Search results for "Models"

showing 10 items of 8211 documents

Microphthalmia, persistent hyperplastic hyaloid vasculature and lens anomalies following overexpression of VEGF-A188 from the αA-crystallin promoter

2007

Purpose During growth of the embryonic eye, dose- and site-specific expression of heparin-binding growth factors is critical for the formation of an appropriate vascular supply. Overexpression of vascular endothelial growth factor-A188 (VEGF-A188), a strongly heparin-binding, endothelial-specific mitogen, leads to severe disturbance of vascular and overall ocular morphology. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of VEGF-A188 overexpression on growth of ocular tissue components. Methods Stereological and immunohistochemical methods were employed to identify the vascular profiles, ocular tissue proportions, and cell types in VEGF-A188 transgenic mice and compare them with wild-type mice. R…

Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Agenetic structuresMyocytes Smooth MuscleCell CountMice TransgenicEyealpha-Crystallin A ChainCongenital AbnormalitiesCorneaMiceLens CrystallineAnimalsMicrophthalmosVascular DiseasesPromoter Regions GeneticHyperplasiaEndothelial CellsHypertrophyEmbryo MammalianAntigens DifferentiationImmunohistochemistryeye diseasesActinsDisease Models AnimalAnimals NewbornBlood Vesselssense organsPericytesHeparan Sulfate ProteoglycansResearch ArticleMolecular Vision
researchProduct

Dopamine agonist administration causes a reduction in endometrial implants through modulation of angiogenesis in experimentally induced endometriosis

2009

Survival of newly implanted retrograde-shed endometrial tissue during menstruation in an ectopic location requires an adequate blood supply. This suggests that angiogenesis is a prerequisite for the development of endometriosis and that its inhibition may be a target for preventing development. Previous studies have shown that vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a heparin-binding glycoprotein, has an essential role in angiogenesis. The main regulatory factor for angiogenesis appears to be binding of VEGF to its type-2 receptor (VEGFR-2). Cabergoline (Cb2) and other dopamine agonists promote endocytosis of the VEGF receptor-2 (VEGFR-2) in endothelial cells, thereby preventing VEGF-VEG…

Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Amedicine.medical_specialtyCabergolineProliferation indexAngiogenesisEndometriosisEndometriosisBiologyEndometriumDopamine agonistMicechemistry.chemical_compoundPeritoneumCabergolineInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansErgolinesPhosphorylationReceptorCell ProliferationNeovascularization Pathologicbusiness.industryRehabilitationObstetrics and GynecologyKinase insert domain receptorGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseVascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-2Vascular endothelial growth factorDisease Models AnimalVascular endothelial growth factor AEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureGene Expression RegulationReproductive MedicinechemistryDopamine AgonistsFemalelipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)businessmedicine.drugHuman Reproduction
researchProduct

Obesity and intermittent hypoxia increase tumor growth in a mouse model of sleep apnea.

2012

Background: Intermittent hypoxia and obesity which are two pathological conditions commonly found in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), potentially enhance cancer progression. Objective: To investigate whether obesity and/or intermittent hypoxia (IH) mimicking OSA affect tumor growth. Methods: A subcutaneous melanoma was induced in 40 mice [22 obese (40–45 g) and 18 lean (20–25 g)] by injecting 106 B16F10 cells in the flank. Nineteen mice (10 obese/9 lean) were subjected to IH (6 h/day for 17 days). A group of 21 mice (12 obese/9 lean) were kept under normoxia. At day 17, tumors were excised, weighed and processed to quantify necrosis and endothelial expression of vascular endothe…

Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Amedicine.medical_specialtyNecrosisMice ObeseSettore MED/10 - Malattie Dell'Apparato Respiratoriochemistry.chemical_compoundMiceSleep Apnea SyndromesInternal medicineMedicineAnimalsAnimal modelTumor growthObesityHypoxiaMelanomaCancerIntermittent hypoxiabusiness.industryMelanomaSleep apneaSleep apneaCancerIntermittent hypoxiaGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseObesityObstructive sleep apneaVascular endothelial growth factorMice Inbred C57BLDisease Models AnimalEndocrinologychemistrymedicine.symptombusinessNeoplasm TransplantationSleep medicine
researchProduct

Renal transplantation by automatic anastomotic device in a porcine model

2015

Automatic vascular staplers for vascular anastomoses in kidney transplantation may dramatically reduce the operative time and, in particular, warm ischemia time, thus increasing the outcome of transplantation. Ten pigs underwent kidney auto-transplantation by automatic anastomotic device. Kidneys were collected by laparotomy with selective ligations at the renal hilum and perfused with cold storage solution. To overcome the shortage in length of renal hilum, a tract of the internal jugular vein was harvested to increase the length of the vessels. The anastomoses were totally performed by the use of the anastomotic device. On 10 kidney transplants, nine were successful and no complications o…

Vascular anastomosiAnastomosis deviceAnimalSwineMedicine (all)Anastomosis SurgicalBiomedical EngineeringMedicine (miscellaneous)Mechanical vascular sutureWarm ischemia timeBioengineeringKidneyIliac ArteryKidney TransplantationBiomaterialAnastomosis device; Kidney transplantation; Mechanical vascular sutures; Vascular anastomosis; Warm ischemia time; Anastomosis Surgical; Animals; Automation; Disease Models Animal; Female; Iliac Artery; Kidney; Kidney Transplantation; Renal Artery; Swine; Biomaterials; Biomedical Engineering; Bioengineering; Medicine (miscellaneous); Medicine (all)AutomationDisease Models AnimalSettore MED/18 - Chirurgia GeneraleRenal ArteryAnimalsFemale
researchProduct

Dryland vegetation pattern dynamics driven by inertial effects and secondary seed dispersal

2022

This manuscript tackles the study of vegetation pattern dynamics driven by inertial effects and secondary seed dispersal. To achieve this goal, an hyperbolic extension of the classical parabolic Klausmeier model of vegetation, generally used to predict the formation of banded vegetation along the slopes of semiarid environments, has been here considered together with an additional advective term mimicking the downslope motion of seeds. Linear stability analyses have been carried out to inspect the dependence of the wave instability locus on the model parameters, with particular emphasis on the role played by inertial time and seed advection speed. Moreover, periodic travelling wave solution…

Vegetation stripe patterns Hyperbolic reaction–advection–diffusion models Inertial times Secondary seed dispersal Wave instability Travelling wave solutionsEcological ModelingSettore MAT/07 - Fisica MatematicaEcological Modelling
researchProduct

Phenotypic analysis of adults of Fasciola hepatica, Fasciola gigantica and intermediate forms from the endemic region of Gilan, Iran.

2006

Fascioliasis is an important human and animal disease caused by Fasciola hepatica and Fasciola gigantica. In Iran, the distribution of these two species overlaps in most areas, including the northern human endemic province of Gilan where both fasciolids are simultaneously found in individual cattle and buffaloes. A phenotypic study of fasciolid adult flukes from naturally infected bovines from Gilan was carried out by means of an exhaustive morphometric analysis using traditional microscopic measurements and an allometric model. The Iranian fasciolids were compared to F. hepatica and F. gigantica standard populations, i.e. from geographical areas where both species do not co-exist (Bolivia …

Veterinary medicineBoliviaFascioliasisTime FactorsBuffaloesEndemic DiseasesFasciola giganticaAllopatric speciationCattle DiseasesIranPhenotypic analysisSpecies SpecificityHepaticaparasitic diseasesBurkina FasoSuckerFasciola hepaticaAnimalsbiologyEcologyAnimal diseaseFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationClassificationFasciolaInfectious DiseasesLogistic ModelsPhenotypeLiverParasitologyCattleAllometryParasitology international
researchProduct

MM3-ELISA evaluation of coproantigen release and serum antibody production in sheep experimentally infected with Fasciola hepatica and F. gigantica.

2008

During an experimental infection of sheep with Fasciola hepatica or F. gigantica, MM3-SERO and MM3-COPRO ELISA tests were applied to compare the kinetics of antibody production and coproantigen release between the 2nd and 32nd week post-infection (wpi). The Kato-Katz technique was used to measure the kinetics of egg shedding by both Fasciola species (eggs per gram of feces, epg). The kinetics of IgG antibodies for all sheep infected with F. hepatica and F. gigantica followed a similar pattern. Optical density (OD) increased rapidly between the 4th until the 12th wpi, when the highest values were reached and then decreased slowly until the 32nd wpi. Coproantigen levels increased above the cu…

Veterinary medicineFascioliasisFasciola giganticaAntibodies HelminthSheep DiseasesEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayStatistics NonparametricFecesRandom AllocationHepaticaparasitic diseasesParasite Egg CountFasciola hepaticaHelminthsAnimalsParasite Egg CountEggs per gramFecesSheepGeneral VeterinaryFasciolabiologyAntibodies MonoclonalGeneral MedicineFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationVirologyFasciolaKineticsAntigens HelminthImmunoglobulin GAntibody FormationLinear ModelsParasitologyVeterinary parasitology
researchProduct

Transmission, infectivity and survival of Diplostomum spathaceum cercariae

2003

The transmission dynamics of the cercariae of Diplostomum spathaceum were investigated under laboratory conditions using cercariae collected from naturally infected Lymnaea stagnalis. Cercariae were kept in a constant temperature of 20 °C and the survival and infectivity to naïve young rainbow trout recorded at 3-h intervals until few cercariae were alive. Mortality initially remained constant but increased rapidly after 20 h. While a model of constant mortality fitted the survival data, an age-dependent model provided a better fit and implied that cercariae tended to carry similar quantities of resources and once these were exhausted the cercariae died. Cercarial infectivity also showed an…

Veterinary medicineTransmission rateLymnaea stagnalisTrematode InfectionsBiologyModels Biologicallaw.inventionFish DiseasesRandom AllocationSurvival datalawAnimalsEye Infections ParasiticLymnaeaInfectivityFrequency dependencebiology.organism_classificationInfectious DiseasesTransmission (mechanics)Diplostomum spathaceumOncorhynchus mykissImmunologyAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyRainbow troutTrematodaParasitology
researchProduct

Effect of somatic cell count level on functional longevity in Valle del Belice dairy sheep assessed using survival analysis.

2009

The objectives of this study were to evaluate the effect of somatic cell count (SCC) on functional longevity and to estimate the heritability of functional longevity using survival analysis in Valle del Belice dairy sheep. A total of 4,880 lactations of 2,190 ewes from 11 flocks were used. In this study, SCC was considered as an indication of subclinical mastitis. In case of clinical cases, identified by the technicians at milking time, test-day weights and milk samples of those ewes were not considered. Somatic cells were analyzed as counts, without any transformation, and were grouped in 3 classes based on the observed SCC maximum (mxSCC). The mxSCC classes, expressed as 103 cells/mL, wer…

Veterinary medicinemedia_common.quotation_subjectLongevityselectionCell CountMastitisAnimal Breeding and GenomicsBiologygenetic-parametersModels BiologicalMilkingSettore AGR/17 - Zootecnica Generale E Miglioramento GeneticocowsAnimal scienceQuantitative Trait Heritabletraitsproductive lifeLactationsomatic cell count longevity survival analysis dairy sheepGeneticsmedicinescoreAnimalsFokkerij en Genomicasubclinical mastitisSurvival analysismedia_commonmilkSheepLongevityHeritabilitymedicine.diseaseSurvival AnalysisMastitisDairyingmedicine.anatomical_structureMilkcattleWIASholsteinAnimal Science and ZoologyFemaleFlockSomatic cell countFood ScienceJournal of dairy science
researchProduct

Do vitamin E supplements in diets for laboratory animals jeopardize findings in animal models of disease?

1999

Abstract Vitamin E has been supplemented to the diets of farm animals to improve fertility, health, growth rates and quality of animal products. Because of the positive experience obtained in farm animals, vitamin E has been added in increasing amounts to the diets of laboratory animals. Today, vitamin E levels in standard rodent maintenance diets range from 30 mg/kg (France, United States), 90–120 mg/kg (Netherlands, United Kingdom) to as much as 200 mg/kg (Germany). While increasing fertility and health of laboratory animals, these vitamin E supplements affect diverse pathophysiological conditions and thus the outcome of animal models of disease. Because of the large variability of vitami…

Veterinary medicinemedia_common.quotation_subjectVitamin Emedicine.medical_treatmentReproducibility of ResultsFertilityDiseaseBiologyBiochemistryDisease Models AnimalAnimal scienceAnimal modelPhysiology (medical)Animals LaboratoryDietary SupplementsmedicineAnimalsVitamin ETocopherolmedia_commonFree radical biologymedicine
researchProduct