Search results for "PANCREAS"

showing 10 items of 231 documents

Changes in biochemical composition of gills, hepatopancreas and muscle of the red crayfish Procambarus clarkii (Girard) after sublethal exposure to m…

1992

Abstract 1. 1. The changes in the biochemical composition of gills, hepatopancreas and muscle after exposure to 0.25 mg Hg/l were studied in Procambarus clarkii . 2. 2. Sublethal exposure to mercury in P. clarkii resulted in significant decreases in protein concentration and caloric concentration in gills over the 96 hr period. Glycogen/lipid and glycogen/protein ratios increased after 48 and 96 hr of mercury exposure. 3. 3. Lipid and caloric concentration in the hepatopancreas were significantly lower in 96 hr mercury exposed group. 4. 4. Glycogen concentration in muscle was depleted as consequence of 96 hr mercury exposure.

GillGillsMalemedicine.medical_specialtyImmunologychemistry.chemical_elementAstacoideaLethal Dose 50chemistry.chemical_compoundInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsPancreasPharmacologyProcambarus clarkiibiologyGlycogenDose-Response Relationship DrugDecapodaMusclesAnatomyMercurybiology.organism_classificationCrayfishMercury (element)EndocrinologychemistryLiverToxicityHepatopancreasFemaleComparative biochemistry and physiology. C, Comparative pharmacology and toxicology
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Effects of cadmium on the biochemical composition of the freshwater crayfishProcambarus clarkii (Girard, 1852)

1991

Lake Albufera of Valencia (Spain) and the surrounding rice field waters are subjected to very heavy loads of sewage and toxic residues. Among these residues include heavy metals which have been deposited from the many urban and waste waters in this area. The American red crayfish, Procambarus clarkii from Albufera Lake has high resistance to heavy metals. The authors have also found that P. clarkii shows a high capacity for cadmium accumulation in experimental conditions and natural conditions since crayfish collected in this area contained considerable amounts of cadmium in several tissues even after 15 days of depuration in clean water. Since the physiological changes that take place when…

GillsMaleGillHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesischemistry.chemical_elementAstacoideaBiologyToxicologyLethal Dose 50AnimalsEcotoxicologyPancreasProcambarus clarkiiPollutantCadmiumEcologyDecapodaMusclesGeneral MedicineLipid Metabolismbiology.organism_classificationCrayfishPollutionGlucoseLiverchemistryEnvironmental chemistryLactatesFemaleHepatopancreasEnergy MetabolismGlycogenCadmiumBulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology
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No influence of oxygen levels on pathogenesis and virus shedding in Salmonid alphavirus (SAV)-challenged Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.)

2010

Abstract Background For more than three decades, diseases caused by salmonid alphaviruses (SAV) have become a major problem of increasing economic importance in the European fish-farming industry. However, experimental infection trials with SAV result in low or no mortality i.e very different from most field outbreaks of pancreas disease (PD). This probably reflects the difficulties in reproducing complex biotic and abiotic field conditions in the laboratory. In this study we looked at the relationship between SAV-infection in salmon and sub-lethal environmental hypoxia as a result of reduced flow-through in tank systems. Results The experiment demonstrated that constant reduced oxygen leve…

GillsSalmo salarAlphavirusAlphavirusBiologySeverity of Illness IndexViruslcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesLesionFish DiseasesVirologymedicineAnimalslcsh:RC109-216Viral sheddingAlphavirus infectionHypoxiaPancreasOxygen saturation (medicine)Alphavirus InfectionsHistocytochemistryResearchMyocardiumOutbreakWaterAquatic animalHeartbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologyVirus SheddingOxygenInfectious Diseases:Mathematics and natural science: 400 [VDP]medicine.symptomVirology Journal
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Pancreatic Extracts for the Treatment of Diabetes (1889-1914): Acomatol.

2019

Background Historical review on the early development of organotherapy for diabetes [pancreatic extracts (PE)] and its relationship with the social and political circumstances. Areas of uncertainty The diagnosis of diabetes relied only in the presence of glycosuria and cardinal symptoms. Blood glucose determinations were not regularly available, requiring large volumes for sampling. Micromethods for glycemia were developed just in the last years of the investigated period. Hypoglycemia remains undiscovered. Isolation and purification of PE were difficult tasks due to the unknown chemical structure of the antidiabetic hormone. Data sources (1) Berliner Medizinhistoriches Museum der Charite (…

GlycosuriaBlood Glucosemedicine.medical_specialtyPancreatic diseasemedicine.medical_treatmentMEDLINEPancreatic Extracts030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyHypoglycemia03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineEndocrinologyDiabetes mellitusmedicineDiabetes MellitusHumansHypoglycemic AgentsPharmacology (medical)030212 general & internal medicinePancreasPharmacologybusiness.industryHistory 19th CenturyGeneral MedicineHistory 20th CenturyOrganotherapymedicine.diseaseEndocrine pharmacologyFamily medicinePancreatectomymedicine.symptombusinessAmerican journal of therapeutics
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Wharton’s Jelly Mesenchymal Stem Cells as Candidates for Beta Cells Regeneration: Extending the Differentiative and Immunomodulatory Benefits of Adul…

2010

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) are uniquely capable of crossing germinative layers borders (i.e. are able to differentiate towards ectoderm-, mesoderm- and endoderm-derived cytotypes) and are viewed as promising cells for regenerative medicine approaches in several diseases. Type I diabetes therapy should potentially benefit from such differentiated cells: the search for alternatives to organ/islet transplantation strategies via stem cells differentiation is an ongoing task, significant goals having been achieved in most experimental settings (e.g. insulin production and euglycaemia restoration), though caution is still needed to ensure safe and durable effects in vivo. MSC are obtainable in …

Graft RejectionCancer ResearchCellular differentiationCell Culture TechniquesClinical uses of mesenchymal stem cellsBiologyMesenchymal Stem Cell TransplantationRegenerative medicineUmbilical CordImmunomodulationMesenchymal stem cells Umbilical cord Wharton’s jelly Type 1 diabetes Beta cells Differentiation markers Pancreas development Inflammation Immune modulation HypoimmunogenicityInsulin-Secreting CellsWharton's jellyAnimalsHumansRegenerationEmbryonic Stem CellsSettore BIO/16 - Anatomia UmanaRegeneration (biology)Mesenchymal stem cellCell DifferentiationMesenchymal Stem CellsCell BiologyAntigens DifferentiationTransplantationAdult Stem CellsDiabetes Mellitus Type 1Adipose TissueImmunologyCancer researchCord Blood Stem Cell TransplantationStem cellStem Cell Reviews and Reports
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Organ Recovery Procedure in Donation After Controlled Circulatory Death with Normothermic Regional Perfusion: State of the Art

2020

The global shortage of organ donors will not be resolved solely by relying on donation after brain death. Expansion to use of donation after controlled circulatory death will be needed to address the shortfall of organs for transplantation. The processes of warm ischemia threaten the viability of organs obtained after controlled circulatory death, but these can be minimized by well-organized donation pathways and new techniques of in situ organ preservation, such as normothermic regional perfusion. The use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) devices for normothermic regional perfusion in liver transplantation can help reduce rates of biliary complications, ischemic type biliary le…

Heart transplantationmedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentPancreas transplantationLiver transplantationmedicine.diseaseTransplantationsurgical procedures operativeInternal medicinemedicineCardiologyExtracorporeal membrane oxygenationLung transplantationOrgan donationbusinessKidney transplantation
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Hereditäre Pankreatitis - Eine klinisch relevante Ursache des Pankreaskarzinoms? -

2001

UNLABELLED Hereditary pancreatitis is an autosomal dominant disease. Recently, the genetic defect has been mapped to chromosome 7q35 and consists mainly of a point mutation in exon 3 of the cationic trypsinogen gene which causes an Arg(CGC)-His(CAC) substitution at residue 117. In patients with hereditary pancreatitis the estimated cumulative risk for pancreatic carcinoma to age 70 approaches 40 %. Thus, the role of hereditary pancreatitis in the pathogenesis of pancreatic carcinoma is of interest. PATIENTS AND METHODS DNA was extracted from peripheral blood (n = 16), fresh tumor tissue (n = 29) and formalin fixed and paraffin embedded tumor tissue (n = 5) of 50 patients with ductal adenoca…

Hereditary pancreatitismedicine.medical_specialtyTrypsinogenbusiness.industryGeneral surgeryPoint mutationAutosomal dominant traitmedicine.diseasechemistry.chemical_compoundExonmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryPancreatic cancermedicineCancer researchAdenocarcinomaSurgeryPancreasbusinessZentralblatt für Chirurgie
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Genetic Determined Downregulation of Both Type 1 and Type 2 Cytokine Pathways Might Be Protective against Pancreatic Cancer

2009

Many cytokine polymorphisms have been studied for associations with susceptibility to breast, gastric, liver, lung, prostate, and ovarian cancer without conclusive results. The cytokine network, indeed, is characterized by complex interactions, and the final biological effect of a single genetic variation depends on the balance among different molecular signals. As is well known, Th1/Th2 cytokine unbalanced production might predispose to different pathologies, cancer included. In general, a prolonged type 1 inflammatory response might allow that cells accumulating enough "genetic hits" are promoted to neoplastic transformation. On the other hand, IL-13-producing cells through the IL-13/IL-4…

Heterozygotemedicine.medical_treatmentDown-RegulationBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyTh2 CellsHistory and Philosophy of SciencePancreatic cancerGenotypemedicineHumansGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseNeoplastic transformationInterleukin 4Polymorphism GeneticGeneral NeuroscienceCancerTh1 Cellsmedicine.diseasePancreatic NeoplasmsInterleukin 10Cytokinemedicine.anatomical_structureCase-Control StudiesImmunologyCytokinespancreatic cancer gene polymorphism IL-10 IL-4RalfaPancreasAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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Intraductal tubulopapillary neoplasm (ITPN) of the pancreas: a distinct entity among pancreatic tumors

2022

Aims Intraductal tubulopapillary neoplasm (ITPN) of the pancreas is a recently recognized pancreatic tumor entity. Here we aimed to determine the most important features with a systematic review coupled with an integrated statistical approach. Methods and results PubMed, SCOPUS, and Embase were searched for studies reporting data on pancreatic ITPN. The clinicopathological, immunohistochemical, and molecular data were summarized. Then a comprehensive survival analysis and a comparative analysis of the molecular alterations of ITPN with those of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) and intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN) from reference cohorts (including the International Cance…

HistologyIPMNITPNPancreatic Intraductal NeoplasmsPDACpancreatic ductal adenocarcinomaGeneral MedicineCarcinoma PapillaryPathology and Forensic MedicinePancreatic Neoplasmspancreatubulopapillary.TubulopapillaryHumansintraductalPrecision MedicineIPMN; ITPN; Intraductal; PDAC; Tubulopapillary; pancreas; pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomaPancreasCarcinoma Pancreatic Ductal
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Characterization of Acylating and Deacylating Activities of an Extracellular Phospholipase A2 in a Water-Restricted Environment

1994

The behavior of porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2 (ppPLA2) in monophasic low-water media has been explored, for the first time, in a systematic manner. It has been investigated how a number of variables can modulate both acylating and deacylating activities of the enzyme, and several interesting, unexpected results are presented. Among the most relevant, when placing ppPLA2 in the water-restricted environment, are the following: (i) it displays a remarkable alteration of its specificity toward the substrate polar head relative to all-water medium; (ii) it is quite severely inhibited by lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC), which has important implications, particularly concerning its acylation a…

Hot TemperatureSwineStereochemistryAcylationOleic AcidsBinding CompetitiveBiochemistryPhospholipases ASubstrate SpecificityAcylationchemistry.chemical_compoundPhospholipase A2Enzyme StabilityExtracellularAnimalsPancreasEdetic Acidchemistry.chemical_classificationEsterificationbiologyChemistryHydrolysisLysophosphatidylcholinesWaterSubstrate (chemistry)In vitroKineticsPhospholipases A2LysophosphatidylcholineEnzymeBiochemistryYield (chemistry)Phosphatidylcholinesbiology.proteinCalciumExtracellular SpaceOleic AcidBiochemistry
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