchfell in Abh�ngigkeit von der Denervationsdauer
1955
An 41 isolierten Zwerchfellpraparaten der Ratte wurde zu verschiedenen Zeitpunkten nach Exharese des N. phrenicus die Wirkung von Acetylcholin (Ach), Decamethonium (C 10) und d-Tubocurarin (dTc) untersucht. Die Reaktionen des Muskels zeigten eine charakteristische Abhangigkeit von der Denervationsdauer. Ach verursachte eine Verminderung der Hubhohe elektrisch ausgeloster Einzelzuckungen, Kontraktur und Kontraktur-Ruckstand. Die Wirkung von C 10 ahnelte der von Ach weitgehend. Dagegen fuhrte Gabe von dTc zu einer Senkung der „Grundlinie“ und zur Verminderung der Hubhohe der Einzelzuckungen.
Über den Einfluss von Acetylcholin auf das Membranpotential denervierter Rattenzwerchfelle
1957
The membran potential of isolated rat-diaphragms has been measured by means of intracellular micro-electrodes, in order to study changes of the resting potential and of the depolarizing action of acetylcholine after section of the phrenic nerve. Within 80 days after denervation, the membrane potential was found to fall exponentially from 87 mV to 66 mV. The action of acetylcholine, on the other hand, was found to be independent of the duration of denervation: between the 4th and the 80th day of denervation: 10−5g/ml acetylcholine always caused the membrane potential to fall by an average of the 9 mV.
Expression of functional α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor during mammalian muscle development and denervation
1999
We have studied, on the transcriptional, protein and functional level, the expression of alpha7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR) in the course of rat muscle development, denervation and renervation. At foetal day 13, alpha7 nAChR expression was observed in somites and developing muscles of the back, but not yet in migrating myoblasts. Two days later, concomitant with myoblast aggregation, the alpha7 isoform began to be expressed in isolated myoblasts, with the highest level of expression in the frontal zone of the migrating wave. On foetal day 18, a time when the myoblasts in the upper hindleg have fused, alpha7 nAChR expression was most prominent in the outer layer of muscle tissu…