Search results for "MUCOSA"

showing 10 items of 1066 documents

Morphology and chronology of ischemic mucosal changes in the small intestine

1983

The morphology and chronology of an absolute ischemia was investigated on the small intestine of man and rat. It could be shown that the morphogenesis of ischemic damage to the intestinal mucosa in man does not differ from that in the rat. However, there are crucial and in therapeutic terms significant differences in the time course of the ischemic damage to the intestinal mucosa. Whereas in the small intestine of the rat, the first appreciable alterations - detachment and disruption of the lining epithelium at the villous tip - are already to be observed after absolute ischemia lasting 15 min, in the human small intestine the same lesions only occur after 4 h. A comparable complete necrosi…

MalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyNecrosisIschemiaMorphogenesislaw.inventionNecrosisIntestinal mucosaIschemialawIntestine SmallDrug DiscoverymedicineAnimalsHumansIntestinal MucosaGenetics (clinical)ChemistryRats Inbred StrainsGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseMolecular medicineEpitheliumSmall intestineRatsMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structureMicroscopy Electron ScanningMolecular MedicineElectron microscopemedicine.symptomKlinische Wochenschrift
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Gastric control of duodenal electric activity--the function of the gastroduodenal junction.

1975

An investigation was made into the links between electric activity of antral and of duodeno-jejunal musculature in different functional conditions. The function of the gastroduodenal junction in this linking mechanism was analysed. The following observations were made: (a) in the absence of gastric stimulation, the slow electric activities of stomach and duodenum appear to be completely independent; (b) the gastroduodenal junction evidences no electric activity of its own but is affected by that of the two adjacent structures; (c) chemical stimulation of the gastric mucosa causes activation of the electric and mechanical activity of the stomach and analogous activation of duodenal musculatu…

MalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyPhysiologyDuodenummedicine.medical_treatmentStimulationBiochemistryGastroduodenal junctionmedicineGastric mucosaAnimalsLigatureAntrumElectrodesChemistryStomachdigestive oral and skin physiologyStomachTemperatureElectric Stimulationmedicine.anatomical_structureDuodenumCatsFemalemedicine.symptomMuscle contractionMuscle ContractionArchives internationales de physiologie et de biochimie
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Nonceliac wheat sensitivity in the context of multiple food hypersensitivity: new data from confocal endomicroscopy.

2015

Dear Editor, We enjoyed reading the article by Fritscher-Ravens et al who showed, by confocal endomicroscopy, that candidate food antigens caused immediate duodenal mucosa damage in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients with a prolonged clinical history of symptoms after meals. Their in vivo data add evidence to the relationship between IBS and food allergy and seem to reinforce our hypothesis that a percentage of “nonceliac wheat sensitive” (NCWS) -patients with an IBS-like clinical presentation could suffer from non-immunoglobulin E-mediated wheat allergy. However, we would suggest that the very high percentage of positive confocal laser endomicroscopy patients (CLE) -22 out of 36- foun…

MalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtySettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaDuodenumConfocalContext (language use)Nonceliac wheat sensitivity; multiple food hypersensitivity; confocal endomicroscopy.Endoscopy GastrointestinalIrritable Bowel SyndromeNonceliac wheat sensitivityEndomicroscopymedicineHumansSensitivity (control systems)Intestinal Mucosamultiple food hypersensitivityMicroscopy ConfocalHepatologybusiness.industryGastroenterologyconfocal endomicroscopy.Food hypersensitivityFoodFemalebusinessFood HypersensitivityGastroenterology
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Clinicopathological and Immunohistochemical Study of Oral Amalgam Pigmentation

2012

Amalgam tattoo, the most common exogenous oral pigmentation, can sometimes be confused with melanotic lesions, being then biopsied. We present the clinicopathological characteristics of 6 biopsied cases (5 females and 1 male) of oral amalgam pigmentation. The most common location was the gingival mucosa, followed by the buccal and palatal mucosa. Morphology and distribution (stromal, perivascular, perineural, endomysial) of pigmentation was variable; there was only 1 case with fibrous capsular reaction and likewise only a single case of granulomatous foreign body reaction. Morphological variability is conditioned by the timing and amount of the pigment deposit, which is often associated wit…

MalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyStromal cellBiopsyGingivaAntigens Differentiation MyelomonocyticHLA-DR alpha-ChainsDental AmalgamMelanosisDiagnosis DifferentialPhagocytosisAntigens CDMetals HeavyBiopsymedicineHumansMast CellsPigmentation disorderGranulomabiologymedicine.diagnostic_testCD117business.industryForeign-Body ReactionMacrophagesAmalgam tattooMouth MucosaGeneral MedicineBuccal administrationMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMelanosisCorrosionProto-Oncogene Proteins c-kitstomatognathic diseasesGranulomabiology.proteinFemaleMetallothioneinMicroscopy PolarizationbusinessPigmentation DisordersActa Otorrinolaringologica (English Edition)
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Ischemia and post-ischemic regeneration of the small intestinal mucosa

1979

After reversible ligation of the arcade vessels of the proximal jejunum, the intestinal mucosa was investigated by light microscopic and autoradiographic methods after 15, 30, 60, 120 and 300 min of ischemia. Early ischemic damage to the mucosa (after about 15 min) is characterized by shedding of not yet irreversibly damaged enterocytes from the tips of the villi into the intestinal lumen and bleb formation starting at the base of the epithelia. This process advances from the tips to the bases of the villi with increasing duration of ischemia, and the villi are completely denuded of epithelium after ischemia lasting 2 h. Remains of the small intestinal crypts are still present at this time.…

MalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsIschemiadigestive systemIntestinal mucosaIschemiaIntestine SmallmedicineAnimalsRegenerationBleb (cell biology)Intestinal MucosaChemistryRegeneration (biology)digestive oral and skin physiologyHistologyGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseEpitheliumRatsSmall intestinal mucosamedicine.anatomical_structureAutoradiographyLigationVirchows Archiv B Cell Pathology Including Molecular Pathology
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Resurgence of syphilis:a diagnosis based on unusual oral mucosa lesions

2009

Background Known as “the great imitator,” secondary syphilis may clinically manifest itself in myriad of ways, involving different organs (including the oral cavity), and mimicking, both clinically and histologically, several diseases, thereby making diagnosis a challenge for clinicians. Case report We highlight an interesting case of a 45-year-old man on whose diagnosis of secondary syphilis was based on the presence of unusual oral lesions, consisting of a well delimited, raised, nonhomogeneous, and corrugated white plaque on the right buccal mucosa which mimicked, clinically and histologically, a “leukoplakia-like” plaque and several whitish oral mucous patches localized on the lower lab…

MalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyunusual oral mucosa lesionsPenile DiseasesThe great imitatorsyphiliTongue DiseasesDiagnosis DifferentialCandidiasis OralTonguemedicineHumansSyphilisOral mucosaGeneral DentistryLeukoplakiabusiness.industryGlans penisLip DiseasesSyphilis CutaneousMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseChancreRashstomatognathic diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureOtorhinolaryngologySurgerySyphilisLeukoplakia OralOral Surgerymedicine.symptomDifferential diagnosisMouth Diseasesbusiness
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The effects of three absorption-modifying critical excipients on the in vivo intestinal absorption of six model compounds in rats and dogs.

2018

Pharmaceutical excipients that may affect gastrointestinal (GI) drug absorption are called critical pharmaceutical excipients, or absorption-modifying excipients (AMEs) if they act by altering the integrity of the intestinal epithelial cell membrane. Some of these excipients increase intestinal permeability, and subsequently the absorption and bioavailability of the drug. This could have implications for both the assessment of bioequivalence and the efficacy of the absorption-enhancing drug delivery system. The absorption-enhancing effects of AMEs with different mechanisms (chitosan, sodium caprate, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)) have previously been evaluated in the rat single-pass intestin…

MalePharmaceutical ScienceExcipientBiological Availability02 engineering and technologyBioequivalencePharmacology030226 pharmacology & pharmacyIntestinal absorptionPermeabilityExcipients03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineDogsIn vivomedicineAnimalsPharmaceutical sciencesIntestinal MucosaChitosanIntestinal permeabilityChemistrySodium Dodecyl Sulfate021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologymedicine.diseaseBioavailabilityRatsIntestinesIntestinal AbsorptionPharmaceutical PreparationsDrug delivery0210 nano-technologyDecanoic Acidsmedicine.drugInternational journal of pharmaceutics
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Effect of the chloroform extract of tanacetum vulgare and one of its active principles, parthenolide, on experimental gastric ulcer in rats

1999

Abstract This study examines the anti-ulcerogenic activity of a chloroform extract of Tanacetum vulgare and purified parthenolide, the major sesquiterpene lactone found in the extract. Gastric ulcers induced by oral administration of absolute ethanol to rats were reduced dose-dependently by oral pretreatment of animals with the chloroform extract (2.5–80 mg kg−1) or parthenolide (5–40 mgkg−1). When administered 30 min before challenge with the alcohol the protection ranged between 34 and 100% for the extract and 27 and 100% for parthenolide. When the products were administered orally 24h before treatment with ethanol, 40 mg kg−1 of the extract and of the lactone reduced the mean ulcer index…

MalePharmaceutical SciencePharmacologySesquiterpene lactoneUlcer indexSeverity of Illness Indexlaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundlawOral administrationGastric mucosamedicineAnimalsParthenolideStomach UlcerSulfhydryl CompoundsRats WistarPharmacologychemistry.chemical_classificationPlants MedicinalChloroformEthanolDose-Response Relationship DrugEthanolPlant Extractsbusiness.industryRatsmedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistrychemistryGastric MucosaSolventsChloroformPhytotherapybusinessSesquiterpenes
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A binary genetic approach to characterize TRPM5 cells in mice

2015

International audience; Transient receptor potential channel subfamily M member 5 (TRPM5) is an important downstream signaling component in a subset of taste receptor cells making it a potential target for taste modulation. Interestingly, TRPM5 has been detected in extra-oral tissues; however, the function of extra-gustatory TRPM5-expressing cells is less well understood. To facilitate visualization and manipulation of TRPM5-expressing cells in mice, we generated a Cre knock-in TRPM5 allele by homologous recombination. We then used the novel TRPM5-IRES-Cre mouse strain to report TRPM5 expression by activating a tau GFP transgene. To confirm faithful coexpression of tau GFP and TRPM5 we gene…

MalePhysiologytaste papillaegene targetingBehavioral NeuroscienceMice0302 clinical medicineTaste receptor[SDV.IDA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineeringGene Knock-In TechniquesIn Situ Hybridization Fluorescence0303 health sciencestaste budsiresGene targetingrosa26ImmunohistochemistrySensory SystemsCell biologyknock inmedicine.anatomical_structuretrpm5taste receptor cellsFemaleGenotypeTransgeneCre recombinaseTRPM Cation ChannelsMice TransgenicBiologyAntibodiestgfpseptal organ of masera03 medical and health sciencesOlfactory MucosaTonguemicrovillar cellsPhysiology (medical)Gene knockinmedicineAnimals[SPI.GPROC]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Chemical and Process EngineeringTRPM5cre recombinaseAlleles030304 developmental biologyPalateMice Inbred C57BLvomeronasal organolfactory epitheliumgastrointestinal tractHomologous recombinationOlfactory epithelium030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Surgical Atlas. Primary hypospadias repair with buccal mucosa

2006

MalePostoperative CareHypospadiasWound Healingmedicine.medical_specialtyUrologic Surgical Procedures Malebusiness.industryAdministration TopicalUrologyMouth MucosaInfantOral cavitymedicine.diseaseBuccal mucosaUrologic Surgical ProcedureSurgeryHypospadiasChild PreschoolMedical IllustrationHypospadias repairHumansMedicineTestosteronebusinessBJU International
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